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  • Project Gutenberg’s Le Morte D’Arthur, Volume I (of II), by Thomas Malory
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  • Title: Le Morte D’Arthur, Volume I (of II)
  • King Arthur and of his Noble Knights of the Round Table
  • Author: Thomas Malory
  • Editor: William Caxton
  • Release Date: November 6, 2009 [EBook #1251]
  • Last Updated: October 13, 2019
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LE MORTE D’ARTHUR, VOLUME I ***
  • Produced by Mike Lough, and David Widger
  • Le Morte D’Arthur
  • King Arthur and of his Noble Knights of the Round Table
  • by Thomas Malory
  • IN TWO VOLS.—VOL. I
  • Contents
  • BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
  • PREFACE OF WILLIAM CAXTON
  • BOOK I.
  • CHAPTER I. First, How Uther Pendragon sent for the duke of Cornwall
  • and Igraine his wife, and of their departing suddenly again.
  • CHAPTER II. How Uther Pendragon made war on the duke of Cornwall, and
  • how by the mean of Merlin he lay by the duchess and gat Arthur.
  • CHAPTER III. Of the birth of King Arthur and of his nurture.
  • CHAPTER IV. Of the death of King Uther Pendragon.
  • CHAPTER V. How Arthur was chosen king, and of wonders and marvels of a
  • sword taken out of a stone by the said Arthur.
  • CHAPTER VI. How King Arthur pulled out the sword divers times.
  • CHAPTER VII. How King Arthur was crowned, and how he made officers.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How King Arthur held in Wales, at a Pentecost, a great
  • feast, and what kings and lords came to his feast.
  • CHAPTER IX. Of the first war that King Arthur had, and how he won the
  • field.
  • CHAPTER X. How Merlin counselled King Arthur to send for King Ban and
  • King Bors, and of their counsel taken for the war.
  • CHAPTER XI. Of a great tourney made by King Arthur and the two kings
  • Ban and Bors, and how they went over the sea.
  • CHAPTER XII. How eleven kings gathered a great host against King
  • Arthur.
  • CHAPTER XIII. Of a dream of the King with the Hundred Knights.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How the eleven kings with their host fought against
  • Arthur and his host, and many great feats of the war.
  • CHAPTER XV. Yet of the same battle.
  • CHAPTER XVI. Yet more of the same battle.
  • CHAPTER XVII. Yet more of the same battle, and how it was ended by
  • Merlin.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How King Arthur, King Ban, and King Bors rescued King
  • Leodegrance, and other incidents.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How King Arthur rode to Carlion, and of his dream, and
  • how he saw the questing beast.
  • CHAPTER XX. How King Pellinore took Arthur's horse and followed the
  • Questing Beast, and how Merlin met with Arthur.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How Ulfius impeached Queen Igraine, Arthur's mother, of
  • treason; and how a knight came and desired to have the death of his
  • master revenged.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How Griflet was made knight, and jousted with a knight
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How twelve knights came from Rome and asked truage for
  • this land of Arthur, and how Arthur fought with a knight.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Merlin saved Arthur's life, and threw an enchantment
  • on King Pellinore and made him to sleep.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Arthur by the mean of Merlin gat Excalibur his sword
  • of the Lady of the Lake.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How tidings came to Arthur that King Rience had overcome
  • eleven kings, and how he desired Arthur's beard to trim his mantle.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How all the children were sent for that were born on
  • May-day, and how Mordred was saved.
  • BOOK II.
  • CHAPTER I. Of a damosel which came girt with a sword for to find a man
  • of such virtue to draw it out of the scabbard.
  • CHAPTER II. How Balin, arrayed like a poor knight, pulled out the
  • sword, which afterward was the cause of his death.
  • CHAPTER III. How the Lady of the Lake demanded the knight's head that
  • had won the sword, or the maiden's head.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Merlin told the adventure of this damosel.
  • CHAPTER V. How Balin was pursued by Sir Lanceor, knight of Ireland,
  • and how he jousted and slew him.
  • CHAPTER VI. How a damosel, which was love to Lanceor, slew herself for
  • love, and how Balin met with his brother Balan.
  • CHAPTER VII. How a dwarf reproved Balin for the death of Lanceor, and
  • how King Mark of Cornwall found them, and made a tomb over them.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Merlin prophesied that two the best knights of the
  • world should fight there, which were Sir Lancelot and Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Balin and his brother, by the counsel of Merlin, took
  • King Rience and brought him to King Arthur.
  • CHAPTER X. How King Arthur had a battle against Nero and King Lot of
  • Orkney, and how King Lot was deceived by Merlin, and how twelve kings
  • were slain.
  • CHAPTER XI. Of the interment of twelve kings, and of the prophecy of
  • Merlin, and how Balin should give the dolorous stroke.
  • CHAPTER XII. How a sorrowful knight came before Arthur, and how Balin
  • fetched him, and how that knight was slain by a knight invisible.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Balin and the damosel met with a knight which was in
  • likewise slain, and how the damosel bled for the custom of a castle.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Balin met with that knight named Garlon at a feast,
  • and there he slew him, to have his blood to heal therewith the son of
  • his host.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Balin fought with King Pellam, and how his sword
  • brake, and how he gat a spear wherewith he smote the dolorous stroke.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Balin was delivered by Merlin, and saved a knight
  • that would have slain himself for love.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How that knight slew his love and a knight lying by her,
  • and after, how he slew himself with his own sword, and how Balin rode
  • toward a castle where he lost his life.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Balin met with his brother Balan, and how each of
  • them slew other unknown, till they were wounded to death.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How Merlin buried them both in one tomb, and of Balin's
  • sword.
  • BOOK III.
  • CHAPTER I. How King Arthur took a wife, and wedded Guenever, daughter
  • to Leodegrance, King of the Land of Cameliard, with whom he had the
  • Round Table.
  • CHAPTER II. How the Knights of the Round Table were ordained and their
  • sieges blessed by the Bishop of Canterbury.
  • CHAPTER III. How a poor man riding upon a lean mare desired King
  • Arthur to make his son knight.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Sir Tor was known for son of King Pellinore, and how
  • Gawaine was made knight.
  • CHAPTER V. How at feast of the wedding of King Arthur to Guenever, a
  • white hart came into the hall, and thirty couple hounds, and how a
  • brachet pinched the hart which was taken away.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Gawaine rode for to fetch again the hart, and how
  • two brethren fought each against other for the hart.
  • CHAPTER VII How the hart was chased into a castle and there slain, and
  • how Sir Gawaine slew a lady.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How four knights fought against Gawaine and Gaheris, and
  • how they were overcome, and their lives saved at request of four
  • ladies.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Tor rode after the knight with the brachet, and of
  • his adventure by the way.
  • CHAPTER X. How Sir Tor found the brachet with a lady, and how a knight
  • assailed him for the said brachet.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Tor overcame the knight, and how he lost his head
  • at the request of a lady.
  • CHAPTER XII. How King Pellinore rode after the lady and the knight
  • that led her away, and how a lady desired help of him, and how he
  • fought with two knights for that lady, of whom he slew the one at the
  • first stroke.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How King Pellinore gat the lady and brought her to
  • Camelot to the court of King Arthur.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How on the way he heard two knights, as he lay by night
  • in a valley, and of their adventures.
  • CHAPTER XV. How when he was come to Camelot he was sworn upon a book
  • to tell the truth of his quest.
  • BOOK IV.
  • CHAPTER I. How Merlin was assotted and doted on one of the ladies of
  • the lake, and how he was shut in a rock under a stone and there died.
  • CHAPTER II. How five kings came into this land to war against King
  • Arthur, and what counsel Arthur had against them.
  • CHAPTER III. How King Arthur had ado with them and overthrew them, and
  • slew the five kings and made the remnant to flee.
  • CHAPTER IV. How the battle was finished or he came, and how King
  • Arthur founded an abbey where the battle was.
  • CHAPTER V. How Sir Tor was made knight of the Round Table, and how
  • Bagdemagus was displeased.
  • CHAPTER VI. How King Arthur, King Uriens, and Sir Accolon of Gaul,
  • chased an hart, and of their marvellous adventures.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Arthur took upon him to fight to be delivered out of
  • prison, and also for to deliver twenty knights that were in prison.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Accolon found himself by a well, and he took upon
  • him to do battle against Arthur.
  • CHAPTER IX. Of the battle between King Arthur and Accolon.
  • CHAPTER X. How King Arthur's sword that he fought with brake, and how
  • he recovered of Accolon his own sword Excalibur, and overcame his
  • enemy.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Accolon confessed the treason of Morgan le Fay, King
  • Arthur's sister, and how she would have done slay him.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Arthur accorded the two brethren, and delivered the
  • twenty knights, and how Sir Accolon died.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Morgan would have slain Sir Uriens her husband, and
  • how Sir Uwaine her son saved him.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Queen Morgan le Fay made great sorrow for the death
  • of Accolon, and how she stole away the scabbard from Arthur.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Morgan le Fay saved a knight that should have been
  • drowned, and how King Arthur returned home again.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How the Damosel of the Lake saved King Arthur from mantle
  • that should have burnt him.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine met with twelve fair
  • damosels, and how they complained on Sir Marhaus.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Sir Marhaus jousted with Sir Gawaine and Sir
  • Uwaine, and overthrew them both.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How Sir Marhaus, Sir Gawaine, and Sir Uwaine met three
  • damosels, and each of them took one.
  • CHAPTER XX. How a knight and a dwarf strove for a lady.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How King Pelleas suffered himself to be taken prisoner
  • because he would have a sight of his lady, and how Sir Gawaine
  • promised him to get to him the love of his lady.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How Sir Gawaine came to the Lady Ettard, and how Sir
  • Pelleas found them sleeping.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How Sir Pelleas loved no more Ettard by means of the
  • Damosel of the Lake, whom he loved ever after.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Sir Marhaus rode with the damosel, and how he came
  • to the Duke of the South Marches.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Sir Marhaus fought with the duke and his four sons
  • and made them to yield them.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How Sir Uwaine rode with the damosel of sixty year of
  • age, and how he gat the prize at tourneying.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How Sir Uwaine fought with two knights and overcame
  • them.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How at the year's end all three knights with their
  • three damosels met at the fountain.
  • BOOK V.
  • CHAPTER I. How twelve aged ambassadors of Rome came to King Arthur to
  • demand truage for Britain.
  • CHAPTER II. How the kings and lords promised to King Arthur aid and
  • help against the Romans.
  • CHAPTER III. How King Arthur held a parliament at York, and how he
  • ordained the realm should be governed in his absence.
  • CHAPTER IV. How King Arthur being shipped and lying in his cabin had a
  • marvellous dream and of the exposition thereof.
  • CHAPTER V. How a man of the country told to him of a marvellous giant,
  • and how he fought and conquered him.
  • CHAPTER VI. How King Arthur sent Sir Gawaine and other to Lucius, and
  • how they were assailed and escaped with worship.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Lucius sent certain spies in a bushment for to have
  • taken his knights being prisoners, and how they were letted.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How a senator told to Lucius of their discomfiture, and
  • also of the great battle between Arthur and Lucius.
  • CHAPTER IX How Arthur, after he had achieved the battle against the
  • Romans, entered into Almaine, and so into Italy.
  • CHAPTER X. Of a battle done by Sir Gawaine against a Saracen, which
  • after was yielden and became Christian.
  • CHAPTER XI. How the Saracens came out of a wood for to rescue their
  • beasts, and of a great battle.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Gawaine returned to King Arthur with his
  • prisoners, and how the King won a city, and how he was crowned
  • Emperor.
  • BOOK VI.
  • CHAPTER I. How Sir Launcelot and Sir Lionel departed from the court,
  • and how Sir Lionel left him sleeping and was taken.
  • CHAPTER II. How Sir Ector followed for to seek Sir Launcelot, and how
  • he was taken by Sir Turquine.
  • CHAPTER III How four queens found Launcelot sleeping, and how by
  • enchantment he was taken and led into a castle.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Sir Launcelot was delivered by the mean of a damosel.
  • CHAPTER V. How a knight found Sir Launcelot lying in his leman's bed,
  • and how Sir Launcelot fought with the knight.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Launcelot was received of King Bagdemagus'
  • daughter, and how he made his complaint to her father.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Sir Launcelot behaved him in a tournament, and how he
  • met with Sir Turquine leading Sir Gaheris.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Sir Launcelot and Sir Turquine fought together.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Turquine was slain, and how Sir Launcelot bade Sir
  • Gaheris deliver all the prisoners.
  • CHAPTER X. How Sir Launcelot rode with a damosel and slew a knight
  • that distressed all ladies and also a villain that kept a bridge.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Launcelot slew two giants, and made a castle free.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Launcelot rode disguised in Sir Kay's harness,
  • and how he smote down a knight.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Sir Launcelot jousted against four knights of the
  • Round Table and overthrew them.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Sir Launcelot followed a brachet into a castle, where
  • he found a dead knight, and how he after was required of a damosel to
  • heal her brother.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Sir Launcelot came into the Chapel Perilous and gat
  • there of a dead corpse a piece of the cloth and a sword.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Sir Launcelot at the request of a lady recovered a
  • falcon, by which he was deceived.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Launcelot overtook a knight which chased his
  • wife to have slain her, and how he said to him.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Sir Launcelot came to King Arthur's Court, and how
  • there were recounted all his noble feats and acts.
  • BOOK VII.
  • CHAPTER I. How Beaumains came to King Arthur's Court and demanded
  • three petitions of King Arthur.
  • CHAPTER II. How Sir Launcelot and Sir Gawaine were wroth because Sir
  • Kay mocked Beaumains, and of a damosel which desired a knight to fight
  • for a lady.
  • CHAPTER III. How Beaumains desired the battle, and how it was granted
  • to him, and how he desired to be made knight of Sir Launcelot.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Beaumains departed, and how he gat of Sir Kay a spear
  • and a shield, and how he jousted with Sir Launcelot.
  • CHAPTER V. How Beaumains told to Sir Launcelot his name, and how he
  • was dubbed knight of Sir Launcelot, and after overtook the damosel.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Beaumains fought and slew two knights at a passage.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Beaumains fought with the Knight of the Black Launds,
  • and fought with him till he fell down and died.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How the brother of the knight that was slain met with
  • Beaumains, and fought with Beaumains till he was yielden.
  • CHAPTER IX. How the damosel again rebuked Beaumains, and would not
  • suffer him to sit at her table, but called him kitchen boy.
  • CHAPTER X. How the third brother, called the Red Knight, jousted and
  • fought against Beaumains, and how Beaumains overcame him.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Beaumains suffered great rebukes of the damosel,
  • and he suffered it patiently.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Beaumains fought with Sir Persant of Inde, and made
  • him to be yielden.
  • CHAPTER XIII. Of the goodly communication between Sir Persant and
  • Beaumains, and how he told him that his name was Sir Gareth.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How the lady that was besieged had word from her sister
  • how she had brought a knight to fight for her, and what battles he had
  • achieved.
  • CHAPTER XV. How the damosel and Beaumains came to the siege; and came
  • to a sycamore tree, and there Beaumains blew a horn, and then the
  • Knight of the Red Launds came to fight with him.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How the two knights met together, and of their talking,
  • and how they began their battle.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How after long fighting Beaumains overcame the knight
  • and would have slain him, but at the request of the lords he saved his
  • life, and made him to yield him to the lady.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How the knight yielded him, and how Beaumains made him
  • to go unto King Arthur's court, and to cry Sir Launcelot mercy.
  • CHAPTER XIX How Beaumains came to the lady, and when he came to the
  • castle the gates were closed against him, and of the words that the
  • lady said to him.
  • CHAPTER XX. How Sir Beaumains rode after to rescue his dwarf, and came
  • into the castle where he was.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How Sir Gareth, otherwise called Beaumains, came to the
  • presence of his lady, and how they took acquaintance, and of their
  • love.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How at night came an armed knight, and fought with Sir
  • Gareth, and he, sore hurt in the thigh, smote off the knight's head.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How the said knight came again the next night and was
  • beheaded again, and how at the feast of Pentecost all the knights that
  • Sir Gareth had overcome came and yielded them to King Arthur.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How King Arthur pardoned them, and demanded of them
  • where Sir Gareth was.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How the Queen of Orkney came to this feast of Pentecost,
  • and Sir Gawaine and his brethren came to ask her blessing.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How King Arthur sent for the Lady Lionesse, and how she
  • let cry a tourney at her castle, whereas came many knights.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How King Arthur went to the tournament with his
  • knights, and how the lady received him worshipfully, and how the
  • knights encountered.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How the knights bare them in the battle.
  • CHAPTER XXIX. Yet of the said tournament.
  • CHAPTER XXX. How Sir Gareth was espied by the heralds, and how he
  • escaped out of the field.
  • CHAPTER XXXI. How Sir Gareth came to a castle where he was well
  • lodged, and he jousted with a knight and slew him.
  • CHAPTER XXXII. How Sir Gareth fought with a knight that held within
  • his castle thirty ladies, and how he slew him.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII. How Sir Gareth and Sir Gawaine fought each against
  • other, and how they knew each other by the damosel Linet.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV. How Sir Gareth acknowledged that they loved each other
  • to King Arthur, and of the appointment of their wedding.
  • CHAPTER XXXV. Of the Great Royalty, and what officers were made at the
  • feast of the wedding, and of the jousts at the feast.
  • BOOK VIII.
  • CHAPTER I. How Sir Tristram de Liones was born, and how his mother
  • died at his birth, wherefore she named him Tristram.
  • CHAPTER II. How the stepmother of Sir Tristram had ordained poison for
  • to have poisoned Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER III. How Sir Tristram was sent into France, and had one to
  • govern him named Gouvernail, and how he learned to harp, hawk, and
  • hunt.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Sir Marhaus came out of Ireland for to ask truage of
  • Cornwall, or else he would fight therefore.
  • CHAPTER V. How Tristram enterprized the battle to fight for the truage
  • of Cornwall, and how he was made knight.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Tristram arrived into the Island for to furnish
  • the battle with Sir Marhaus.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Sir Tristram fought against Sir Marhaus and achieved
  • his battle, and how Sir Marhaus fled to his ship.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Sir Marhaus after that he was arrived in Ireland
  • died of the stroke that Sir Tristram had given him, and how Tristram
  • was hurt.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Tristram was put to the keeping of La Beale Isoud
  • first for to be healed of his wound.
  • CHAPTER X. How Sir Tristram won the degree at a tournament in Ireland,
  • and there made Palamides to bear no more harness in a year.
  • CHAPTER XI. How the queen espied that Sir Tristram had slain her
  • brother Sir Marhaus by his sword, and in what jeopardy he was.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Tristram departed from the king and La Beale
  • Isoud out of Ireland for to come into Cornwall.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Sir Tristram and King Mark hurted each other for the
  • love of a knight's wife.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Sir Tristram lay with the lady, and how her husband
  • fought with Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Sir Bleoberis demanded the fairest lady in King Mark's
  • court, whom he took away, and how he was fought with.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Sir Tristram fought with two knights of the Round
  • Table.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Tristram fought with Sir Bleoberis for a lady,
  • and how the lady was put to choice to whom she would go.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How the lady forsook Sir Tristram and abode with Sir
  • Bleoberis, and how she desired to go to her husband.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How King Mark sent Sir Tristram for La Beale Isoud toward
  • Ireland, and how by fortune he arrived into England.
  • CHAPTER XX. How King Anguish of Ireland was summoned to come to King
  • Arthur's court for treason.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How Sir Tristram rescued a child from a knight, and how
  • Gouvernail told him of King Anguish.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How Sir Tristram fought for Sir Anguish and overcame his
  • adversary, and how his adversary would never yield him.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How Sir Blamore desired Tristram to slay him, and how
  • Sir Tristram spared him, and how they took appointment.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Sir Tristram demanded La Beale Isoud for King Mark,
  • and how Sir Tristram and Isoud drank the love drink.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Sir Tristram and Isoud were in prison, and how he
  • fought for her beauty, and smote of another lady's head.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How Sir Tristram fought with Sir Breunor, and at the
  • last smote off his head.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How Sir Galahad fought with Sir Tristram, and how Sir
  • Tristram yielded him and promised to fellowship with Launcelot.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How Sir Launcelot met with Sir Carados bearing away
  • Sir Gawaine, and of the rescue of Sir Gawaine.
  • CHAPTER XXIX. Of the wedding of King Mark to La Beale Isoud, and of
  • Bragwaine her maid, and of Palamides.
  • CHAPTER XXX. How Palamides demanded Queen Isoud, and how Lambegus rode
  • after to rescue her, and of the escape of Isoud.
  • CHAPTER XXXI. How Sir Tristram rode after Palamides, and how he found
  • him and fought with him, and by the means of Isoud the battle ceased.
  • CHAPTER XXXII. How Sir Tristram brought Queen Isoud home, and of the
  • debate of King Mark and Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII. How Sir Lamorak jousted with thirty knights, and Sir
  • Tristram at the request of King Mark smote his horse down.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV. How Sir Lamorak sent an horn to King Mark in despite of
  • Sir Tristram, and how Sir Tristram was driven into a chapel.
  • CHAPTER XXXV. How Sir Tristram was holpen by his men, and of Queen
  • Isoud which was put in a lazar-cote, and how Tristram was hurt.
  • CHAPTER XXXVI. How Sir Tristram served in war King Howel of Brittany,
  • and slew his adversary in the field.
  • CHAPTER XXXVII. How Sir Suppinabiles told Sir Tristram how he was
  • defamed in the court of King Arthur, and of Sir Lamorak.
  • CHAPTER XXXVIII. How Sir Tristram and his wife arrived in Wales, and
  • how he met there with Sir Lamorak.
  • CHAPTER XXXIX. How Sir Tristram fought with Sir Nabon, and overcame
  • him, and made Sir Segwarides lord of the isle.
  • CHAPTER XL
  • CHAPTER XLI. How Sir Lamorak slew Sir Frol, and of the courteous
  • fighting with Sir Belliance his brother.
  • BOOK IX.
  • CHAPTER I. How a young man came into the court of King Arthur, and how
  • Sir Kay called him in scorn La Cote Male Taile.
  • CHAPTER II. How a damosel came into the court and desired a knight to
  • take on him an enquest, which La Cote Male Taile emprised.
  • CHAPTER III. How La Cote Male Taile overthrew Sir Dagonet the king's
  • fool, and of the rebuke that he had of the damosel.
  • CHAPTER IV. How La Cote Male Taile fought against an hundred knights,
  • and how he escaped by the mean of a lady.
  • CHAPTER V. How Sir Launcelot came to the court and heard of La Cote
  • Male Taile, and how he followed after him, and how La Cote Male Taile
  • was prisoner.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Launcelot fought with six knights, and after with
  • Sir Brian, and how he delivered the prisoners.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Sir Launcelot met with the damosel named Male disant,
  • and named her the Damosel Bienpensant.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How La Cote Male Taile was taken prisoner, and after
  • rescued by Sir Launcelot, and how Sir Launcelot overcame four
  • brethren.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Launcelot made La Cote Male Taile lord of the
  • Castle of Pendragon, and after was made knight of the Round Table.
  • CHAPTER X. How La Beale Isoud sent letters to Sir Tristram by her maid
  • Bragwaine, and of divers adventures of Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Tristram met with Sir Lamorak de Galis, and how
  • they fought, and after accorded never to fight together.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Palomides followed the Questing Beast, and smote
  • down Sir Tristram and Sir Lamorak with one spear.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Sir Lamorak met with Sir Meliagaunce, and fought
  • together for the beauty of Dame Guenever.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Sir Kay met with Sir Tristram, and after of the shame
  • spoken of the knights of Cornwall, and how they jousted.
  • CHAPTER XV. How King Arthur was brought into the Forest Perilous, and
  • how Sir Tristram saved his life.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Sir Tristram came to La Beale Isoud, and how Kehydius
  • began to love Beale Isoud, and of a letter that Tristram found.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Tristram departed from Tintagil, and how he
  • sorrowed and was so long in a forest till he was out of his mind.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Sir Tristram soused Dagonet in a well, and how
  • Palomides sent a damosel to seek Tristram, and how Palomides met with
  • King Mark.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How it was noised how Sir Tristram was dead, and how La
  • Beale Isoud would have slain herself.
  • CHAPTER XX. How King Mark found Sir Tristram naked, and made him to be
  • borne home to Tintagil, and how he was there known by a brachet.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How King Mark, by the advice of his council, banished Sir
  • Tristram out of Cornwall the term of ten years.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How a damosel sought help to help Sir Launcelot against
  • thirty knights, and how Sir Tristram fought with them.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How Sir Tristram and Sir Dinadan came to a lodging
  • where they must joust with two knights.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Sir Tristram jousted with Sir Kay and Sir Sagramore
  • le Desirous, and how Sir Gawaine turned Sir Tristram from Morgan le
  • Fay.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Sir Tristram and Sir Gawaine rode to have foughten
  • with the thirty knights, but they durst not come out.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How damosel Bragwaine found Tristram sleeping by a well,
  • and how she delivered letters to him from La Beale Isoud.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How Sir Tristram had a fall with Sir Palomides, and how
  • Launcelot overthrew two knights.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How Sir Launcelot jousted with Palomides and overthrew
  • him, and after he was assailed with twelve knights.
  • CHAPTER XXIX. How Sir Tristram behaved him the first day of the
  • tournament, and there he had the prize.
  • CHAPTER XXX. How Sir Tristram returned against King Arthur's party
  • because he saw Sir Palomides on that party.
  • CHAPTER XXXI. How Sir Tristram found Palomides by a well, and brought
  • him with him to his lodging.
  • CHAPTER XXXII. How Sir Tristram smote down Sir Palomides, and how he
  • jousted with King Arthur, and other feats.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII. How Sir Launcelot hurt Sir Tristram, and how after Sir
  • Tristram smote down Sir Palomides.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV. How the prize of the third day was given to Sir
  • Launcelot, and Sir Launcelot gave it to Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER XXXV. How Palomides came to the castle where Sir Tristram was,
  • and of the quest that Sir Launcelot and ten knights made for Sir
  • Tristram.
  • CHAPTER XXXVI. How Sir Tristram, Sir Palomides, and Sir Dinadan were
  • taken and put in prison.
  • CHAPTER XXXVII. How King Mark was sorry for the good renown of Sir
  • Tristram. Some of King Arthur's knights jousted with knights of
  • Cornwall.
  • CHAPTER XXXVIII. Of the treason of King Mark, and how Sir Gaheris
  • smote him down and Andred his cousin.
  • CHAPTER XXXIX. How after that Sir Tristram, Sir Palomides, and Sir
  • Dinadan had been long in prison they were delivered.
  • CHAPTER XL. How Sir Dinadan rescued a lady from Sir Breuse Saunce
  • Pite, and how Sir Tristram received a shield of Morgan le Fay.
  • CHAPTER XLI. How Sir Tristram took with him the shield, and also how
  • he slew the paramour of Morgan le Fay.
  • CHAPTER XLII. How Morgan le Fay buried her paramour, and how Sir
  • Tristram praised Sir Launcelot and his kin.
  • CHAPTER XLIII. How Sir Tristram at a tournament bare the shield that
  • Morgan le Fay delivered to him.
  • BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
  • The Morte D’Arthur was finished, as the epilogue tells us, in the ninth
  • year of Edward IV., i.e. between March 4, 1469 and the same date in
  • 1470. It is thus, fitly enough, the last important English book written
  • before the introduction of printing into this country, and since no
  • manuscript of it has come down to us it is also the first English
  • classic for our knowledge of which we are entirely dependent on a
  • printed text. Caxton’s story of how the book was brought to him and he
  • was induced to print it may be read farther on in his own preface. From
  • this we learn also that he was not only the printer of the book, but to
  • some extent its editor also, dividing Malory’s work into twenty-one
  • books, splitting up the books into chapters, by no means skilfully, and
  • supplying the “Rubrish” or chapter-headings. It may be added that
  • Caxton’s preface contains, moreover, a brief criticism which, on the
  • points on which it touches, is still the soundest and most sympathetic
  • that has been written.
  • Caxton finished his edition the last day of July 1485, some fifteen or
  • sixteen years after Malory wrote his epilogue. It is clear that the
  • author was then dead, or the printer would not have acted as a clumsy
  • editor to the book, and recent discoveries (if bibliography may, for
  • the moment, enlarge its bounds to mention such matters) have revealed
  • with tolerable certainty when Malory died and who he was. In letters to
  • The Athenaeum in July 1896 Mr. T. Williams pointed out that the name of
  • a Sir Thomas Malorie occurred among those of a number of other
  • Lancastrians excluded from a general pardon granted by Edward IV. in
  • 1468, and that a William Mallerye was mentioned in the same year as
  • taking part in a Lancastrian rising. In September 1897, again, in
  • another letter to the same paper, Mr. A. T. Martin reported the finding
  • of the will of a Thomas Malory of Papworth, a hundred partly in
  • Cambridgeshire, partly in Hunts. This will was made on September 16,
  • 1469, and as it was proved the 27th of the next month the testator must
  • have been in immediate expectation of death. It contains the most
  • careful provision for the education and starting in life of a family of
  • three daughters and seven sons, of whom the youngest seems to have been
  • still an infant. We cannot say with certainty that this Thomas Malory,
  • whose last thoughts were so busy for his children, was our author, or
  • that the Lancastrian knight discovered by Mr. Williams was identical
  • with either or both, but such evidence as the Morte D’Arthur offers
  • favours such a belief. There is not only the epilogue with its
  • petition, “pray for me while I am alive that God send me good
  • deliverance and when I am dead pray you all for my soul,” but this very
  • request is foreshadowed at the end of chap. 37 of Book ix. in the
  • touching passage, surely inspired by personal experience, as to the
  • sickness “that is the greatest pain a prisoner may have”; and the
  • reflections on English fickleness in the first chapter of Book xxi.,
  • though the Wars of the Roses might have inspired them in any one, come
  • most naturally from an author who was a Lancastrian knight.
  • If the Morte D’Arthur was really written in prison and by a prisoner
  • distressed by ill-health as well as by lack of liberty, surely no task
  • was ever better devised to while away weary hours. Leaving abundant
  • scope for originality in selection, modification, and arrangement, as a
  • compilation and translation it had in it that mechanical element which
  • adds the touch of restfulness to literary work. No original, it is
  • said, has yet been found for Book vii., and it is possible that none
  • will ever be forthcoming for chap. 20 of Book xviii., which describes
  • the arrival of the body of the Fair Maiden of Astolat at Arthur’s
  • court, or vii for chap. 25 of the same book, with its discourse on true
  • love; but the great bulk of the work has been traced chapter by chapter
  • to the “Merlin” of Robert de Borron and his successors (Bks. i.-iv.),
  • the English metrical romance La Morte Arthur of the Thornton manuscript
  • (Bk. v.), the French romances of Tristan (Bks. viii.-x.) and of
  • Launcelot (Bks. vi., xi.-xix.), and lastly to the English prose Morte
  • Arthur of Harley MS. 2252 (Bks. xviii., xx., xxi.). As to Malory’s
  • choice of his authorities critics have not failed to point out that now
  • and again he gives a worse version where a better has come down to us,
  • and if he had been able to order a complete set of Arthurian
  • manuscripts from his bookseller, no doubt he would have done even
  • better than he did! But of the skill, approaching to original genius,
  • with which he used the books from which he worked there is little
  • dispute.
  • Malory died leaving his work obviously unrevised, and in this condition
  • it was brought to Caxton, who prepared it for the press with his usual
  • enthusiasm in the cause of good literature, and also, it must be added,
  • with his usual carelessness. New chapters are sometimes made to begin
  • in the middle of a sentence, and in addition to simple misprints there
  • are numerous passages in which it is impossible to believe that we have
  • the text as Malory intended it to stand. After Caxton’s edition
  • Malory’s manuscript must have disappeared, and subsequent editions are
  • differentiated only by the degree of closeness with which they follow
  • the first. Editions appeared printed by Wynkyn de Worde in 1498 and
  • 1529, by William Copland in 1559, by Thomas East about 1585, and by
  • Thomas Stansby in 1634, each printer apparently taking the text of his
  • immediate predecessor and reproducing it with modifications. Stansby’s
  • edition served for reprints in 1816 and 1856 (the latter edited by
  • Thomas Wright); but in 1817 an edition supervised by Robert Southey
  • went back to Caxton’s text, though to a copy (only two are extant, and
  • only one perfect!) in which eleven leaves were supplied from Wynkyn de
  • Worde’s reprint. In 1868 Sir Edward Strachey produced for the present
  • publishers a reprint of Southey’s text in modern spelling, with the
  • substitution of current words for those now obsolete, and the softening
  • of a handful of passages likely, he thought, to prevent the book being
  • placed in the hands of boys. In 1889 a boon was conferred on scholars
  • by the publication of Dr. H. Oskar Sommer’s page-for-page reprint of
  • Caxton’s text, with an elaborate discussion of Malory’s sources. Dr.
  • Sommer’s edition was used by Sir E. Strachey to revise his Globe text,
  • and in 1897 Mr. Israel Gollancz produced for the “Temple Classics” a
  • very pretty edition in which Sir Edward Strachey’s principles of
  • modernisation in spelling and punctuation were adopted, but with the
  • restoration of obsolete words and omitted phrases. As to the present
  • edition, Sir Edward Strachey altered with so sparing a hand that on
  • many pages differences between his version and that here printed will
  • be looked for in vain; but the most anxious care has been taken to
  • produce a text modernised as to its spelling, but in other respects in
  • accurate accordance with Caxton’s text, as represented by Dr Sommer’s
  • reprint. Obvious misprints have been silently corrected, but in a few
  • cases notes show where emendations have been introduced from Wynkyn de
  • Worde—not that Wynkyn had any more right to emend Caxton than we, but
  • because even a printer’s conjecture gains a little sanctity after four
  • centuries. The restoration of obsolete words has necessitated a much
  • fuller glossary, and the index of names has therefore been separated
  • from it and enlarged. In its present form the index is the work of Mr.
  • Henry Littlehales.
  • A. W. POLLARD.
  • PREFACE OF WILLIAM CAXTON
  • After that I had accomplished and finished divers histories, as well of
  • contemplation as of other historial and worldly acts of great
  • conquerors and princes, and also certain books of ensamples and
  • doctrine, many noble and divers gentlemen of this realm of England came
  • and demanded me many and oft times, wherefore that I have not do made
  • and imprint the noble history of the Saint Greal, and of the most
  • renowned Christian king, first and chief of the three best Christian,
  • and worthy, King Arthur, which ought most to be remembered among us
  • Englishmen to-fore all other Christian kings; for it is notoyrly known
  • through the universal world, that there be nine worthy and the best
  • that ever were, that is to wit, three Paynims, three Jews, and three
  • Christian men. As for the Paynims, they were to-fore the Incarnation of
  • Christ, which were named, the first Hector of Troy, of whom the history
  • is comen both in ballad and in prose, the second Alexander the Great,
  • and the third Julius Caesar, Emperor of Rome, of whom the histories be
  • well known and had. And as for the three Jews, which also were to-fore
  • the incarnation of our Lord, of whom the first was duke Joshua which
  • brought the children of Israel into the land of behest, the second
  • David king of Jerusalem, and the third Judas Machabeus, of these three
  • the Bible rehearseth all their noble histories and acts. And since the
  • said Incarnation have been three noble Christian men, stalled and
  • admitted through the universal world into the number of the nine best
  • and worthy. Of whom was first the noble Arthur, whose noble acts I
  • purpose to write in this present book here following. The second was
  • Charlemain, or Charles the Great, of whom the history is had in many
  • places, both in French and in English. And the third and last was
  • Godfrey of Boloine, of whose acts and life I made a book unto the
  • excellent prince and king of noble memory, King Edward the Fourth.
  • The said noble gentlemen instantly required me to imprint the history
  • of the said noble king and conqueror King Arthur, and of his knights,
  • with the history of the Saint Greal, and of the death and ending of the
  • said Arthur; affirming that I ought rather to imprint his acts and
  • noble feats, than of Godfrey of Boloine, or any of the other eight,
  • considering that he was a man born within this realm, and king and
  • emperor of the same: and that there be in French divers and many noble
  • volumes of his acts, and also of his knights. To whom I answered that
  • divers men hold opinion that there was no such Arthur, and that all
  • such books as been made of him be feigned and fables, because that some
  • chronicles make of him no mention, nor remember him nothing, nor of his
  • knights. Whereto they answered, and one in special said, that in him
  • that should say or think that there was never such a king called Arthur
  • might well be aretted great folly and blindness. For he said that there
  • were many evidences of the contrary. First ye may see his sepulchre in
  • the monastery of Glastonbury. And also in Policronicon, in the fifth
  • book the sixth chapter, and in the seventh book the twenty-third
  • chapter, where his body was buried, and after found, and translated
  • into the said monastery. Ye shall see also in the history of Bochas, in
  • his book De Casu Principum, part of his noble acts, and also of his
  • fall. Also Galfridus in his British book recounteth his life: and in
  • divers places of England many remembrances be yet of him, and shall
  • remain perpetually, and also of his knights. First in the abbey of
  • Westminster, at St. Edward’s shrine, remaineth the print of his seal in
  • red wax closed in beryl, in which is written, Patricius Arthurus
  • Britannie, Gallie, Germanie, Dacie, Imperator. Item in the castle of
  • Dover ye may see Gawaine’s skull, and Cradok’s mantle: at Winchester
  • the Round Table: in other places Launcelot’s sword and many other
  • things. Then all these things considered, there can no man reasonably
  • gainsay but there was a king of this land named Arthur. For in all
  • places, Christian and heathen, he is reputed and taken for one of the
  • nine worthy, and the first of the three Christian men. And also, he is
  • more spoken of beyond the sea, more books made of his noble acts, than
  • there be in England, as well in Dutch, Italian, Spanish, and Greekish,
  • as in French. And yet of record remain in witness of him in Wales, in
  • the town of Camelot, the great stones and the marvellous works of iron
  • lying under the ground, and royal vaults, which divers now living have
  • seen. Wherefore it is a marvel why he is no more renowned in his own
  • country, save only it accordeth to the Word of God, which saith that no
  • man is accepted for a prophet in his own country.
  • Then all these things aforesaid alleged, I could not well deny but that
  • there was such a noble king named Arthur, and reputed one of the nine
  • worthy, and first and chief of the Christian men. And many noble
  • volumes be made of him and of his noble knights in French, which I have
  • seen and read beyond the sea, which be not had in our maternal tongue.
  • But in Welsh be many and also in French, and some in English but
  • nowhere nigh all. Wherefore, such as have late been drawn out briefly
  • into English I have after the simple conning that God hath sent to me,
  • under the favour and correction of all noble lords and gentlemen,
  • enprised to imprint a book of the noble histories of the said King
  • Arthur, and of certain of his knights, after a copy unto me delivered,
  • which copy Sir Thomas Malorye did take out of certain books of French,
  • and reduced it into English. And I, according to my copy, have done set
  • it in imprint, to the intent that noble men may see and learn the noble
  • acts of chivalry, the gentle and virtuous deeds that some knights used
  • in those days, by which they came to honour, and how they that were
  • vicious were punished and oft put to shame and rebuke; humbly
  • beseeching all noble lords and ladies, with all other estates of what
  • estate or degree they been of, that shall see and read in this said
  • book and work, that they take the good and honest acts in their
  • remembrance, and to follow the same. Wherein they shall find many
  • joyous and pleasant histories, and noble and renowned acts of humanity,
  • gentleness, and chivalry. For herein may be seen noble chivalry,
  • courtesy, humanity, friendliness, hardiness, love, friendship,
  • cowardice, murder, hate, virtue, and sin. Do after the good and leave
  • the evil, and it shall bring you to good fame and renown. And for to
  • pass the time this book shall be pleasant to read in, but for to give
  • faith and belief that all is true that is contained herein, ye be at
  • your liberty: but all is written for our doctrine, and for to beware
  • that we fall not to vice nor sin, but to exercise and follow virtue, by
  • which we may come and attain to good fame and renown in this life, and
  • after this short and transitory life to come unto everlasting bliss in
  • heaven; the which He grant us that reigneth in heaven, the blessed
  • Trinity. Amen.
  • Then to proceed forth in this said book, which I direct unto all noble
  • princes, lords and ladies, gentlemen or gentlewomen, that desire to
  • read or hear read of the noble and joyous history of the great
  • conqueror and excellent king, King Arthur, sometime king of this noble
  • realm, then called Britain; I, William Caxton, simple person, present
  • this book following, which I have enprised to imprint: and treateth of
  • the noble acts, feats of arms of chivalry, prowess, hardiness,
  • humanity, love, courtesy, and very gentleness, with many wonderful
  • histories and adventures. And for to understand briefly the content of
  • this volume, I have divided it into XXI Books, and every book
  • chaptered, as hereafter shall by God’s grace follow. The First Book
  • shall treat how Uther Pendragon gat the noble conqueror King Arthur,
  • and containeth xxviii chapters. The Second Book treateth of Balin the
  • noble knight, and containeth xix chapters. The Third Book treateth of
  • the marriage of King Arthur to Queen Guenever, with other matters, and
  • containeth xv chapters. The Fourth Book, how Merlin was assotted, and
  • of war made to King Arthur, and containeth xxix chapters. The Fifth
  • Book treateth of the conquest of Lucius the emperor, and containeth xii
  • chapters. The Sixth Book treateth of Sir Launcelot and Sir Lionel, and
  • marvellous adventures, and containeth xviii chapters. The Seventh Book
  • treateth of a noble knight called Sir Gareth, and named by Sir Kay
  • Beaumains, and containeth xxxvi chapters. The Eighth Book treateth of
  • the birth of Sir Tristram the noble knight, and of his acts, and
  • containeth xli chapters. The Ninth Book treateth of a knight named by
  • Sir Kay Le Cote Male Taille, and also of Sir Tristram, and containeth
  • xliv chapters. The Tenth Book treateth of Sir Tristram, and other
  • marvellous adventures, and containeth lxxxviii chapters. The Eleventh
  • Book treateth of Sir Launcelot and Sir Galahad, and containeth xiv
  • chapters. The Twelfth Book treateth of Sir Launcelot and his madness,
  • and containeth xiv chapters. The Thirteenth Book treateth how Galahad
  • came first to king Arthur’s court, and the quest how the Sangreal was
  • begun, and containeth xx chapters. The Fourteenth Book treateth of the
  • quest of the Sangreal, and containeth x chapters. The Fifteenth Book
  • treateth of Sir Launcelot, and containeth vi chapters. The Sixteenth
  • Book treateth of Sir Bors and Sir Lionel his brother, and containeth
  • xvii chapters. The Seventeenth Book treateth of the Sangreal, and
  • containeth xxiii chapters. The Eighteenth Book treateth of Sir
  • Launcelot and the queen, and containeth xxv chapters. The Nineteenth
  • Book treateth of Queen Guenever and Launcelot, and containeth xiii
  • chapters. The Twentieth Book treateth of the piteous death of Arthur,
  • and containeth xxii chapters. The Twenty-first Book treateth of his
  • last departing, and how Sir Launcelot came to revenge his death, and
  • containeth xiii chapters. The sum is twenty-one books, which contain
  • the sum of five hundred and seven chapters, as more plainly shall
  • follow hereafter.
  • BOOK I.
  • CHAPTER I. First, How Uther Pendragon sent for the duke of Cornwall and
  • Igraine his wife, and of their departing suddenly again.
  • It befell in the days of Uther Pendragon, when he was king of all
  • England, and so reigned, that there was a mighty duke in Cornwall that
  • held war against him long time. And the duke was called the Duke of
  • Tintagil. And so by means King Uther sent for this duke, charging him
  • to bring his wife with him, for she was called a fair lady, and a
  • passing wise, and her name was called Igraine.
  • So when the duke and his wife were come unto the king, by the means of
  • great lords they were accorded both. The king liked and loved this lady
  • well, and he made them great cheer out of measure, and desired to have
  • lain by her. But she was a passing good woman, and would not assent
  • unto the king. And then she told the duke her husband, and said, I
  • suppose that we were sent for that I should be dishonoured; wherefore,
  • husband, I counsel you, that we depart from hence suddenly, that we may
  • ride all night unto our own castle. And in like wise as she said so
  • they departed, that neither the king nor none of his council were ware
  • of their departing. All so soon as King Uther knew of their departing
  • so suddenly, he was wonderly wroth. Then he called to him his privy
  • council, and told them of the sudden departing of the duke and his
  • wife.
  • Then they advised the king to send for the duke and his wife by a great
  • charge; and if he will not come at your summons, then may ye do your
  • best, then have ye cause to make mighty war upon him. So that was done,
  • and the messengers had their answers; and that was this shortly, that
  • neither he nor his wife would not come at him.
  • Then was the king wonderly wroth. And then the king sent him plain word
  • again, and bade him be ready and stuff him and garnish him, for within
  • forty days he would fetch him out of the biggest castle that he hath.
  • When the duke had this warning, anon he went and furnished and
  • garnished two strong castles of his, of the which the one hight
  • Tintagil, and the other castle hight Terrabil. So his wife Dame Igraine
  • he put in the castle of Tintagil, and himself he put in the castle of
  • Terrabil, the which had many issues and posterns out. Then in all haste
  • came Uther with a great host, and laid a siege about the castle of
  • Terrabil. And there he pight many pavilions, and there was great war
  • made on both parties, and much people slain. Then for pure anger and
  • for great love of fair Igraine the king Uther fell sick. So came to the
  • king Uther Sir Ulfius, a noble knight, and asked the king why he was
  • sick. I shall tell thee, said the king, I am sick for anger and for
  • love of fair Igraine, that I may not be whole. Well, my lord, said Sir
  • Ulfius, I shall seek Merlin, and he shall do you remedy, that your
  • heart shall be pleased. So Ulfius departed, and by adventure he met
  • Merlin in a beggar’s array, and there Merlin asked Ulfius whom he
  • sought. And he said he had little ado to tell him. Well, said Merlin, I
  • know whom thou seekest, for thou seekest Merlin; therefore seek no
  • farther, for I am he; and if King Uther will well reward me, and be
  • sworn unto me to fulfil my desire, that shall be his honour and profit
  • more than mine; for I shall cause him to have all his desire. All this
  • will I undertake, said Ulfius, that there shall be nothing reasonable
  • but thou shalt have thy desire. Well, said Merlin, he shall have his
  • intent and desire. And therefore, said Merlin, ride on your way, for I
  • will not be long behind.
  • CHAPTER II. How Uther Pendragon made war on the duke of Cornwall, and
  • how by the mean of Merlin he lay by the duchess and gat Arthur.
  • Then Ulfius was glad, and rode on more than a pace till that he came to
  • King Uther Pendragon, and told him he had met with Merlin. Where is he?
  • said the king. Sir, said Ulfius, he will not dwell long. Therewithal
  • Ulfius was ware where Merlin stood at the porch of the pavilion’s door.
  • And then Merlin was bound to come to the king. When King Uther saw him,
  • he said he was welcome. Sir, said Merlin, I know all your heart every
  • deal; so ye will be sworn unto me as ye be a true king anointed, to
  • fulfil my desire, ye shall have your desire. Then the king was sworn
  • upon the Four Evangelists. Sir, said Merlin, this is my desire: the
  • first night that ye shall lie by Igraine ye shall get a child on her,
  • and when that is born, that it shall be delivered to me for to nourish
  • there as I will have it; for it shall be your worship, and the child’s
  • avail, as mickle as the child is worth. I will well, said the king, as
  • thou wilt have it. Now make you ready, said Merlin, this night ye shall
  • lie with Igraine in the castle of Tintagil; and ye shall be like the
  • duke her husband, Ulfius shall be like Sir Brastias, a knight of the
  • duke’s, and I will be like a knight that hight Sir Jordanus, a knight
  • of the duke’s. But wait ye make not many questions with her nor her
  • men, but say ye are diseased, and so hie you to bed, and rise not on
  • the morn till I come to you, for the castle of Tintagil is but ten
  • miles hence; so this was done as they devised. But the duke of Tintagil
  • espied how the king rode from the siege of Terrabil, and therefore that
  • night he issued out of the castle at a postern for to have distressed
  • the king’s host. And so, through his own issue, the duke himself was
  • slain or ever the king came at the castle of Tintagil.
  • So after the death of the duke, King Uther lay with Igraine more than
  • three hours after his death, and begat on her that night Arthur, and on
  • day came Merlin to the king, and bade him make him ready, and so he
  • kissed the lady Igraine and departed in all haste. But when the lady
  • heard tell of the duke her husband, and by all record he was dead or
  • ever King Uther came to her, then she marvelled who that might be that
  • lay with her in likeness of her lord; so she mourned privily and held
  • her peace. Then all the barons by one assent prayed the king of accord
  • betwixt the lady Igraine and him; the king gave them leave, for fain
  • would he have been accorded with her. So the king put all the trust in
  • Ulfius to entreat between them, so by the entreaty at the last the king
  • and she met together. Now will we do well, said Ulfius, our king is a
  • lusty knight and wifeless, and my lady Igraine is a passing fair lady;
  • it were great joy unto us all, an it might please the king to make her
  • his queen. Unto that they all well accorded and moved it to the king.
  • And anon, like a lusty knight, he assented thereto with good will, and
  • so in all haste they were married in a morning with great mirth and
  • joy.
  • And King Lot of Lothian and of Orkney then wedded Margawse that was
  • Gawaine’s mother, and King Nentres of the land of Garlot wedded Elaine.
  • All this was done at the request of King Uther. And the third sister
  • Morgan le Fay was put to school in a nunnery, and there she learned so
  • much that she was a great clerk of necromancy. And after she was wedded
  • to King Uriens of the land of Gore, that was Sir Ewain’s le
  • Blanchemain’s father.
  • CHAPTER III. Of the birth of King Arthur and of his nurture.
  • Then Queen Igraine waxed daily greater and greater, so it befell after
  • within half a year, as King Uther lay by his queen, he asked her, by
  • the faith she owed to him, whose was the body; then she sore abashed to
  • give answer. Dismay you not, said the king, but tell me the truth, and
  • I shall love you the better, by the faith of my body. Sir, said she, I
  • shall tell you the truth. The same night that my lord was dead, the
  • hour of his death, as his knights record, there came into my castle of
  • Tintagil a man like my lord in speech and in countenance, and two
  • knights with him in likeness of his two knights Brastias and Jordanus,
  • and so I went unto bed with him as I ought to do with my lord, and the
  • same night, as I shall answer unto God, this child was begotten upon
  • me. That is truth, said the king, as ye say; for it was I myself that
  • came in the likeness, and therefore dismay you not, for I am father of
  • the child; and there he told her all the cause, how it was by Merlin’s
  • counsel. Then the queen made great joy when she knew who was the father
  • of her child.
  • Soon came Merlin unto the king, and said, Sir, ye must purvey you for
  • the nourishing of your child. As thou wilt, said the king, be it. Well,
  • said Merlin, I know a lord of yours in this land, that is a passing
  • true man and a faithful, and he shall have the nourishing of your
  • child, and his name is Sir Ector, and he is a lord of fair livelihood
  • in many parts in England and Wales; and this lord, Sir Ector, let him
  • be sent for, for to come and speak with you, and desire him yourself,
  • as he loveth you, that he will put his own child to nourishing to
  • another woman, and that his wife nourish yours. And when the child is
  • born let it be delivered to me at yonder privy postern unchristened. So
  • like as Merlin devised it was done. And when Sir Ector was come he made
  • fiaunce to the king for to nourish the child like as the king desired;
  • and there the king granted Sir Ector great rewards. Then when the lady
  • was delivered, the king commanded two knights and two ladies to take
  • the child, bound in a cloth of gold, and that ye deliver him to what
  • poor man ye meet at the postern gate of the castle. So the child was
  • delivered unto Merlin, and so he bare it forth unto Sir Ector, and made
  • an holy man to christen him, and named him Arthur; and so Sir Ector’s
  • wife nourished him with her own pap.
  • CHAPTER IV. Of the death of King Uther Pendragon.
  • Then within two years King Uther fell sick of a great malady. And in
  • the meanwhile his enemies usurped upon him, and did a great battle upon
  • his men, and slew many of his people. Sir, said Merlin, ye may not lie
  • so as ye do, for ye must to the field though ye ride on an
  • horse-litter: for ye shall never have the better of your enemies but if
  • your person be there, and then shall ye have the victory. So it was
  • done as Merlin had devised, and they carried the king forth in an
  • horse-litter with a great host towards his enemies. And at St. Albans
  • there met with the king a great host of the North. And that day Sir
  • Ulfius and Sir Brastias did great deeds of arms, and King Uther’s men
  • overcame the Northern battle and slew many people, and put the remnant
  • to flight. And then the king returned unto London, and made great joy
  • of his victory. And then he fell passing sore sick, so that three days
  • and three nights he was speechless: wherefore all the barons made great
  • sorrow, and asked Merlin what counsel were best. There is none other
  • remedy, said Merlin, but God will have his will. But look ye all barons
  • be before King Uther to-morn, and God and I shall make him to speak. So
  • on the morn all the barons with Merlin came to-fore the king; then
  • Merlin said aloud unto King Uther, Sir, shall your son Arthur be king
  • after your days, of this realm with all the appurtenance? Then Uther
  • Pendragon turned him, and said in hearing of them all, I give him God’s
  • blessing and mine, and bid him pray for my soul, and righteously and
  • worshipfully that he claim the crown, upon forfeiture of my blessing;
  • and therewith he yielded up the ghost, and then was he interred as
  • longed to a king. Wherefore the queen, fair Igraine, made great sorrow,
  • and all the barons.
  • CHAPTER V. How Arthur was chosen king, and of wonders and marvels of a
  • sword taken out of a stone by the said Arthur.
  • Then stood the realm in great jeopardy long while, for every lord that
  • was mighty of men made him strong, and many weened to have been king.
  • Then Merlin went to the Archbishop of Canterbury, and counselled him
  • for to send for all the lords of the realm, and all the gentlemen of
  • arms, that they should to London come by Christmas, upon pain of
  • cursing; and for this cause, that Jesus, that was born on that night,
  • that he would of his great mercy show some miracle, as he was come to
  • be king of mankind, for to show some miracle who should be rightwise
  • king of this realm. So the Archbishop, by the advice of Merlin, sent
  • for all the lords and gentlemen of arms that they should come by
  • Christmas even unto London. And many of them made them clean of their
  • life, that their prayer might be the more acceptable unto God. So in
  • the greatest church of London, whether it were Paul’s or not the French
  • book maketh no mention, all the estates were long or day in the church
  • for to pray. And when matins and the first mass was done, there was
  • seen in the churchyard, against the high altar, a great stone four
  • square, like unto a marble stone; and in midst thereof was like an
  • anvil of steel a foot on high, and therein stuck a fair sword naked by
  • the point, and letters there were written in gold about the sword that
  • said thus:—Whoso pulleth out this sword of this stone and anvil, is
  • rightwise king born of all England. Then the people marvelled, and told
  • it to the Archbishop.
  • I command, said the Archbishop, that ye keep you within your church and
  • pray unto God still, that no man touch the sword till the high mass be
  • all done. So when all masses were done all the lords went to behold the
  • stone and the sword. And when they saw the scripture some assayed, such
  • as would have been king. But none might stir the sword nor move it. He
  • is not here, said the Archbishop, that shall achieve the sword, but
  • doubt not God will make him known. But this is my counsel, said the
  • Archbishop, that we let purvey ten knights, men of good fame, and they
  • to keep this sword. So it was ordained, and then there was made a cry,
  • that every man should assay that would, for to win the sword. And upon
  • New Year’s Day the barons let make a jousts and a tournament, that all
  • knights that would joust or tourney there might play, and all this was
  • ordained for to keep the lords together and the commons, for the
  • Archbishop trusted that God would make him known that should win the
  • sword.
  • So upon New Year’s Day, when the service was done, the barons rode unto
  • the field, some to joust and some to tourney, and so it happened that
  • Sir Ector, that had great livelihood about London, rode unto the
  • jousts, and with him rode Sir Kay his son, and young Arthur that was
  • his nourished brother; and Sir Kay was made knight at All Hallowmass
  • afore. So as they rode to the jousts-ward, Sir Kay lost his sword, for
  • he had left it at his father’s lodging, and so he prayed young Arthur
  • for to ride for his sword. I will well, said Arthur, and rode fast
  • after the sword, and when he came home, the lady and all were out to
  • see the jousting. Then was Arthur wroth, and said to himself, I will
  • ride to the churchyard, and take the sword with me that sticketh in the
  • stone, for my brother Sir Kay shall not be without a sword this day. So
  • when he came to the churchyard, Sir Arthur alighted and tied his horse
  • to the stile, and so he went to the tent, and found no knights there,
  • for they were at the jousting. And so he handled the sword by the
  • handles, and lightly and fiercely pulled it out of the stone, and took
  • his horse and rode his way until he came to his brother Sir Kay, and
  • delivered him the sword. And as soon as Sir Kay saw the sword, he wist
  • well it was the sword of the stone, and so he rode to his father Sir
  • Ector, and said: Sir, lo here is the sword of the stone, wherefore I
  • must be king of this land. When Sir Ector beheld the sword, he returned
  • again and came to the church, and there they alighted all three, and
  • went into the church. And anon he made Sir Kay swear upon a book how he
  • came to that sword. Sir, said Sir Kay, by my brother Arthur, for he
  • brought it to me. How gat ye this sword? said Sir Ector to Arthur. Sir,
  • I will tell you. When I came home for my brother’s sword, I found
  • nobody at home to deliver me his sword; and so I thought my brother Sir
  • Kay should not be swordless, and so I came hither eagerly and pulled it
  • out of the stone without any pain. Found ye any knights about this
  • sword? said Sir Ector. Nay, said Arthur. Now, said Sir Ector to Arthur,
  • I understand ye must be king of this land. Wherefore I, said Arthur,
  • and for what cause? Sir, said Ector, for God will have it so; for there
  • should never man have drawn out this sword, but he that shall be
  • rightwise king of this land. Now let me see whether ye can put the
  • sword there as it was, and pull it out again. That is no mastery, said
  • Arthur, and so he put it in the stone; wherewithal Sir Ector assayed to
  • pull out the sword and failed.
  • CHAPTER VI. How King Arthur pulled out the sword divers times.
  • Now assay, said Sir Ector unto Sir Kay. And anon he pulled at the sword
  • with all his might; but it would not be. Now shall ye assay, said Sir
  • Ector to Arthur. I will well, said Arthur, and pulled it out easily.
  • And therewithal Sir Ector knelt down to the earth, and Sir Kay. Alas,
  • said Arthur, my own dear father and brother, why kneel ye to me? Nay,
  • nay, my lord Arthur, it is not so; I was never your father nor of your
  • blood, but I wot well ye are of an higher blood than I weened ye were.
  • And then Sir Ector told him all, how he was betaken him for to nourish
  • him, and by whose commandment, and by Merlin’s deliverance.
  • Then Arthur made great dole when he understood that Sir Ector was not
  • his father. Sir, said Ector unto Arthur, will ye be my good and
  • gracious lord when ye are king? Else were I to blame, said Arthur, for
  • ye are the man in the world that I am most beholden to, and my good
  • lady and mother your wife, that as well as her own hath fostered me and
  • kept. And if ever it be God’s will that I be king as ye say, ye shall
  • desire of me what I may do, and I shall not fail you; God forbid I
  • should fail you Sir, said Sir Ector, I will ask no more of you, but
  • that ye will make my son, your foster brother, Sir Kay, seneschal of
  • all your lands. That shall be done, said Arthur, and more, by the faith
  • of my body, that never man shall have that office but he, while he and
  • I live Therewithal they went unto the Archbishop, and told him how the
  • sword was achieved, and by whom; and on Twelfth-day all the barons came
  • thither, and to assay to take the sword, who that would assay. But
  • there afore them all, there might none take it out but Arthur;
  • wherefore there were many lords wroth, and said it was great shame unto
  • them all and the realm, to be overgoverned with a boy of no high blood
  • born. And so they fell out at that time that it was put off till
  • Candlemas and then all the barons should meet there again; but always
  • the ten knights were ordained to watch the sword day and night, and so
  • they set a pavilion over the stone and the sword, and five always
  • watched. So at Candlemas many more great lords came thither for to have
  • won the sword, but there might none prevail. And right as Arthur did at
  • Christmas, he did at Candlemas, and pulled out the sword easily,
  • whereof the barons were sore aggrieved and put it off in delay till the
  • high feast of Easter. And as Arthur sped before, so did he at Easter;
  • yet there were some of the great lords had indignation that Arthur
  • should be king, and put it off in a delay till the feast of Pentecost.
  • Then the Archbishop of Canterbury by Merlin’s providence let purvey
  • then of the best knights that they might get, and such knights as Uther
  • Pendragon loved best and most trusted in his days. And such knights
  • were put about Arthur as Sir Baudwin of Britain, Sir Kay, Sir Ulfius,
  • Sir Brastias. All these, with many other, were always about Arthur, day
  • and night, till the feast of Pentecost.
  • CHAPTER VII. How King Arthur was crowned, and how he made officers.
  • And at the feast of Pentecost all manner of men assayed to pull at the
  • sword that would assay; but none might prevail but Arthur, and pulled
  • it out afore all the lords and commons that were there, wherefore all
  • the commons cried at once, We will have Arthur unto our king, we will
  • put him no more in delay, for we all see that it is God’s will that he
  • shall be our king, and who that holdeth against it, we will slay him.
  • And therewithal they kneeled at once, both rich and poor, and cried
  • Arthur mercy because they had delayed him so long, and Arthur forgave
  • them, and took the sword between both his hands, and offered it upon
  • the altar where the Archbishop was, and so was he made knight of the
  • best man that was there. And so anon was the coronation made. And there
  • was he sworn unto his lords and the commons for to be a true king, to
  • stand with true justice from thenceforth the days of this life. Also
  • then he made all lords that held of the crown to come in, and to do
  • service as they ought to do. And many complaints were made unto Sir
  • Arthur of great wrongs that were done since the death of King Uther, of
  • many lands that were bereaved lords, knights, ladies, and gentlemen.
  • Wherefore King Arthur made the lands to be given again unto them that
  • owned them.
  • When this was done, that the king had stablished all the countries
  • about London, then he let make Sir Kay seneschal of England; and Sir
  • Baudwin of Britain was made constable; and Sir Ulfius was made
  • chamberlain; and Sir Brastias was made warden to wait upon the north
  • from Trent forwards, for it was that time the most party the king’s
  • enemies. But within few years after Arthur won all the north, Scotland,
  • and all that were under their obeissance. Also Wales, a part of it,
  • held against Arthur, but he overcame them all, as he did the remnant,
  • through the noble prowess of himself and his knights of the Round
  • Table.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How King Arthur held in Wales, at a Pentecost, a great
  • feast, and what kings and lords came to his feast.
  • Then the king removed into Wales, and let cry a great feast that it
  • should be holden at Pentecost after the incoronation of him at the city
  • of Carlion. Unto the feast came King Lot of Lothian and of Orkney, with
  • five hundred knights with him. Also there came to the feast King Uriens
  • of Gore with four hundred knights with him. Also there came to that
  • feast King Nentres of Garlot, with seven hundred knights with him. Also
  • there came to the feast the king of Scotland with six hundred knights
  • with him, and he was but a young man. Also there came to the feast a
  • king that was called the King with the Hundred Knights, but he and his
  • men were passing well beseen at all points. Also there came the king of
  • Carados with five hundred knights. And King Arthur was glad of their
  • coming, for he weened that all the kings and knights had come for great
  • love, and to have done him worship at his feast; wherefore the king
  • made great joy, and sent the kings and knights great presents. But the
  • kings would none receive, but rebuked the messengers shamefully, and
  • said they had no joy to receive no gifts of a beardless boy that was
  • come of low blood, and sent him word they would none of his gifts, but
  • that they were come to give him gifts with hard swords betwixt the neck
  • and the shoulders: and therefore they came thither, so they told to the
  • messengers plainly, for it was great shame to all them to see such a
  • boy to have a rule of so noble a realm as this land was. With this
  • answer the messengers departed and told to King Arthur this answer.
  • Wherefore, by the advice of his barons, he took him to a strong tower
  • with five hundred good men with him. And all the kings aforesaid in a
  • manner laid a siege to-fore him, but King Arthur was well victualed.
  • And within fifteen days there came Merlin among them into the city of
  • Carlion. Then all the kings were passing glad of Merlin, and asked him,
  • For what cause is that boy Arthur made your king? Sirs, said Merlin, I
  • shall tell you the cause, for he is King Uther Pendragon’s son, born in
  • wedlock, gotten on Igraine, the duke’s wife of Tintagil. Then is he a
  • bastard, they said all. Nay, said Merlin, after the death of the duke,
  • more than three hours, was Arthur begotten, and thirteen days after
  • King Uther wedded Igraine; and therefore I prove him he is no bastard.
  • And who saith nay, he shall be king and overcome all his enemies; and,
  • or he die, he shall be long king of all England, and have under his
  • obeissance Wales, Ireland, and Scotland, and more realms than I will
  • now rehearse. Some of the kings had marvel of Merlin’s words, and
  • deemed well that it should be as he said; and some of them laughed him
  • to scorn, as King Lot; and more other called him a witch. But then were
  • they accorded with Merlin, that King Arthur should come out and speak
  • with the kings, and to come safe and to go safe, such surance there was
  • made. So Merlin went unto King Arthur, and told him how he had done,
  • and bade him fear not, but come out boldly and speak with them, and
  • spare them not, but answer them as their king and chieftain; for ye
  • shall overcome them all, whether they will or nill.
  • CHAPTER IX. Of the first war that King Arthur had, and how he won the
  • field.
  • Then King Arthur came out of his tower, and had under his gown a
  • jesseraunt of double mail, and there went with him the Archbishop of
  • Canterbury, and Sir Baudwin of Britain, and Sir Kay, and Sir Brastias:
  • these were the men of most worship that were with him. And when they
  • were met there was no meekness, but stout words on both sides; but
  • always King Arthur answered them, and said he would make them to bow an
  • he lived. Wherefore they departed with wrath, and King Arthur bade keep
  • them well, and they bade the king keep him well. So the king returned
  • him to the tower again and armed him and all his knights. What will ye
  • do? said Merlin to the kings; ye were better for to stint, for ye shall
  • not here prevail though ye were ten times so many. Be we well advised
  • to be afeared of a dream-reader? said King Lot. With that Merlin
  • vanished away, and came to King Arthur, and bade him set on them
  • fiercely; and in the meanwhile there were three hundred good men, of
  • the best that were with the kings, that went straight unto King Arthur,
  • and that comforted him greatly. Sir, said Merlin to Arthur, fight not
  • with the sword that ye had by miracle, till that ye see ye go unto the
  • worse, then draw it out and do your best. So forthwithal King Arthur
  • set upon them in their lodging. And Sir Baudwin, Sir Kay, and Sir
  • Brastias slew on the right hand and on the left hand that it was
  • marvel; and always King Arthur on horseback laid on with a sword, and
  • did marvellous deeds of arms, that many of the kings had great joy of
  • his deeds and hardiness.
  • Then King Lot brake out on the back side, and the King with the Hundred
  • Knights, and King Carados, and set on Arthur fiercely behind him. With
  • that Sir Arthur turned with his knights, and smote behind and before,
  • and ever Sir Arthur was in the foremost press till his horse was slain
  • underneath him. And therewith King Lot smote down King Arthur. With
  • that his four knights received him and set him on horseback. Then he
  • drew his sword Excalibur, but it was so bright in his enemies’ eyes,
  • that it gave light like thirty torches. And therewith he put them
  • a-back, and slew much people. And then the commons of Carlion arose
  • with clubs and staves and slew many knights; but all the kings held
  • them together with their knights that were left alive, and so fled and
  • departed. And Merlin came unto Arthur, and counselled him to follow
  • them no further.
  • CHAPTER X. How Merlin counselled King Arthur to send for King Ban and
  • King Bors, and of their counsel taken for the war.
  • So after the feast and journey, King Arthur drew him unto London, and
  • so by the counsel of Merlin, the king let call his barons to council,
  • for Merlin had told the king that the six kings that made war upon him
  • would in all haste be awroke on him and on his lands. Wherefore the
  • king asked counsel at them all. They could no counsel give, but said
  • they were big enough. Ye say well, said Arthur; I thank you for your
  • good courage, but will ye all that loveth me speak with Merlin? ye know
  • well that he hath done much for me, and he knoweth many things, and
  • when he is afore you, I would that ye prayed him heartily of his best
  • advice. All the barons said they would pray him and desire him. So
  • Merlin was sent for, and fair desired of all the barons to give them
  • best counsel. I shall say you, said Merlin, I warn you all, your
  • enemies are passing strong for you, and they are good men of arms as be
  • alive, and by this time they have gotten to them four kings more, and a
  • mighty duke; and unless that our king have more chivalry with him than
  • he may make within the bounds of his own realm, an he fight with them
  • in battle, he shall be overcome and slain. What were best to do in this
  • cause? said all the barons. I shall tell you, said Merlin, mine advice;
  • there are two brethren beyond the sea, and they be kings both, and
  • marvellous good men of their hands; and that one hight King Ban of
  • Benwick, and that other hight King Bors of Gaul, that is France. And on
  • these two kings warreth a mighty man of men, the King Claudas, and
  • striveth with them for a castle, and great war is betwixt them. But
  • this Claudas is so mighty of goods whereof he getteth good knights,
  • that he putteth these two kings most part to the worse; wherefore this
  • is my counsel, that our king and sovereign lord send unto the kings Ban
  • and Bors by two trusty knights with letters well devised, that an they
  • will come and see King Arthur and his court, and so help him in his
  • wars, that he will be sworn unto them to help them in their wars
  • against King Claudas. Now, what say ye unto this counsel? said Merlin.
  • This is well counselled, said the king and all the barons.
  • Right so in all haste there were ordained to go two knights on the
  • message unto the two kings. So were there made letters in the pleasant
  • wise according unto King Arthur’s desire. Ulfius and Brastias were made
  • the messengers, and so rode forth well horsed and well armed and as the
  • guise was that time, and so passed the sea and rode toward the city of
  • Benwick. And there besides were eight knights that espied them, and at
  • a strait passage they met with Ulfius and Brastias, and would have
  • taken them prisoners; so they prayed them that they might pass, for
  • they were messengers unto King Ban and Bors sent from King Arthur.
  • Therefore, said the eight knights, ye shall die or be prisoners, for we
  • be knights of King Claudas. And therewith two of them dressed their
  • spears, and Ulfius and Brastias dressed their spears, and ran together
  • with great raundom. And Claudas’ knights brake their spears, and theirs
  • to-held and bare the two knights out of their saddles to the earth, and
  • so left them lying, and rode their ways. And the other six knights rode
  • afore to a passage to meet with them again, and so Ulfius and Brastias
  • smote other two down, and so passed on their ways. And at the fourth
  • passage there met two for two, and both were laid unto the earth; so
  • there was none of the eight knights but he was sore hurt or bruised.
  • And when they come to Benwick it fortuned there were both kings, Ban
  • and Bors.
  • And when it was told the kings that there were come messengers, there
  • were sent unto them two knights of worship, the one hight Lionses, lord
  • of the country of Payarne, and Sir Phariance a worshipful knight. Anon
  • they asked from whence they came, and they said from King Arthur, king
  • of England; so they took them in their arms and made great joy each of
  • other. But anon, as the two kings wist they were messengers of
  • Arthur’s, there was made no tarrying, but forthwith they spake with the
  • knights, and welcomed them in the faithfullest wise, and said they were
  • most welcome unto them before all the kings living; and therewith they
  • kissed the letters and delivered them. And when Ban and Bors understood
  • the letters, then they were more welcome than they were before. And
  • after the haste of the letters they gave them this answer, that they
  • would fulfil the desire of King Arthur’s writing, and Ulfius and
  • Brastias, tarry there as long as they would, they should have such
  • cheer as might be made them in those marches. Then Ulfius and Brastias
  • told the kings of the adventure at their passages of the eight knights.
  • Ha! ah! said Ban and Bors, they were my good friends. I would I had
  • wist of them; they should not have escaped so. So Ulfius and Brastias
  • had good cheer and great gifts, as much as they might bear away; and
  • had their answer by mouth and by writing, that those two kings would
  • come unto Arthur in all the haste that they might. So the two knights
  • rode on afore, and passed the sea, and came to their lord, and told him
  • how they had sped, whereof King Arthur was passing glad. At what time
  • suppose ye the two kings will be here? Sir, said they, afore All
  • Hallowmass. Then the king let purvey for a great feast, and let cry a
  • great jousts. And by All Hallowmass the two kings were come over the
  • sea with three hundred knights well arrayed both for the peace and for
  • the war. And King Arthur met with them ten mile out of London, and
  • there was great joy as could be thought or made. And on All Hallowmass
  • at the great feast, sat in the hall the three kings, and Sir Kay
  • seneschal served in the hall, and Sir Lucas the butler, that was Duke
  • Corneus’ son, and Sir Griflet, that was the son of Cardol, these three
  • knights had the rule of all the service that served the kings. And
  • anon, as they had washen and risen, all knights that would joust made
  • them ready; by then they were ready on horseback there were seven
  • hundred knights. And Arthur, Ban, and Bors, with the Archbishop of
  • Canterbury, and Sir Ector, Kay’s father, they were in a place covered
  • with cloth of gold like an hall, with ladies and gentlewomen, for to
  • behold who did best, and thereon to give judgment.
  • CHAPTER XI. Of a great tourney made by King Arthur and the two kings
  • Ban and Bors, and how they went over the sea.
  • And King Arthur and the two kings let depart the seven hundred knights
  • in two parties. And there were three hundred knights of the realm of
  • Benwick and of Gaul turned on the other side. Then they dressed their
  • shields, and began to couch their spears many good knights. So Griflet
  • was the first that met with a knight, one Ladinas, and they met so
  • eagerly that all men had wonder; and they so fought that their shields
  • fell to pieces, and horse and man fell to the earth; and both the
  • French knight and the English knight lay so long that all men weened
  • they had been dead. When Lucas the butler saw Griflet so lie, he horsed
  • him again anon, and they two did marvellous deeds of arms with many
  • bachelors. Also Sir Kay came out of an ambushment with five knights
  • with him, and they six smote other six down. But Sir Kay did that day
  • marvellous deeds of arms, that there was none did so well as he that
  • day. Then there came Ladinas and Gracian, two knights of France, and
  • did passing well, that all men praised them.
  • Then came there Sir Placidas, a good knight, and met with Sir Kay, and
  • smote him down horse and man, where fore Sir Griflet was wroth, and met
  • with Sir Placidas so hard, that horse and man fell to the earth. But
  • when the five knights wist that Sir Kay had a fall, they were wroth out
  • of wit, and therewith each of them five bare down a knight. When King
  • Arthur and the two kings saw them begin to wax wroth on both parties,
  • they leapt on small hackneys, and let cry that all men should depart
  • unto their lodging. And so they went home and unarmed them, and so to
  • evensong and supper. And after, the three kings went into a garden, and
  • gave the prize unto Sir Kay, and to Lucas the butler, and unto Sir
  • Griflet. And then they went unto council, and with them Gwenbaus, the
  • brother unto Sir Ban and Bors, a wise clerk, and thither went Ulfius
  • and Brastias, and Merlin. And after they had been in council, they went
  • unto bed. And on the morn they heard mass, and to dinner, and so to
  • their council, and made many arguments what were best to do. At the
  • last they were concluded, that Merlin should go with a token of King
  • Ban, and that was a ring, unto his men and King Bors’; and Gracian and
  • Placidas should go again and keep their castles and their countries, as
  • for [dread of King Claudas] King Ban of Benwick, and King Bors of Gaul
  • had ordained them, and so passed the sea and came to Benwick. And when
  • the people saw King Ban’s ring, and Gracian and Placidas, they were
  • glad, and asked how the kings fared, and made great joy of their
  • welfare and cording, and according unto the sovereign lords desire, the
  • men of war made them ready in all haste possible, so that they were
  • fifteen thousand on horse and foot, and they had great plenty of
  • victual with them, by Merlin’s provision. But Gracian and Placidas were
  • left to furnish and garnish the castles, for dread of King Claudas.
  • Right so Merlin passed the sea, well victualled both by water and by
  • land. And when he came to the sea he sent home the footmen again, and
  • took no more with him but ten thousand men on horseback, the most part
  • men of arms, and so shipped and passed the sea into England, and landed
  • at Dover; and through the wit of Merlin, he had the host northward, the
  • priviest way that could be thought, unto the forest of Bedegraine, and
  • there in a valley he lodged them secretly.
  • Then rode Merlin unto Arthur and the two kings, and told them how he
  • had sped; whereof they had great marvel, that man on earth might speed
  • so soon, and go and come. So Merlin told them ten thousand were in the
  • forest of Bedegraine, well armed at all points. Then was there no more
  • to say, but to horseback went all the host as Arthur had afore
  • purveyed. So with twenty thousand he passed by night and day, but there
  • was made such an ordinance afore by Merlin, that there should no man of
  • war ride nor go in no country on this side Trent water, but if he had a
  • token from King Arthur, where through the king’s enemies durst not ride
  • as they did to-fore to espy.
  • CHAPTER XII. How eleven kings gathered a great host against King
  • Arthur.
  • And so within a little space the three kings came unto the castle of
  • Bedegraine, and found there a passing fair fellowship, and well beseen,
  • whereof they had great joy, and victual they wanted none. This was the
  • cause of the northern host: that they were reared for the despite and
  • rebuke the six kings had at Carlion. And those six kings by their
  • means, gat unto them five other kings; and thus they began to gather
  • their people.
  • And now they sware that for weal nor woe, they should not leave other,
  • till they had destroyed Arthur. And then they made an oath. The first
  • that began the oath was the Duke of Cambenet, that he would bring with
  • him five thousand men of arms, the which were ready on horseback. Then
  • sware King Brandegoris of Stranggore that he would bring five thousand
  • men of arms on horseback. Then sware King Clariance of Northumberland
  • he would bring three thousand men of arms. Then sware the King of the
  • Hundred Knights, that was a passing good man and a young, that he would
  • bring four thousand men of arms on horseback. Then there swore King
  • Lot, a passing good knight, and Sir Gawain’s father, that he would
  • bring five thousand men of arms on horseback. Also there swore King
  • Urience, that was Sir Uwain’s father, of the land of Gore, and he would
  • bring six thousand men of arms on horseback. Also there swore King
  • Idres of Cornwall, that he would bring five thousand men of arms on
  • horseback. Also there swore King Cradelmas to bring five thousand men
  • on horseback. Also there swore King Agwisance of Ireland to bring five
  • thousand men of arms on horseback. Also there swore King Nentres to
  • bring five thousand men of arms on horseback. Also there swore King
  • Carados to bring five thousand men of arms on horseback. So their whole
  • host was of clean men of arms on horseback fifty thousand, and a-foot
  • ten thousand of good men’s bodies. Then were they soon ready, and
  • mounted upon horse and sent forth their fore-riders, for these eleven
  • kings in their ways laid a siege unto the castle of Bedegraine; and so
  • they departed and drew toward Arthur, and left few to abide at the
  • siege, for the castle of Bedegraine was holden of King Arthur, and the
  • men that were therein were Arthur’s.
  • CHAPTER XIII. Of a dream of the King with the Hundred Knights.
  • So by Merlin’s advice there were sent fore-riders to skim the country,
  • and they met with the fore-riders of the north, and made them to tell
  • which way the host came, and then they told it to Arthur, and by King
  • Ban and Bors’ council they let burn and destroy all the country afore
  • them, there they should ride.
  • The King with the Hundred Knights met a wonder dream two nights afore
  • the battle, that there blew a great wind, and blew down their castles
  • and their towns, and after that came a water and bare it all away. All
  • that heard of the sweven said it was a token of great battle. Then by
  • counsel of Merlin, when they wist which way the eleven kings would ride
  • and lodge that night, at midnight they set upon them, as they were in
  • their pavilions. But the scout-watch by their host cried, Lords! at
  • arms! for here be your enemies at your hand!
  • CHAPTER XIV. How the eleven kings with their host fought against Arthur
  • and his host, and many great feats of the war.
  • Then King Arthur and King Ban and King Bors, with their good and trusty
  • knights, set on them so fiercely that they made them overthrow their
  • pavilions on their heads, but the eleven kings, by manly prowess of
  • arms, took a fair champaign, but there was slain that morrowtide ten
  • thousand good men’s bodies. And so they had afore them a strong
  • passage, yet were they fifty thousand of hardy men. Then it drew toward
  • day. Now shall ye do by mine advice, said Merlin unto the three kings:
  • I would that King Ban and King Bors, with their fellowship of ten
  • thousand men, were put in a wood here beside, in an ambushment, and
  • keep them privy, and that they be laid or the light of the day come,
  • and that they stir not till ye and your knights have fought with them
  • long. And when it is daylight, dress your battle even afore them and
  • the passage, that they may see all your host, for then will they be the
  • more hardy, when they see you but about twenty thousand men, and cause
  • them to be the gladder to suffer you and your host to come over the
  • passage. All the three kings and the whole barons said that Merlin said
  • passingly well, and it was done anon as Merlin had devised. So on the
  • morn, when either host saw other, the host of the north was well
  • comforted. Then to Ulfius and Brastias were delivered three thousand
  • men of arms, and they set on them fiercely in the passage, and slew on
  • the right hand and on the left hand that it was wonder to tell.
  • When that the eleven kings saw that there was so few a fellowship did
  • such deeds of arms, they were ashamed and set on them again fiercely;
  • and there was Sir Ulfius’s horse slain under him, but he did
  • marvellously well on foot. But the Duke Eustace of Cambenet and King
  • Clariance of Northumberland, were alway grievous on Ulfius. Then
  • Brastias saw his fellow fared so withal he smote the duke with a spear,
  • that horse and man fell down. That saw King Clariance and returned unto
  • Brastias, and either smote other so that horse and man went to the
  • earth, and so they lay long astonied, and their horses’ knees brast to
  • the hard bone. Then came Sir Kay the seneschal with six fellows with
  • him, and did passing well. With that came the eleven kings, and there
  • was Griflet put to the earth, horse and man, and Lucas the butler,
  • horse and man, by King Brandegoris, and King Idres, and King Agwisance.
  • Then waxed the medley passing hard on both parties. When Sir Kay saw
  • Griflet on foot, he rode on King Nentres and smote him down, and led
  • his horse unto Sir Griflet, and horsed him again. Also Sir Kay with the
  • same spear smote down King Lot, and hurt him passing sore. That saw the
  • King with the Hundred Knights, and ran unto Sir Kay and smote him down,
  • and took his horse, and gave him King Lot, whereof he said gramercy.
  • When Sir Griflet saw Sir Kay and Lucas the butler on foot, he took a
  • sharp spear, great and square, and rode to Pinel, a good man of arms,
  • and smote horse and man down, and then he took his horse, and gave him
  • unto Sir Kay. Then King Lot saw King Nentres on foot, he ran unto Melot
  • de la Roche, and smote him down, horse and man, and gave King Nentres
  • the horse, and horsed him again. Also the King of the Hundred Knights
  • saw King Idres on foot; then he ran unto Gwiniart de Bloi, and smote
  • him down, horse and man, and gave King Idres the horse, and horsed him
  • again; and King Lot smote down Clariance de la Forest Savage, and gave
  • the horse unto Duke Eustace. And so when they had horsed the kings
  • again they drew them, all eleven kings, together, and said they would
  • be revenged of the damage that they had taken that day. The meanwhile
  • came in Sir Ector with an eager countenance, and found Ulfius and
  • Brastias on foot, in great peril of death, that were foul defoiled
  • under horse-feet.
  • Then Arthur as a lion, ran unto King Cradelment of North Wales, and
  • smote him through the left side, that the horse and the king fell down;
  • and then he took the horse by the rein, and led him unto Ulfius, and
  • said, Have this horse, mine old friend, for great need hast thou of
  • horse. Gramercy, said Ulfius. Then Sir Arthur did so marvellously in
  • arms, that all men had wonder. When the King with the Hundred Knights
  • saw King Cradelment on foot, he ran unto Sir Ector, that was well
  • horsed, Sir Kay’s father, and smote horse and man down, and gave the
  • horse unto the king, and horsed him again. And when King Arthur saw the
  • king ride on Sir Ector’s horse, he was wroth and with his sword he
  • smote the king on the helm, that a quarter of the helm and shield fell
  • down, and so the sword carved down unto the horse’s neck, and so the
  • king and the horse fell down to the ground. Then Sir Kay came unto Sir
  • Morganore, seneschal with the King of the Hundred Knights, and smote
  • him down, horse and man, and led the horse unto his father, Sir Ector;
  • then Sir Ector ran unto a knight, hight Lardans, and smote horse and
  • man down, and led the horse unto Sir Brastias, that great need had of
  • an horse, and was greatly defoiled. When Brastias beheld Lucas the
  • butler, that lay like a dead man under the horses’ feet, and ever Sir
  • Griflet did marvellously for to rescue him, and there were always
  • fourteen knights on Sir Lucas; then Brastias smote one of them on the
  • helm, that it went to the teeth, and he rode to another and smote him,
  • that the arm flew into the field. Then he went to the third and smote
  • him on the shoulder, that shoulder and arm flew in the field. And when
  • Griflet saw rescues, he smote a knight on the temples, that head and
  • helm went to the earth, and Griflet took the horse of that knight, and
  • led him unto Sir Lucas, and bade him mount upon the horse and revenge
  • his hurts. For Brastias had slain a knight to-fore and horsed Griflet.
  • CHAPTER XV. Yet of the same battle.
  • Then Lucas saw King Agwisance, that late had slain Moris de la Roche,
  • and Lucas ran to him with a short spear that was great, that he gave
  • him such a fall, that the horse fell down to the earth. Also Lucas
  • found there on foot, Bloias de La Flandres, and Sir Gwinas, two hardy
  • knights, and in that woodness that Lucas was in, he slew two bachelors
  • and horsed them again. Then waxed the battle passing hard on both
  • parties, but Arthur was glad that his knights were horsed again, and
  • then they fought together, that the noise and sound rang by the water
  • and the wood. Wherefore King Ban and King Bors made them ready, and
  • dressed their shields and harness, and they were so courageous that
  • many knights shook and bevered for eagerness. All this while Lucas, and
  • Gwinas, and Briant, and Bellias of Flanders, held strong medley against
  • six kings, that was King Lot, King Nentres, King Brandegoris, King
  • Idres, King Uriens, and King Agwisance. So with the help of Sir Kay and
  • of Sir Griflet they held these six kings hard, that unnethe they had
  • any power to defend them. But when Sir Arthur saw the battle would not
  • be ended by no manner, he fared wood as a lion, and steered his horse
  • here and there, on the right hand, and on the left hand, that he
  • stinted not till he had slain twenty knights. Also he wounded King Lot
  • sore on the shoulder, and made him to leave that ground, for Sir Kay
  • and Griflet did with King Arthur there great deeds of arms. Then
  • Ulfius, and Brastias, and Sir Ector encountered against the Duke
  • Eustace, and King Cradelment, and King Clariance of Northumberland, and
  • King Carados, and against the King with the Hundred Knights. So these
  • knights encountered with these kings, that they made them to avoid the
  • ground. Then King Lot made great dole for his damages and his fellows,
  • and said unto the ten kings, But if ye will do as I devise we shall be
  • slain and destroyed; let me have the King with the Hundred Knights, and
  • King Agwisance, and King Idres, and the Duke of Cambenet, and we five
  • kings will have fifteen thousand men of arms with us, and we will go
  • apart while ye six kings hold medley with twelve thousand; an we see
  • that ye have foughten with them long, then will we come on fiercely,
  • and else shall we never match them, said King Lot, but by this mean. So
  • they departed as they here devised, and six kings made their party
  • strong against Arthur, and made great war long.
  • In the meanwhile brake the ambushment of King Ban and King Bors, and
  • Lionses and Phariance had the vanguard, and they two knights met with
  • King Idres and his fellowship, and there began a great medley of
  • breaking of spears, and smiting of swords, with slaying of men and
  • horses, and King Idres was near at discomforture.
  • That saw Agwisance the king, and put Lionses and Phariance in point of
  • death; for the Duke of Cambenet came on withal with a great fellowship.
  • So these two knights were in great danger of their lives that they were
  • fain to return, but always they rescued themselves and their fellowship
  • marvellously When King Bors saw those knights put aback, it grieved him
  • sore; then he came on so fast that his fellowship seemed as black as
  • Inde. When King Lot had espied King Bors, he knew him well, then he
  • said, O Jesu, defend us from death and horrible maims! for I see well
  • we be in great peril of death; for I see yonder a king, one of the most
  • worshipfullest men and one of the best knights of the world, is
  • inclined unto his fellowship. What is he? said the King with the
  • Hundred Knights. It is, said King Lot, King Bors of Gaul; I marvel how
  • they came into this country without witting of us all. It was by
  • Merlin’s advice, said the knight. As for him, said King Carados, I will
  • encounter with King Bors, an ye will rescue me when myster is. Go on,
  • said they all, we will do all that we may. Then King Carados and his
  • host rode on a soft pace, till that they came as nigh King Bors as
  • bow-draught; then either battle let their horse run as fast as they
  • might. And Bleoberis, that was godson unto King Bors, he bare his chief
  • standard, that was a passing good knight. Now shall we see, said King
  • Bors, how these northern Britons can bear the arms: and King Bors
  • encountered with a knight, and smote him throughout with a spear that
  • he fell dead unto the earth; and after drew his sword and did
  • marvellous deeds of arms, that all parties had great wonder thereof;
  • and his knights failed not, but did their part, and King Carados was
  • smitten to the earth. With that came the King with the Hundred Knights
  • and rescued King Carados mightily by force of arms, for he was a
  • passing good knight of a king, and but a young man.
  • CHAPTER XVI. Yet more of the same battle.
  • By then came into the field King Ban as fierce as a lion, with bands of
  • green and thereupon gold. Ha! a! said King Lot, we must be discomfited,
  • for yonder I see the most valiant knight of the world, and the man of
  • the most renown, for such two brethren as is King Ban and King Bors are
  • not living, wherefore we must needs void or die; and but if we avoid
  • manly and wisely there is but death. When King Ban came into the
  • battle, he came in so fiercely that the strokes redounded again from
  • the wood and the water; wherefore King Lot wept for pity and dole that
  • he saw so many good knights take their end. But through the great force
  • of King Ban they made both the northern battles that were departed
  • hurtled together for great dread; and the three kings and their knights
  • slew on ever, that it was pity on to behold that multitude of the
  • people that fled. But King Lot, and King of the Hundred Knights, and
  • King Morganore gathered the people together passing knightly, and did
  • great prowess of arms, and held the battle all that day, like hard.
  • When the King of the Hundred Knights beheld the great damage that King
  • Ban did, he thrust unto him with his horse, and smote him on high upon
  • the helm, a great stroke, and astonied him sore. Then King Ban was
  • wroth with him, and followed on him fiercely; the other saw that, and
  • cast up his shield, and spurred his horse forward, but the stroke of
  • King Ban fell down and carved a cantel off the shield, and the sword
  • slid down by the hauberk behind his back, and cut through the trapping
  • of steel and the horse even in two pieces, that the sword felt the
  • earth. Then the King of the Hundred Knights voided the horse lightly,
  • and with his sword he broached the horse of King Ban through and
  • through. With that King Ban voided lightly from the dead horse, and
  • then King Ban smote at the other so eagerly, and smote him on the helm
  • that he fell to the earth. Also in that ire he felled King Morganore,
  • and there was great slaughter of good knights and much people. By then
  • came into the press King Arthur, and found King Ban standing among dead
  • men and dead horses, fighting on foot as a wood lion, that there came
  • none nigh him, as far as he might reach with his sword, but he caught a
  • grievous buffet; whereof King Arthur had great pity. And Arthur was so
  • bloody, that by his shield there might no man know him, for all was
  • blood and brains on his sword. And as Arthur looked by him he saw a
  • knight that was passingly well horsed, and therewith Sir Arthur ran to
  • him, and smote him on the helm, that his sword went unto his teeth, and
  • the knight sank down to the earth dead, and anon Arthur took the horse
  • by the rein, and led him unto King Ban, and said, Fair brother, have
  • this horse, for he have great myster thereof, and me repenteth sore of
  • your great damage. It shall be soon revenged, said King Ban, for I
  • trust in God mine ure is not such but some of them may sore repent
  • this. I will well, said Arthur, for I see your deeds full actual;
  • nevertheless, I might not come at you at that time.
  • But when King Ban was mounted on horseback, then there began new
  • battle, the which was sore and hard, and passing great slaughter. And
  • so through great force King Arthur, King Ban, and King Bors made their
  • knights a little to withdraw them. But alway the eleven kings with
  • their chivalry never turned back; and so withdrew them to a little
  • wood, and so over a little river, and there they rested them, for on
  • the night they might have no rest on the field. And then the eleven
  • kings and knights put them on a heap all together, as men adread and
  • out of all comfort. But there was no man might pass them, they held
  • them so hard together both behind and before, that King Arthur had
  • marvel of their deeds of arms, and was passing wroth. Ah, Sir Arthur,
  • said King Ban and King Bors, blame them not, for they do as good men
  • ought to do. For by my faith, said King Ban, they are the best fighting
  • men, and knights of most prowess, that ever I saw or heard speak of,
  • and those eleven kings are men of great worship; and if they were
  • longing unto you there were no king under the heaven had such eleven
  • knights, and of such worship. I may not love them, said Arthur, they
  • would destroy me. That wot we well, said King Ban and King Bors, for
  • they are your mortal enemies, and that hath been proved aforehand; and
  • this day they have done their part, and that is great pity of their
  • wilfulness.
  • Then all the eleven kings drew them together, and then said King Lot,
  • Lords, ye must other ways than ye do, or else the great loss is behind;
  • ye may see what people we have lost, and what good men we lose, because
  • we wait always on these foot-men, and ever in saving of one of the
  • foot-men we lose ten horsemen for him; therefore this is mine advice,
  • let us put our foot-men from us, for it is near night, for the noble
  • Arthur will not tarry on the footmen, for they may save themselves, the
  • wood is near hand. And when we horsemen be together, look every each of
  • you kings let make such ordinance that none break upon pain of death.
  • And who that seeth any man dress him to flee, lightly that he be slain,
  • for it is better that we slay a coward, than through a coward all we to
  • be slain. How say ye? said King Lot, answer me all ye kings. It is well
  • said, quoth King Nentres; so said the King of the Hundred Knights; the
  • same said the King Carados, and King Uriens; so did King Idres and King
  • Brandegoris; and so did King Cradelment, and the Duke of Cambenet; the
  • same said King Clariance and King Agwisance, and sware they would never
  • fail other, neither for life nor for death. And whoso that fled, but
  • did as they did, should be slain. Then they amended their harness, and
  • righted their shields, and took new spears and set them on their
  • thighs, and stood still as it had been a plump of wood.
  • CHAPTER XVII. Yet more of the same battle, and how it was ended by
  • Merlin.
  • When Sir Arthur and King Ban and Bors beheld them and all their
  • knights, they praised them much for their noble cheer of chivalry, for
  • the hardiest fighters that ever they heard or saw. With that, there
  • dressed them a forty noble knights, and said unto the three kings, they
  • would break their battle; these were their names: Lionses, Phariance,
  • Ulfius, Brastias, Ector, Kay, Lucas the butler, Griflet le Fise de
  • Dieu, Mariet de la Roche, Guinas de Bloi, Briant de la Forest Savage,
  • Bellaus, Morians of the Castle [of] Maidens, Flannedrius of the Castle
  • of Ladies, Annecians that was King Bors’ godson, a noble knight,
  • Ladinas de la Rouse, Emerause, Caulas, Graciens le Castlein, one Blois
  • de la Case, and Sir Colgrevaunce de Gorre; all these knights rode on
  • afore with spears on their thighs, and spurred their horses mightily as
  • the horses might run. And the eleven kings with part of their knights
  • rushed with their horses as fast as they might with their spears, and
  • there they did on both parties marvellous deeds of arms. So came into
  • the thick of the press, Arthur, Ban, and Bors, and slew down right on
  • both hands, that their horses went in blood up to the fetlocks. But
  • ever the eleven kings and their host was ever in the visage of Arthur.
  • Wherefore Ban and Bors had great marvel, considering the great
  • slaughter that there was, but at the last they were driven aback over a
  • little river. With that came Merlin on a great black horse, and said
  • unto Arthur, Thou hast never done! Hast thou not done enough? of three
  • score thousand this day hast thou left alive but fifteen thousand, and
  • it is time to say Ho! For God is wroth with thee, that thou wilt never
  • have done; for yonder eleven kings at this time will not be overthrown,
  • but an thou tarry on them any longer, thy fortune will turn and they
  • shall increase. And therefore withdraw you unto your lodging, and rest
  • you as soon as ye may, and reward your good knights with gold and with
  • silver, for they have well deserved it; there may no riches be too dear
  • for them, for of so few men as ye have, there were never men did more
  • of prowess than they have done today, for ye have matched this day with
  • the best fighters of the world. That is truth, said King Ban and Bors.
  • Also said Merlin, withdraw you where ye list, for this three year I
  • dare undertake they shall not dere you; and by then ye shall hear new
  • tidings. And then Merlin said unto Arthur, These eleven kings have more
  • on hand than they are ware of, for the Saracens are landed in their
  • countries, more than forty thousand, that burn and slay, and have laid
  • siege at the castle Wandesborow, and make great destruction; therefore
  • dread you not this three year. Also, sir, all the goods that be gotten
  • at this battle, let it be searched, and when ye have it in your hands,
  • let it be given freely unto these two kings, Ban and Bors, that they
  • may reward their knights withal; and that shall cause strangers to be
  • of better will to do you service at need. Also you be able to reward
  • your own knights of your own goods whensomever it liketh you. It is
  • well said, quoth Arthur, and as thou hast devised, so shall it be done.
  • When it was delivered to Ban and Bors, they gave the goods as freely to
  • their knights as freely as it was given to them. Then Merlin took his
  • leave of Arthur and of the two kings, for to go and see his master
  • Bleise, that dwelt in Northumberland; and so he departed and came to
  • his master, that was passing glad of his coming; and there he told how
  • Arthur and the two kings had sped at the great battle, and how it was
  • ended, and told the names of every king and knight of worship that was
  • there. And so Bleise wrote the battle word by word, as Merlin told him,
  • how it began, and by whom, and in likewise how it was ended, and who
  • had the worse. All the battles that were done in Arthur’s days Merlin
  • did his master Bleise do write; also he did do write all the battles
  • that every worthy knight did of Arthur’s court.
  • After this Merlin departed from his master and came to King Arthur,
  • that was in the castle of Bedegraine, that was one of the castles that
  • stand in the forest of Sherwood. And Merlin was so disguised that King
  • Arthur knew him not, for he was all befurred in black sheep-skins, and
  • a great pair of boots, and a bow and arrows, in a russet gown, and
  • brought wild geese in his hand, and it was on the morn after Candlemas
  • day; but King Arthur knew him not. Sir, said Merlin unto the king, will
  • ye give me a gift? Wherefore, said King Arthur, should I give thee a
  • gift, churl? Sir, said Merlin, ye were better to give me a gift that is
  • not in your hand than to lose great riches, for here in the same place
  • where the great battle was, is great treasure hid in the earth. Who
  • told thee so, churl? said Arthur. Merlin told me so, said he. Then
  • Ulfius and Brastias knew him well enough, and smiled. Sir, said these
  • two knights, it is Merlin that so speaketh unto you. Then King Arthur
  • was greatly abashed, and had marvel of Merlin, and so had King Ban and
  • King Bors, and so they had great disport at him. So in the meanwhile
  • there came a damosel that was an earl’s daughter: his name was Sanam,
  • and her name was Lionors, a passing fair damosel; and so she came
  • thither for to do homage, as other lords did after the great battle.
  • And King Arthur set his love greatly upon her, and so did she upon him,
  • and the king had ado with her, and gat on her a child: his name was
  • Borre, that was after a good knight, and of the Table Round. Then there
  • came word that the King Rience of North Wales made great war on King
  • Leodegrance of Cameliard, for the which thing Arthur was wroth, for he
  • loved him well, and hated King Rience, for he was alway against him. So
  • by ordinance of the three kings that were sent home unto Benwick, all
  • they would depart for dread of King Claudas; and Phariance, and
  • Antemes, and Gratian, and Lionses [of] Payarne, with the leaders of
  • those that should keep the kings’ lands.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How King Arthur, King Ban, and King Bors rescued King
  • Leodegrance, and other incidents.
  • And then King Arthur, and King Ban, and King Bors departed with their
  • fellowship, a twenty thousand, and came within six days into the
  • country of Cameliard, and there rescued King Leodegrance, and slew
  • there much people of King Rience, unto the number of ten thousand men,
  • and put him to flight. And then had these three kings great cheer of
  • King Leodegrance, that thanked them of their great goodness, that they
  • would revenge him of his enemies; and there had Arthur the first sight
  • of Guenever, the king’s daughter of Cameliard, and ever after he loved
  • her. After they were wedded, as it telleth in the book. So, briefly to
  • make an end, they took their leave to go into their own countries, for
  • King Claudas did great destruction on their lands. Then said Arthur, I
  • will go with you. Nay, said the kings, ye shall not at this time, for
  • ye have much to do yet in these lands, therefore we will depart, and
  • with the great goods that we have gotten in these lands by your gifts,
  • we shall wage good knights and withstand the King Claudas’ malice, for
  • by the grace of God, an we have need we will send to you for your
  • succour; and if ye have need, send for us, and we will not tarry, by
  • the faith of our bodies. It shall not, said Merlin, need that these two
  • kings come again in the way of war, but I know well King Arthur may not
  • be long from you, for within a year or two ye shall have great need,
  • and then shall he revenge you on your enemies, as ye have done on his.
  • For these eleven kings shall die all in a day, by the great might and
  • prowess of arms of two valiant knights (as it telleth after); their
  • names be Balin le Savage, and Balan, his brother, that be marvellous
  • good knights as be any living.
  • Now turn we to the eleven kings that returned unto a city that hight
  • Sorhaute, the which city was within King Uriens’, and there they
  • refreshed them as well as they might, and made leeches search their
  • wounds, and sorrowed greatly for the death of their people. With that
  • there came a messenger and told how there was come into their lands
  • people that were lawless as well as Saracens, a forty thousand, and
  • have burnt and slain all the people that they may come by, without
  • mercy, and have laid siege on the castle of Wandesborow. Alas, said the
  • eleven kings, here is sorrow upon sorrow, and if we had not warred
  • against Arthur as we have done, he would soon revenge us. As for King
  • Leodegrance, he loveth Arthur better than us, and as for King Rience,
  • he hath enough to do with Leodegrance, for he hath laid siege unto him.
  • So they consented together to keep all the marches of Cornwall, of
  • Wales, and of the North. So first, they put King Idres in the City of
  • Nauntes in Britain, with four thousand men of arms, to watch both the
  • water and the land. Also they put in the city of Windesan, King Nentres
  • of Garlot, with four thousand knights to watch both on water and on
  • land. Also they had of other men of war more than eight thousand, for
  • to fortify all the fortresses in the marches of Cornwall. Also they put
  • more knights in all the marches of Wales and Scotland, with many good
  • men of arms, and so they kept them together the space of three year,
  • and ever allied them with mighty kings and dukes and lords. And to them
  • fell King Rience of North Wales, the which and Nero that was a mighty
  • man of men. And all this while they furnished them and garnished them
  • of good men of arms, and victual, and of all manner of habiliment that
  • pretendeth to the war, to avenge them for the battle of Bedegraine, as
  • it telleth in the book of adventures following.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How King Arthur rode to Carlion, and of his dream, and how
  • he saw the questing beast.
  • Then after the departing of King Ban and of King Bors, King Arthur rode
  • into Carlion. And thither came to him, King Lot’s wife, of Orkney, in
  • manner of a message, but she was sent thither to espy the court of King
  • Arthur; and she came richly beseen, with her four sons, Gawaine,
  • Gaheris, Agravine, and Gareth, with many other knights and ladies. For
  • she was a passing fair lady, therefore the king cast great love unto
  • her, and desired to lie by her; so they were agreed, and he begat upon
  • her Mordred, and she was his sister, on his mother’s side, Igraine. So
  • there she rested her a month, and at the last departed. Then the king
  • dreamed a marvellous dream whereof he was sore adread. But all this
  • time King Arthur knew not that King Lot’s wife was his sister. Thus was
  • the dream of Arthur: Him thought there was come into this land griffins
  • and serpents, and him thought they burnt and slew all the people in the
  • land, and then him thought he fought with them, and they did him
  • passing great harm, and wounded him full sore, but at the last he slew
  • them. When the king awaked, he was passing heavy of his dream, and so
  • to put it out of thoughts, he made him ready with many knights to ride
  • a-hunting. As soon as he was in the forest the king saw a great hart
  • afore him. This hart will I chase, said King Arthur, and so he spurred
  • the horse, and rode after long, and so by fine force oft he was like to
  • have smitten the hart; whereas the king had chased the hart so long,
  • that his horse lost his breath, and fell down dead. Then a yeoman
  • fetched the king another horse.
  • So the king saw the hart enbushed, and his horse dead, he set him down
  • by a fountain, and there he fell in great thoughts. And as he sat so,
  • him thought he heard a noise of hounds, to the sum of thirty. And with
  • that the king saw coming toward him the strangest beast that ever he
  • saw or heard of; so the beast went to the well and drank, and the noise
  • was in the beast’s belly like unto the questing of thirty couple
  • hounds; but all the while the beast drank there was no noise in the
  • beast’s belly: and there with the beast departed with a great noise,
  • whereof the king had great marvel. And so he was in a great thought,
  • and therewith he fell asleep. Right so there came a knight afoot unto
  • Arthur and said, Knight full of thought and sleepy, tell me if thou
  • sawest a strange beast pass this way. Such one saw I, said King Arthur,
  • that is past two mile; what would ye with the beast? said Arthur. Sir,
  • I have followed that beast long time, and killed mine horse, so would
  • God I had another to follow my quest. Right so came one with the king’s
  • horse, and when the knight saw the horse, he prayed the king to give
  • him the horse: for I have followed this quest this twelvemonth, and
  • either I shall achieve him, or bleed of the best blood of my body.
  • Pellinore, that time king, followed the Questing Beast, and after his
  • death Sir Palamides followed it.
  • CHAPTER XX. How King Pellinore took Arthur’s horse and followed the
  • Questing Beast, and how Merlin met with Arthur.
  • Sir knight, said the king, leave that quest, and suffer me to have it,
  • and I will follow it another twelvemonth. Ah, fool, said the knight
  • unto Arthur, it is in vain thy desire, for it shall never be achieved
  • but by me, or my next kin. Therewith he started unto the king’s horse
  • and mounted into the saddle, and said, Gramercy, this horse is my own.
  • Well, said the king, thou mayst take my horse by force, but an I might
  • prove thee whether thou were better on horseback or I.—Well, said the
  • knight, seek me here when thou wilt, and here nigh this well thou shalt
  • find me, and so passed on his way. Then the king sat in a study, and
  • bade his men fetch his horse as fast as ever they might. Right so came
  • by him Merlin like a child of fourteen year of age, and saluted the
  • king, and asked him why he was so pensive. I may well be pensive, said
  • the king, for I have seen the marvellest sight that ever I saw. That
  • know I well, said Merlin, as well as thyself, and of all thy thoughts,
  • but thou art but a fool to take thought, for it will not amend thee.
  • Also I know what thou art, and who was thy father, and of whom thou
  • wert begotten; King Uther Pendragon was thy father, and begat thee on
  • Igraine. That is false, said King Arthur, how shouldest thou know it,
  • for thou art not so old of years to know my father? Yes, said Merlin, I
  • know it better than ye or any man living. I will not believe thee, said
  • Arthur, and was wroth with the child. So departed Merlin, and came
  • again in the likeness of an old man of fourscore year of age, whereof
  • the king was right glad, for he seemed to be right wise.
  • Then said the old man, Why are ye so sad? I may well be heavy, said
  • Arthur, for many things. Also here was a child, and told me many things
  • that meseemeth he should not know, for he was not of age to know my
  • father. Yes, said the old man, the child told you truth, and more would
  • he have told you an ye would have suffered him. But ye have done a
  • thing late that God is displeased with you, for ye have lain by your
  • sister, and on her ye have gotten a child that shall destroy you and
  • all the knights of your realm. What are ye, said Arthur, that tell me
  • these tidings? I am Merlin, and I was he in the child’s likeness. Ah,
  • said King Arthur, ye are a marvellous man, but I marvel much of thy
  • words that I must die in battle. Marvel not, said Merlin, for it is
  • God’s will your body to be punished for your foul deeds; but I may well
  • be sorry, said Merlin, for I shall die a shameful death, to be put in
  • the earth quick, and ye shall die a worshipful death. And as they
  • talked this, came one with the king’s horse, and so the king mounted on
  • his horse, and Merlin on another, and so rode unto Carlion. And anon
  • the king asked Ector and Ulfius how he was begotten, and they told him
  • Uther Pendragon was his father and Queen Igraine his mother. Then he
  • said to Merlin, I will that my mother be sent for that I may speak with
  • her; and if she say so herself then will I believe it. In all haste,
  • the queen was sent for, and she came and brought with her Morgan le
  • Fay, her daughter, that was as fair a lady as any might be, and the
  • king welcomed Igraine in the best manner.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How Ulfius impeached Queen Igraine, Arthur’s mother, of
  • treason; and how a knight came and desired to have the death of his
  • master revenged.
  • Right so came Ulfius, and said openly, that the king and all might hear
  • that were feasted that day, Ye are the falsest lady of the world, and
  • the most traitress unto the king’s person. Beware, said Arthur, what
  • thou sayest; thou speakest a great word. I am well ware, said Ulfius,
  • what I speak, and here is my glove to prove it upon any man that will
  • say the contrary, that this Queen Igraine is causer of your great
  • damage, and of your great war. For, an she would have uttered it in the
  • life of King Uther Pendragon, of the birth of you, and how ye were
  • begotten ye had never had the mortal wars that ye have had; for the
  • most part of your barons of your realm knew never whose son ye were,
  • nor of whom ye were begotten; and she that bare you of her body should
  • have made it known openly in excusing of her worship and yours, and in
  • like wise to all the realm, wherefore I prove her false to God and to
  • you and to all your realm, and who will say the contrary I will prove
  • it on his body.
  • Then spake Igraine and said, I am a woman and I may not fight, but
  • rather than I should be dishonoured, there would some good man take my
  • quarrel. More, she said, Merlin knoweth well, and ye Sir Ulfius, how
  • King Uther came to me in the Castle of Tintagil in the likeness of my
  • lord, that was dead three hours to-fore, and thereby gat a child that
  • night upon me. And after the thirteenth day King Uther wedded me, and
  • by his commandment when the child was born it was delivered unto Merlin
  • and nourished by him, and so I saw the child never after, nor wot not
  • what is his name, for I knew him never yet. And there, Ulfius said to
  • the queen, Merlin is more to blame than ye. Well I wot, said the queen,
  • I bare a child by my lord King Uther, but I wot not where he is become.
  • Then Merlin took the king by the hand, saying, This is your mother. And
  • therewith Sir Ector bare witness how he nourished him by Uther’s
  • commandment. And therewith King Arthur took his mother, Queen Igraine,
  • in his arms and kissed her, and either wept upon other. And then the
  • king let make a feast that lasted eight days.
  • Then on a day there came in the court a squire on horseback, leading a
  • knight before him wounded to the death, and told him how there was a
  • knight in the forest had reared up a pavilion by a well, and hath slain
  • my master, a good knight, his name was Miles; wherefore I beseech you
  • that my master may be buried, and that some knight may revenge my
  • master’s death. Then the noise was great of that knight’s death in the
  • court, and every man said his advice. Then came Griflet that was but a
  • squire, and he was but young, of the age of the king Arthur, so he
  • besought the king for all his service that he had done him to give the
  • order of knighthood.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How Griflet was made knight, and jousted with a knight.
  • Thou art full young and tender of age, said Arthur, for to take so high
  • an order on thee. Sir, said Griflet, I beseech you make me knight. Sir,
  • said Merlin, it were great pity to lose Griflet, for he will be a
  • passing good man when he is of age, abiding with you the term of his
  • life. And if he adventure his body with yonder knight at the fountain,
  • it is in great peril if ever he come again, for he is one of the best
  • knights of the world, and the strongest man of arms. Well, said Arthur.
  • So at the desire of Griflet the king made him knight. Now, said Arthur
  • unto Sir Griflet, sith I have made you knight thou must give me a gift.
  • What ye will, said Griflet. Thou shalt promise me by the faith of thy
  • body, when thou hast jousted with the knight at the fountain, whether
  • it fall ye be on foot or on horseback, that right so ye shall come
  • again unto me without making any more debate. I will promise you, said
  • Griflet, as you desire. Then took Griflet his horse in great haste, and
  • dressed his shield and took a spear in his hand, and so he rode a great
  • wallop till he came to the fountain, and thereby he saw a rich
  • pavilion, and thereby under a cloth stood a fair horse well saddled and
  • bridled, and on a tree a shield of divers colours and a great spear.
  • Then Griflet smote on the shield with the butt of his spear, that the
  • shield fell down to the ground. With that the knight came out of the
  • pavilion, and said, Fair knight, why smote ye down my shield? For I
  • will joust with you, said Griflet. It is better ye do not, said the
  • knight, for ye are but young, and late made knight, and your might is
  • nothing to mine. As for that, said Griflet, I will joust with you. That
  • is me loath, said the knight, but sith I must needs, I will dress me
  • thereto. Of whence be ye? said the knight. Sir, I am of Arthur’s court.
  • So the two knights ran together that Griflet’s spear all to-shivered;
  • and there withal he smote Griflet through the shield and the left side,
  • and brake the spear that the truncheon stuck in his body, that horse
  • and knight fell down.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How twelve knights came from Rome and asked truage for
  • this land of Arthur, and how Arthur fought with a knight.
  • When the knight saw him lie so on the ground, he alighted, and was
  • passing heavy, for he weened he had slain him, and then he unlaced his
  • helm and gat him wind, and so with the truncheon he set him on his
  • horse, and so betook him to God, and said he had a mighty heart, and if
  • he might live he would prove a passing good knight. And so Sir Griflet
  • rode to the court, where great dole was made for him. But through good
  • leeches he was healed and saved. Right so came into the court twelve
  • knights, and were aged men, and they came from the Emperor of Rome, and
  • they asked of Arthur truage for this realm, other else the emperor
  • would destroy him and his land. Well, said King Arthur, ye are
  • messengers, therefore ye may say what ye will, other else ye should die
  • therefore. But this is mine answer: I owe the emperor no truage, nor
  • none will I hold him, but on a fair field I shall give him my truage
  • that shall be with a sharp spear, or else with a sharp sword, and that
  • shall not be long, by my father’s soul, Uther Pendragon. And therewith
  • the messengers departed passingly wroth, and King Arthur as wroth, for
  • in evil time came they then; for the king was passingly wroth for the
  • hurt of Sir Griflet. And so he commanded a privy man of his chamber
  • that or it be day his best horse and armour, with all that longeth unto
  • his person, be without the city or to-morrow day. Right so or to-morrow
  • day he met with his man and his horse, and so mounted up and dressed
  • his shield and took his spear, and bade his chamberlain tarry there
  • till he came again. And so Arthur rode a soft pace till it was day, and
  • then was he ware of three churls chasing Merlin, and would have slain
  • him. Then the king rode unto them, and bade them: Flee, churls! then
  • were they afeard when they saw a knight, and fled. O Merlin, said
  • Arthur, here hadst thou been slain for all thy crafts had I not been.
  • Nay, said Merlin, not so, for I could save myself an I would; and thou
  • art more near thy death than I am, for thou goest to the deathward, an
  • God be not thy friend.
  • So as they went thus talking they came to the fountain, and the rich
  • pavilion there by it. Then King Arthur was ware where sat a knight
  • armed in a chair. Sir knight, said Arthur, for what cause abidest thou
  • here, that there may no knight ride this way but if he joust with thee?
  • said the king. I rede thee leave that custom, said Arthur. This custom,
  • said the knight, have I used and will use maugre who saith nay, and who
  • is grieved with my custom let him amend it that will. I will amend it,
  • said Arthur. I shall defend thee, said the knight. Anon he took his
  • horse and dressed his shield and took a spear, and they met so hard
  • either in other’s shields, that all to-shivered their spears. Therewith
  • anon Arthur pulled out his sword. Nay, not so, said the knight; it is
  • fairer, said the knight, that we twain run more together with sharp
  • spears. I will well, said Arthur, an I had any more spears. I have
  • enow, said the knight; so there came a squire and brought two good
  • spears, and Arthur chose one and he another; so they spurred their
  • horses and came together with all their mights, that either brake their
  • spears to their hands. Then Arthur set hand on his sword. Nay, said the
  • knight, ye shall do better, ye are a passing good jouster as ever I met
  • withal, and once for the love of the high order of knighthood let us
  • joust once again. I assent me, said Arthur. Anon there were brought two
  • great spears, and every knight gat a spear, and therewith they ran
  • together that Arthur’s spear all to-shivered. But the other knight hit
  • him so hard in midst of the shield, that horse and man fell to the
  • earth, and therewith Arthur was eager, and pulled out his sword, and
  • said, I will assay thee, sir knight, on foot, for I have lost the
  • honour on horseback. I will be on horseback, said the knight. Then was
  • Arthur wroth, and dressed his shield toward him with his sword drawn.
  • When the knight saw that, he alighted, for him thought no worship to
  • have a knight at such avail, he to be on horseback and he on foot, and
  • so he alighted and dressed his shield unto Arthur. And there began a
  • strong battle with many great strokes, and so hewed with their swords
  • that the cantels flew in the fields, and much blood they bled both,
  • that all the place there as they fought was overbled with blood, and
  • thus they fought long and rested them, and then they went to the battle
  • again, and so hurtled together like two rams that either fell to the
  • earth. So at the last they smote together that both their swords met
  • even together. But the sword of the knight smote King Arthur’s sword in
  • two pieces, wherefore he was heavy. Then said the knight unto Arthur,
  • Thou art in my daunger whether me list to save thee or slay thee, and
  • but thou yield thee as overcome and recreant, thou shalt die. As for
  • death, said King Arthur, welcome be it when it cometh, but to yield me
  • unto thee as recreant I had liefer die than to be so shamed. And
  • therewithal the king leapt unto Pellinore, and took him by the middle
  • and threw him down, and raced off his helm. When the knight felt that
  • he was adread, for he was a passing big man of might, and anon he
  • brought Arthur under him, and raced off his helm and would have smitten
  • off his head.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Merlin saved Arthur’s life, and threw an enchantment
  • on King Pellinore and made him to sleep.
  • Therewithal came Merlin and said, Knight, hold thy hand, for an thou
  • slay that knight thou puttest this realm in the greatest damage that
  • ever was realm: for this knight is a man of more worship than thou
  • wotest of. Why, who is he? said the knight. It is King Arthur. Then
  • would he have slain him for dread of his wrath, and heaved up his
  • sword, and therewith Merlin cast an enchantment to the knight, that he
  • fell to the earth in a great sleep. Then Merlin took up King Arthur,
  • and rode forth on the knight’s horse. Alas! said Arthur, what hast thou
  • done, Merlin? hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts? There
  • liveth not so worshipful a knight as he was; I had liefer than the
  • stint of my land a year that he were alive. Care ye not, said Merlin,
  • for he is wholer than ye; for he is but asleep, and will awake within
  • three hours. I told you, said Merlin, what a knight he was; here had ye
  • been slain had I not been. Also there liveth not a bigger knight than
  • he is one, and he shall hereafter do you right good service; and his
  • name is Pellinore, and he shall have two sons that shall be passing
  • good men; save one they shall have no fellow of prowess and of good
  • living, and their names shall be Percivale of Wales and Lamerake of
  • Wales, and he shall tell you the name of your own son, begotten of your
  • sister, that shall be the destruction of all this realm.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Arthur by the mean of Merlin gat Excalibur his sword
  • of the Lady of the Lake.
  • Right so the king and he departed, and went unto an hermit that was a
  • good man and a great leech. So the hermit searched all his wounds and
  • gave him good salves; so the king was there three days, and then were
  • his wounds well amended that he might ride and go, and so departed. And
  • as they rode, Arthur said, I have no sword. No force, said Merlin,
  • hereby is a sword that shall be yours, an I may. So they rode till they
  • came to a lake, the which was a fair water and broad, and in the midst
  • of the lake Arthur was ware of an arm clothed in white samite, that
  • held a fair sword in that hand. Lo! said Merlin, yonder is that sword
  • that I spake of. With that they saw a damosel going upon the lake. What
  • damosel is that? said Arthur. That is the Lady of the Lake, said
  • Merlin; and within that lake is a rock, and therein is as fair a place
  • as any on earth, and richly beseen; and this damosel will come to you
  • anon, and then speak ye fair to her that she will give you that sword.
  • Anon withal came the damosel unto Arthur, and saluted him, and he her
  • again. Damosel, said Arthur, what sword is that, that yonder the arm
  • holdeth above the water? I would it were mine, for I have no sword. Sir
  • Arthur, king, said the damosel, that sword is mine, and if ye will give
  • me a gift when I ask it you, ye shall have it. By my faith, said
  • Arthur, I will give you what gift ye will ask. Well! said the damosel,
  • go ye into yonder barge, and row yourself to the sword, and take it and
  • the scabbard with you, and I will ask my gift when I see my time. So
  • Sir Arthur and Merlin alighted and tied their horses to two trees, and
  • so they went into the ship, and when they came to the sword that the
  • hand held, Sir Arthur took it up by the handles, and took it with him,
  • and the arm and the hand went under the water. And so [they] came unto
  • the land and rode forth, and then Sir Arthur saw a rich pavilion. What
  • signifieth yonder pavilion? It is the knight’s pavilion, said Merlin,
  • that ye fought with last, Sir Pellinore; but he is out, he is not
  • there. He hath ado with a knight of yours that hight Egglame, and they
  • have foughten together, but at the last Egglame fled, and else he had
  • been dead, and he hath chased him even to Carlion, and we shall meet
  • with him anon in the highway. That is well said, said Arthur, now have
  • I a sword, now will I wage battle with him, and be avenged on him. Sir,
  • you shall not so, said Merlin, for the knight is weary of fighting and
  • chasing, so that ye shall have no worship to have ado with him; also he
  • will not be lightly matched of one knight living, and therefore it is
  • my counsel, let him pass, for he shall do you good service in short
  • time, and his sons after his days. Also ye shall see that day in short
  • space, you shall be right glad to give him your sister to wed. When I
  • see him, I will do as ye advise, said Arthur.
  • Then Sir Arthur looked on the sword, and liked it passing well. Whether
  • liketh you better, said Merlin, the sword or the scabbard? Me liketh
  • better the sword, said Arthur. Ye are more unwise, said Merlin, for the
  • scabbard is worth ten of the swords, for whiles ye have the scabbard
  • upon you, ye shall never lose no blood, be ye never so sore wounded;
  • therefore keep well the scabbard always with you. So they rode unto
  • Carlion, and by the way they met with Sir Pellinore; but Merlin had
  • done such a craft, that Pellinore saw not Arthur, and he passed by
  • without any words. I marvel, said Arthur, that the knight would not
  • speak. Sir, said Merlin, he saw you not, for an he had seen you, ye had
  • not lightly departed. So they came unto Carlion, whereof his knights
  • were passing glad. And when they heard of his adventures, they
  • marvelled that he would jeopard his person so, alone. But all men of
  • worship said it was merry to be under such a chieftain, that would put
  • his person in adventure as other poor knights did.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How tidings came to Arthur that King Rience had overcome
  • eleven kings, and how he desired Arthur’s beard to trim his mantle.
  • This meanwhile came a messenger from King Rience of North Wales, and
  • king he was of all Ireland, and of many isles. And this was his
  • message, greeting well King Arthur in this manner wise, saying that
  • King Rience had discomfited and overcome eleven kings, and everych of
  • them did him homage, and that was this, they gave him their beards
  • clean flayed off, as much as there was; wherefore the messenger came
  • for King Arthur’s beard. For King Rience had purfled a mantle with
  • kings’ beards, and there lacked one place of the mantle; wherefore he
  • sent for his beard, or else he would enter into his lands, and burn and
  • slay, and never leave till he have the head and the beard. Well, said
  • Arthur, thou hast said thy message, the which is the most villainous
  • and lewdest message that ever man heard sent unto a king; also thou
  • mayest see my beard is full young yet to make a purfle of it. But tell
  • thou thy king this: I owe him none homage, nor none of mine elders; but
  • or it be long to, he shall do me homage on both his knees, or else he
  • shall lose his head, by the faith of my body, for this is the most
  • shamefulest message that ever I heard speak of. I have espied thy king
  • met never yet with worshipful man, but tell him, I will have his head
  • without he do me homage. Then the messenger departed.
  • Now is there any here, said Arthur, that knoweth King Rience? Then
  • answered a knight that hight Naram, Sir, I know the king well; he is a
  • passing good man of his body, as few be living, and a passing proud
  • man, and Sir, doubt ye not he will make war on you with a mighty
  • puissance. Well, said Arthur, I shall ordain for him in short time.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How all the children were sent for that were born on
  • May-day, and how Mordred was saved.
  • Then King Arthur let send for all the children born on May-day,
  • begotten of lords and born of ladies; for Merlin told King Arthur that
  • he that should destroy him should be born on May-day, wherefore he sent
  • for them all, upon pain of death; and so there were found many lords’
  • sons, and all were sent unto the king, and so was Mordred sent by King
  • Lot’s wife, and all were put in a ship to the sea, and some were four
  • weeks old, and some less. And so by fortune the ship drave unto a
  • castle, and was all to-riven, and destroyed the most part, save that
  • Mordred was cast up, and a good man found him, and nourished him till
  • he was fourteen year old, and then he brought him to the court, as it
  • rehearseth afterward, toward the end of the Death of Arthur. So many
  • lords and barons of this realm were displeased, for their children were
  • so lost, and many put the wite on Merlin more than on Arthur; so what
  • for dread and for love, they held their peace. But when the messenger
  • came to King Rience, then was he wood out of measure, and purveyed him
  • for a great host, as it rehearseth after in the book of Balin le
  • Savage, that followeth next after, how by adventure Balin gat the
  • sword.
  • Explicit liber primus.
  • BOOK II.
  • CHAPTER I. Of a damosel which came girt with a sword for to find a man
  • of such virtue to draw it out of the scabbard.
  • After the death of Uther Pendragon reigned Arthur his son, the which
  • had great war in his days for to get all England into his hand. For
  • there were many kings within the realm of England, and in Wales,
  • Scotland, and Cornwall. So it befell on a time when King Arthur was at
  • London, there came a knight and told the king tidings how that the King
  • Rience of North Wales had reared a great number of people, and were
  • entered into the land, and burnt and slew the king’s true liege people.
  • If this be true, said Arthur, it were great shame unto mine estate but
  • that he were mightily withstood. It is truth, said the knight, for I
  • saw the host myself. Well, said the king, let make a cry, that all the
  • lords, knights, and gentlemen of arms, should draw unto a castle called
  • Camelot in those days, and there the king would let make a
  • council-general and a great jousts.
  • So when the king was come thither with all his baronage, and lodged as
  • they seemed best, there was come a damosel the which was sent on
  • message from the great lady Lile of Avelion. And when she came before
  • King Arthur, she told from whom she came, and how she was sent on
  • message unto him for these causes. Then she let her mantle fall that
  • was richly furred; and then was she girt with a noble sword whereof the
  • king had marvel, and said, Damosel, for what cause are ye girt with
  • that sword? it beseemeth you not. Now shall I tell you, said the
  • damosel; this sword that I am girt withal doth me great sorrow and
  • cumbrance, for I may not be delivered of this sword but by a knight,
  • but he must be a passing good man of his hands and of his deeds, and
  • without villainy or treachery, and without treason. And if I may find
  • such a knight that hath all these virtues, he may draw out this sword
  • out of the sheath, for I have been at King Rience’s it was told me
  • there were passing good knights, and he and all his knights have
  • assayed it and none can speed. This is a great marvel, said Arthur, if
  • this be sooth; I will myself assay to draw out the sword, not presuming
  • upon myself that I am the best knight, but that I will begin to draw at
  • your sword in giving example to all the barons that they shall assay
  • everych one after other when I have assayed it. Then Arthur took the
  • sword by the sheath and by the girdle and pulled at it eagerly, but the
  • sword would not out.
  • Sir, said the damosel, you need not to pull half so hard, for he that
  • shall pull it out shall do it with little might. Ye say well, said
  • Arthur; now assay ye all my barons; but beware ye be not defiled with
  • shame, treachery, nor guile. Then it will not avail, said the damosel,
  • for he must be a clean knight without villainy, and of a gentle strain
  • of father side and mother side. Most of all the barons of the Round
  • Table that were there at that time assayed all by row, but there might
  • none speed; wherefore the damosel made great sorrow out of measure, and
  • said, Alas! I weened in this court had been the best knights without
  • treachery or treason. By my faith, said Arthur, here are good knights,
  • as I deem, as any be in the world, but their grace is not to help you,
  • wherefore I am displeased.
  • CHAPTER II. How Balin, arrayed like a poor knight, pulled out the
  • sword, which afterward was the cause of his death.
  • Then fell it so that time there was a poor knight with King Arthur,
  • that had been prisoner with him half a year and more for slaying of a
  • knight, the which was cousin unto King Arthur. The name of this knight
  • was called Balin, and by good means of the barons he was delivered out
  • of prison, for he was a good man named of his body, and he was born in
  • Northumberland. And so he went privily into the court, and saw this
  • adventure, whereof it raised his heart, and he would assay it as other
  • knights did, but for he was poor and poorly arrayed he put him not far
  • in press. But in his heart he was fully assured to do as well, if his
  • grace happed him, as any knight that there was. And as the damosel took
  • her leave of Arthur and of all the barons, so departing, this knight
  • Balin called unto her, and said, Damosel, I pray you of your courtesy,
  • suffer me as well to assay as these lords; though that I be so poorly
  • clothed, in my heart meseemeth I am fully assured as some of these
  • others, and meseemeth in my heart to speed right well. The damosel
  • beheld the poor knight, and saw he was a likely man, but for his poor
  • arrayment she thought he should be of no worship without villainy or
  • treachery. And then she said unto the knight, Sir, it needeth not to
  • put me to more pain or labour, for it seemeth not you to speed there as
  • other have failed. Ah! fair damosel, said Balin, worthiness, and good
  • tatches, and good deeds, are not only in arrayment, but manhood and
  • worship is hid within man’s person, and many a worshipful knight is not
  • known unto all people, and therefore worship and hardiness is not in
  • arrayment. By God, said the damosel, ye say sooth; therefore ye shall
  • assay to do what ye may. Then Balin took the sword by the girdle and
  • sheath, and drew it out easily; and when he looked on the sword it
  • pleased him much. Then had the king and all the barons great marvel
  • that Balin had done that adventure, and many knights had great despite
  • of Balin. Certes, said the damosel, this is a passing good knight, and
  • the best that ever I found, and most of worship without treason,
  • treachery, or villainy, and many marvels shall he do. Now, gentle and
  • courteous knight, give me the sword again. Nay, said Balin, for this
  • sword will I keep, but it be taken from me with force. Well, said the
  • damosel, ye are not wise to keep the sword from me, for ye shall slay
  • with the sword the best friend that ye have, and the man that ye most
  • love in the world, and the sword shall be your destruction. I shall
  • take the adventure, said Balin, that God will ordain me, but the sword
  • ye shall not have at this time, by the faith of my body. Ye shall
  • repent it within short time, said the damosel, for I would have the
  • sword more for your avail than for mine, for I am passing heavy for
  • your sake; for ye will not believe that sword shall be your
  • destruction, and that is great pity. With that the damosel departed,
  • making great sorrow.
  • Anon after, Balin sent for his horse and armour, and so would depart
  • from the court, and took his leave of King Arthur. Nay, said the king,
  • I suppose ye will not depart so lightly from this fellowship, I suppose
  • ye are displeased that I have shewed you unkindness; blame me the less,
  • for I was misinformed against you, but I weened ye had not been such a
  • knight as ye are, of worship and prowess, and if ye will abide in this
  • court among my fellowship, I shall so advance you as ye shall be
  • pleased. God thank your highness, said Balin, your bounty and highness
  • may no man praise half to the value; but at this time I must needs
  • depart, beseeching you alway of your good grace. Truly, said the king,
  • I am right wroth for your departing; I pray you, fair knight, that ye
  • tarry not long, and ye shall be right welcome to me, and to my barons,
  • and I shall amend all miss that I have done against you; God thank your
  • great lordship, said Balin, and therewith made him ready to depart.
  • Then the most part of the knights of the Round Table said that Balin
  • did not this adventure all only by might, but by witchcraft.
  • CHAPTER III. How the Lady of the Lake demanded the knight’s head that
  • had won the sword, or the maiden’s head.
  • The meanwhile, that this knight was making him ready to depart, there
  • came into the court a lady that hight the Lady of the Lake. And she
  • came on horseback, richly beseen, and saluted King Arthur, and there
  • asked him a gift that he promised her when she gave him the sword. That
  • is sooth, said Arthur, a gift I promised you, but I have forgotten the
  • name of my sword that ye gave me. The name of it, said the lady, is
  • Excalibur, that is as much to say as Cut-steel. Ye say well, said the
  • king; ask what ye will and ye shall have it, an it lie in my power to
  • give it. Well, said the lady, I ask the head of the knight that hath
  • won the sword, or else the damosel’s head that brought it; I take no
  • force though I have both their heads, for he slew my brother, a good
  • knight and a true, and that gentlewoman was causer of my father’s
  • death. Truly, said King Arthur, I may not grant neither of their heads
  • with my worship, therefore ask what ye will else, and I shall fulfil
  • your desire. I will ask none other thing, said the lady. When Balin was
  • ready to depart, he saw the Lady of the Lake, that by her means had
  • slain Balin’s mother, and he had sought her three years; and when it
  • was told him that she asked his head of King Arthur, he went to her
  • straight and said, Evil be you found; ye would have my head, and
  • therefore ye shall lose yours, and with his sword lightly he smote off
  • her head before King Arthur. Alas, for shame! said Arthur, why have ye
  • done so? ye have shamed me and all my court, for this was a lady that I
  • was beholden to, and hither she came under my safe-conduct; I shall
  • never forgive you that trespass. Sir, said Balin, me forthinketh of
  • your displeasure, for this same lady was the untruest lady living, and
  • by enchantment and sorcery she hath been the destroyer of many good
  • knights, and she was causer that my mother was burnt, through her
  • falsehood and treachery. What cause soever ye had, said Arthur, ye
  • should have forborne her in my presence; therefore, think not the
  • contrary, ye shall repent it, for such another despite had I never in
  • my court; therefore withdraw you out of my court in all haste ye may.
  • Then Balin took up the head of the lady, and bare it with him to his
  • hostelry, and there he met with his squire, that was sorry he had
  • displeased King Arthur and so they rode forth out of the town. Now,
  • said Balin, we must depart, take thou this head and bear it to my
  • friends, and tell them how I have sped, and tell my friends in
  • Northumberland that my most foe is dead. Also tell them how I am out of
  • prison, and what adventure befell me at the getting of this sword.
  • Alas! said the squire, ye are greatly to blame for to displease King
  • Arthur. As for that, said Balin, I will hie me, in all the haste that I
  • may, to meet with King Rience and destroy him, either else to die
  • therefore; and if it may hap me to win him, then will King Arthur be my
  • good and gracious lord. Where shall I meet with you? said the squire.
  • In King Arthur’s court, said Balin. So his squire and he departed at
  • that time. Then King Arthur and all the court made great dole and had
  • shame of the death of the Lady of the Lake. Then the king buried her
  • richly.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Merlin told the adventure of this damosel.
  • At that time there was a knight, the which was the king’s son of
  • Ireland, and his name was Lanceor, the which was an orgulous knight,
  • and counted himself one of the best of the court; and he had great
  • despite at Balin for the achieving of the sword, that any should be
  • accounted more hardy, or more of prowess; and he asked King Arthur if
  • he would give him leave to ride after Balin and to revenge the despite
  • that he had done. Do your best, said Arthur, I am right wroth with
  • Balin; I would he were quit of the despite that he hath done to me and
  • to my court. Then this Lanceor went to his hostelry to make him ready.
  • In the meanwhile came Merlin unto the court of King Arthur, and there
  • was told him the adventure of the sword, and the death of the Lady of
  • the Lake. Now shall I say you, said Merlin; this same damosel that here
  • standeth, that brought the sword unto your court, I shall tell you the
  • cause of her coming: she was the falsest damosel that liveth. Say not
  • so, said they. She hath a brother, a passing good knight of prowess and
  • a full true man; and this damosel loved another knight that held her to
  • paramour, and this good knight her brother met with the knight that
  • held her to paramour, and slew him by force of his hands. When this
  • false damosel understood this, she went to the Lady Lile of Avelion,
  • and besought her of help, to be avenged on her own brother.
  • CHAPTER V. How Balin was pursued by Sir Lanceor, knight of Ireland, and
  • how he jousted and slew him.
  • And so this Lady Lile of Avelion took her this sword that she brought
  • with her, and told there should no man pull it out of the sheath but if
  • he be one of the best knights of this realm, and he should be hard and
  • full of prowess, and with that sword he should slay her brother. This
  • was the cause that the damosel came into this court. I know it as well
  • as ye. Would God she had not come into this court, but she came never
  • in fellowship of worship to do good, but always great harm; and that
  • knight that hath achieved the sword shall be destroyed by that sword,
  • for the which will be great damage, for there liveth not a knight of
  • more prowess than he is, and he shall do unto you, my Lord Arthur,
  • great honour and kindness; and it is great pity he shall not endure but
  • a while, for of his strength and hardiness I know not his match living.
  • So the knight of Ireland armed him at all points, and dressed his
  • shield on his shoulder, and mounted upon horseback, and took his spear
  • in his hand, and rode after a great pace, as much as his horse might
  • go; and within a little space on a mountain he had a sight of Balin,
  • and with a loud voice he cried, Abide, knight, for ye shall abide
  • whether ye will or nill, and the shield that is to-fore you shall not
  • help. When Balin heard the noise, he turned his horse fiercely, and
  • said, Fair knight, what will ye with me, will ye joust with me? Yea,
  • said the Irish knight, therefore come I after you. Peradventure, said
  • Balin, it had been better to have holden you at home, for many a man
  • weeneth to put his enemy to a rebuke, and oft it falleth to himself. Of
  • what court be ye sent from? said Balin. I am come from the court of
  • King Arthur, said the knight of Ireland, that come hither for to
  • revenge the despite ye did this day to King Arthur and to his court.
  • Well, said Balin, I see well I must have ado with you, that me
  • forthinketh for to grieve King Arthur, or any of his court; and your
  • quarrel is full simple, said Balin, unto me, for the lady that is dead,
  • did me great damage, and else would I have been loath as any knight
  • that liveth for to slay a lady. Make you ready, said the knight
  • Lanceor, and dress you unto me, for that one shall abide in the field.
  • Then they took their spears, and came together as much as their horses
  • might drive, and the Irish knight smote Balin on the shield, that all
  • went shivers off his spear, and Balin hit him through the shield, and
  • the hauberk perished, and so pierced through his body and the horse’s
  • croup, and anon turned his horse fiercely, and drew out his sword, and
  • wist not that he had slain him; and then he saw him lie as a dead
  • corpse.
  • CHAPTER VI. How a damosel, which was love to Lanceor, slew herself for
  • love, and how Balin met with his brother Balan.
  • Then he looked by him, and was ware of a damosel that came riding full
  • fast as the horse might ride, on a fair palfrey. And when she espied
  • that Lanceor was slain, she made sorrow out of measure, and said, O
  • Balin, two bodies thou hast slain and one heart, and two hearts in one
  • body, and two souls thou hast lost. And therewith she took the sword
  • from her love that lay dead, and fell to the ground in a swoon. And
  • when she arose she made great dole out of measure, the which sorrow
  • grieved Balin passingly sore, and he went unto her for to have taken
  • the sword out of her hand, but she held it so fast he might not take it
  • out of her hand unless he should have hurt her, and suddenly she set
  • the pommel to the ground, and rove herself through the body. When Balin
  • espied her deeds, he was passing heavy in his heart, and ashamed that
  • so fair a damosel had destroyed herself for the love of his death.
  • Alas, said Balin, me repenteth sore the death of this knight, for the
  • love of this damosel, for there was much true love betwixt them both,
  • and for sorrow might not longer behold him, but turned his horse and
  • looked toward a great forest, and there he was ware, by the arms, of
  • his brother Balan. And when they were met they put off their helms and
  • kissed together, and wept for joy and pity. Then Balan said, I little
  • weened to have met with you at this sudden adventure; I am right glad
  • of your deliverance out of your dolorous prisonment, for a man told me,
  • in the castle of Four Stones, that ye were delivered, and that man had
  • seen you in the court of King Arthur, and therefore I came hither into
  • this country, for here I supposed to find you. Anon the knight Balin
  • told his brother of his adventure of the sword, and of the death of the
  • Lady of the Lake, and how King Arthur was displeased with him.
  • Wherefore he sent this knight after me, that lieth here dead, and the
  • death of this damosel grieveth me sore. So doth it me, said Balan, but
  • ye must take the adventure that God will ordain you. Truly, said Balin,
  • I am right heavy that my Lord Arthur is displeased with me, for he is
  • the most worshipful knight that reigneth now on earth, and his love
  • will I get or else will I put my life in adventure. For the King Rience
  • lieth at a siege at the Castle Terrabil, and thither will we draw in
  • all haste, to prove our worship and prowess upon him. I will well, said
  • Balan, that we do, and we will help each other as brethren ought to do.
  • CHAPTER VII. How a dwarf reproved Balin for the death of Lanceor, and
  • how King Mark of Cornwall found them, and made a tomb over them.
  • Now go we hence, said Balin, and well be we met. The meanwhile as they
  • talked, there came a dwarf from the city of Camelot on horseback, as
  • much as he might; and found the dead bodies, wherefore he made great
  • dole, and pulled out his hair for sorrow, and said, Which of you
  • knights have done this deed? Whereby askest thou it? said Balan. For I
  • would wit it, said the dwarf. It was I, said Balin, that slew this
  • knight in my defence, for hither he came to chase me, and either I must
  • slay him or he me; and this damosel slew herself for his love, which
  • repenteth me, and for her sake I shall owe all women the better love.
  • Alas, said the dwarf, thou hast done great damage unto thyself, for
  • this knight that is here dead was one of the most valiantest men that
  • lived, and trust well, Balin, the kin of this knight will chase you
  • through the world till they have slain you. As for that, said Balin, I
  • fear not greatly, but I am right heavy that I have displeased my lord
  • King Arthur, for the death of this knight. So as they talked together,
  • there came a king of Cornwall riding, the which hight King Mark. And
  • when he saw these two bodies dead, and understood how they were dead,
  • by the two knights above said, then made the king great sorrow for the
  • true love that was betwixt them, and said, I will not depart till I
  • have on this earth made a tomb, and there he pight his pavilions and
  • sought through all the country to find a tomb, and in a church they
  • found one was fair and rich, and then the king let put them both in the
  • earth, and put the tomb upon them, and wrote the names of them both on
  • the tomb. How here lieth Lanceor the king’s son of Ireland, that at his
  • own request was slain by the hands of Balin; and how his lady, Colombe,
  • and paramour, slew herself with her love’s sword for dole and sorrow.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Merlin prophesied that two the best knights of the
  • world should fight there, which were Sir Lancelot and Sir Tristram.
  • The meanwhile as this was a-doing, in came Merlin to King Mark, and
  • seeing all his doing, said, Here shall be in this same place the
  • greatest battle betwixt two knights that was or ever shall be, and the
  • truest lovers, and yet none of them shall slay other. And there Merlin
  • wrote their names upon the tomb with letters of gold that should fight
  • in that place, whose names were Launcelot de Lake, and Tristram. Thou
  • art a marvellous man, said King Mark unto Merlin, that speakest of such
  • marvels, thou art a boistous man and an unlikely to tell of such deeds.
  • What is thy name? said King Mark. At this time, said Merlin, I will not
  • tell, but at that time when Sir Tristram is taken with his sovereign
  • lady, then ye shall hear and know my name, and at that time ye shall
  • hear tidings that shall not please you. Then said Merlin to Balin, Thou
  • hast done thyself great hurt, because that thou savest not this lady
  • that slew herself, that might have saved her an thou wouldest. By the
  • faith of my body, said Balin, I might not save her, for she slew
  • herself suddenly. Me repenteth, said Merlin; because of the death of
  • that lady thou shalt strike a stroke most dolorous that ever man
  • struck, except the stroke of our Lord, for thou shalt hurt the truest
  • knight and the man of most worship that now liveth, and through that
  • stroke three kingdoms shall be in great poverty, misery and
  • wretchedness twelve years, and the knight shall not be whole of that
  • wound for many years. Then Merlin took his leave of Balin. And Balin
  • said, If I wist it were sooth that ye say I should do such a perilous
  • deed as that, I would slay myself to make thee a liar. Therewith Merlin
  • vanished away suddenly. And then Balan and his brother took their leave
  • of King Mark. First, said the king, tell me your name. Sir, said Balan,
  • ye may see he beareth two swords, thereby ye may call him the Knight
  • with the Two Swords. And so departed King Mark unto Camelot to King
  • Arthur, and Balin took the way toward King Rience; and as they rode
  • together they met with Merlin disguised, but they knew him not. Whither
  • ride you? said Merlin. We have little to do, said the two knights, to
  • tell thee. But what is thy name? said Balin. At this time, said Merlin,
  • I will not tell it thee. It is evil seen, said the knights, that thou
  • art a true man that thou wilt not tell thy name. As for that, said
  • Merlin, be it as it be may, I can tell you wherefore ye ride this way,
  • for to meet King Rience; but it will not avail you without ye have my
  • counsel. Ah! said Balin, ye are Merlin; we will be ruled by your
  • counsel. Come on, said Merlin, ye shall have great worship, and look
  • that ye do knightly, for ye shall have great need. As for that, said
  • Balin, dread you not, we will do what we may.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Balin and his brother, by the counsel of Merlin, took
  • King Rience and brought him to King Arthur.
  • Then Merlin lodged them in a wood among leaves beside the highway, and
  • took off the bridles of their horses and put them to grass and laid
  • them down to rest them till it was nigh midnight. Then Merlin bade them
  • rise, and make them ready, for the king was nigh them, that was stolen
  • away from his host with a three score horses of his best knights, and
  • twenty of them rode to-fore to warn the Lady de Vance that the king was
  • coming; for that night King Rience should have lain with her. Which is
  • the king? said Balin. Abide, said Merlin, here in a strait way ye shall
  • meet with him; and therewith he showed Balin and his brother where he
  • rode.
  • Anon Balin and his brother met with the king, and smote him down, and
  • wounded him fiercely, and laid him to the ground; and there they slew
  • on the right hand and the left hand, and slew more than forty of his
  • men, and the remnant fled. Then went they again to King Rience and
  • would have slain him had he not yielded him unto their grace. Then said
  • he thus: Knights full of prowess, slay me not, for by my life ye may
  • win, and by my death ye shall win nothing. Then said these two knights,
  • Ye say sooth and truth, and so laid him on a horse-litter. With that
  • Merlin was vanished, and came to King Arthur aforehand, and told him
  • how his most enemy was taken and discomfited. By whom? said King
  • Arthur. By two knights, said Merlin, that would please your lordship,
  • and to-morrow ye shall know what knights they are. Anon after came the
  • Knight with the Two Swords and Balan his brother, and brought with them
  • King Rience of North Wales, and there delivered him to the porters, and
  • charged them with him; and so they two returned again in the dawning of
  • the day. King Arthur came then to King Rience, and said, Sir king, ye
  • are welcome: by what adventure come ye hither? Sir, said King Rience, I
  • came hither by an hard adventure. Who won you? said King Arthur. Sir,
  • said the king, the Knight with the Two Swords and his brother, which
  • are two marvellous knights of prowess. I know them not, said Arthur,
  • but much I am beholden to them. Ah, said Merlin, I shall tell you: it
  • is Balin that achieved the sword, and his brother Balan, a good knight,
  • there liveth not a better of prowess and of worthiness, and it shall be
  • the greatest dole of him that ever I knew of knight, for he shall not
  • long endure. Alas, said King Arthur, that is great pity; for I am much
  • beholden unto him, and I have ill deserved it unto him for his
  • kindness. Nay, said Merlin, he shall do much more for you, and that
  • shall ye know in haste. But, sir, are ye purveyed, said Merlin, for
  • to-morn the host of Nero, King Rience’s brother, will set on you or
  • noon with a great host, and therefore make you ready, for I will depart
  • from you.
  • CHAPTER X. How King Arthur had a battle against Nero and King Lot of
  • Orkney, and how King Lot was deceived by Merlin, and how twelve kings
  • were slain.
  • Then King Arthur made ready his host in ten battles and Nero was ready
  • in the field afore the Castle Terrabil with a great host, and he had
  • ten battles, with many more people than Arthur had. Then Nero had the
  • vanguard with the most part of his people, and Merlin came to King Lot
  • of the Isle of Orkney, and held him with a tale of prophecy, till Nero
  • and his people were destroyed. And there Sir Kay the seneschal did
  • passingly well, that the days of his life the worship went never from
  • him; and Sir Hervis de Revel did marvellous deeds with King Arthur, and
  • King Arthur slew that day twenty knights and maimed forty. At that time
  • came in the Knight with the Two Swords and his brother Balan, but they
  • two did so marvellously that the king and all the knights marvelled of
  • them, and all they that beheld them said they were sent from heaven as
  • angels, or devils from hell; and King Arthur said himself they were the
  • best knights that ever he saw, for they gave such strokes that all men
  • had wonder of them.
  • In the meanwhile came one to King Lot, and told him while he tarried
  • there Nero was destroyed and slain with all his people. Alas, said King
  • Lot, I am ashamed, for by my default there is many a worshipful man
  • slain, for an we had been together there had been none host under the
  • heaven that had been able for to have matched with us; this faiter with
  • his prophecy hath mocked me. All that did Merlin, for he knew well that
  • an King Lot had been with his body there at the first battle, King
  • Arthur had been slain, and all his people destroyed; and well Merlin
  • knew that one of the kings should be dead that day, and loath was
  • Merlin that any of them both should be slain; but of the twain, he had
  • liefer King Lot had been slain than King Arthur. Now what is best to
  • do? said King Lot of Orkney; whether is me better to treat with King
  • Arthur or to fight, for the greater part of our people are slain and
  • destroyed? Sir, said a knight, set on Arthur for they are weary and
  • forfoughten and we be fresh. As for me, said King Lot, I would every
  • knight would do his part as I would do mine. And then they advanced
  • banners and smote together and all to-shivered their spears; and
  • Arthur’s knights, with the help of the Knight with the Two Swords and
  • his brother Balan put King Lot and his host to the worse. But always
  • King Lot held him in the foremost front, and did marvellous deeds of
  • arms, for all his host was borne up by his hands, for he abode all
  • knights. Alas he might not endure, the which was great pity, that so
  • worthy a knight as he was one should be overmatched, that of late time
  • afore had been a knight of King Arthur’s, and wedded the sister of King
  • Arthur; and for King Arthur lay by King Lot’s wife, the which was
  • Arthur’s sister, and gat on her Mordred, therefore King Lot held
  • against Arthur. So there was a knight that was called the Knight with
  • the Strange Beast, and at that time his right name was called
  • Pellinore, the which was a good man of prowess, and he smote a mighty
  • stroke at King Lot as he fought with all his enemies, and he failed of
  • his stroke, and smote the horse’s neck, that he fell to the ground with
  • King Lot. And therewith anon Pellinore smote him a great stroke through
  • the helm and head unto the brows. And then all the host of Orkney fled
  • for the death of King Lot, and there were slain many mothers’ sons. But
  • King Pellinore bare the wite of the death of King Lot, wherefore Sir
  • Gawaine revenged the death of his father the tenth year after he was
  • made knight, and slew King Pellinore with his own hands. Also there
  • were slain at that battle twelve kings on the side of King Lot with
  • Nero, and all were buried in the Church of Saint Stephen’s in Camelot,
  • and the remnant of knights and of others were buried in a great rock.
  • CHAPTER XI. Of the interment of twelve kings, and of the prophecy of
  • Merlin, and how Balin should give the dolorous stroke.
  • So at the interment came King Lot’s wife Margawse with her four sons,
  • Gawaine, Agravaine, Gaheris, and Gareth. Also there came thither King
  • Uriens, Sir Ewaine’s father, and Morgan le Fay his wife that was King
  • Arthur’s sister. All these came to the interment. But of all these
  • twelve kings King Arthur let make the tomb of King Lot passing richly,
  • and made his tomb by his own; and then Arthur let make twelve images of
  • latten and copper, and over-gilt it with gold, in the sign of twelve
  • kings, and each one of them held a taper of wax that burnt day and
  • night; and King Arthur was made in sign of a figure standing above them
  • with a sword drawn in his hand, and all the twelve figures had
  • countenance like unto men that were overcome. All this made Merlin by
  • his subtle craft, and there he told the king, When I am dead these
  • tapers shall burn no longer, and soon after the adventures of the
  • Sangreal shall come among you and be achieved. Also he told Arthur how
  • Balin the worshipful knight shall give the dolorous stroke, whereof
  • shall fall great vengeance. Oh, where is Balin and Balan and Pellinore?
  • said King Arthur. As for Pellinore, said Merlin, he will meet with you
  • soon; and as for Balin he will not be long from you; but the other
  • brother will depart, ye shall see him no more. By my faith, said
  • Arthur, they are two marvellous knights, and namely Balin passeth of
  • prowess of any knight that ever I found, for much beholden am I unto
  • him; would God he would abide with me. Sir, said Merlin, look ye keep
  • well the scabbard of Excalibur, for ye shall lose no blood while ye
  • have the scabbard upon you, though ye have as many wounds upon you as
  • ye may have. So after, for great trust, Arthur betook the scabbard to
  • Morgan le Fay his sister, and she loved another knight better than her
  • husband King Uriens or King Arthur, and she would have had Arthur her
  • brother slain, and therefore she let make another scabbard like it by
  • enchantment, and gave the scabbard Excalibur to her love; and the
  • knight’s name was called Accolon, that after had near slain King
  • Arthur. After this Merlin told unto King Arthur of the prophecy that
  • there should be a great battle beside Salisbury, and Mordred his own
  • son should be against him. Also he told him that Bagdemegus was his
  • cousin, and germain unto King Uriens.
  • CHAPTER XII. How a sorrowful knight came before Arthur, and how Balin
  • fetched him, and how that knight was slain by a knight invisible.
  • Within a day or two King Arthur was somewhat sick, and he let pitch his
  • pavilion in a meadow, and there he laid him down on a pallet to sleep,
  • but he might have no rest. Right so he heard a great noise of an horse,
  • and therewith the king looked out at the porch of the pavilion, and saw
  • a knight coming even by him, making great dole. Abide, fair sir, said
  • Arthur, and tell me wherefore thou makest this sorrow. Ye may little
  • amend me, said the knight, and so passed forth to the castle of Meliot.
  • Anon after there came Balin, and when he saw King Arthur he alighted
  • off his horse, and came to the King on foot, and saluted him. By my
  • head, said Arthur, ye be welcome. Sir, right now came riding this way a
  • knight making great mourn, for what cause I cannot tell; wherefore I
  • would desire of you of your courtesy and of your gentleness to fetch
  • again that knight either by force or else by his good will. I will do
  • more for your lordship than that, said Balin; and so he rode more than
  • a pace, and found the knight with a damosel in a forest, and said, Sir
  • knight, ye must come with me unto King Arthur, for to tell him of your
  • sorrow. That will I not, said the knight, for it will scathe me
  • greatly, and do you none avail. Sir, said Balin, I pray you make you
  • ready, for ye must go with me, or else I must fight with you and bring
  • you by force, and that were me loath to do. Will ye be my warrant, said
  • the knight, an I go with you? Yea, said Balin, or else I will die
  • therefore. And so he made him ready to go with Balin, and left the
  • damosel still. And as they were even afore King Arthur’s pavilion,
  • there came one invisible, and smote this knight that went with Balin
  • throughout the body with a spear. Alas, said the knight, I am slain
  • under your conduct with a knight called Garlon; therefore take my horse
  • that is better than yours, and ride to the damosel, and follow the
  • quest that I was in as she will lead you, and revenge my death when ye
  • may. That shall I do, said Balin, and that I make vow unto knighthood;
  • and so he departed from this knight with great sorrow. So King Arthur
  • let bury this knight richly, and made a mention on his tomb, how there
  • was slain Herlews le Berbeus, and by whom the treachery was done, the
  • knight Garlon. But ever the damosel bare the truncheon of the spear
  • with her that Sir Herlews was slain withal.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Balin and the damosel met with a knight which was in
  • likewise slain, and how the damosel bled for the custom of a castle.
  • So Balin and the damosel rode into a forest, and there met with a
  • knight that had been a-hunting, and that knight asked Balin for what
  • cause he made so great sorrow. Me list not to tell you, said Balin.
  • Now, said the knight, an I were armed as ye be I would fight with you.
  • That should little need, said Balin, I am not afeard to tell you, and
  • told him all the cause how it was. Ah, said the knight, is this all?
  • here I ensure you by the faith of my body never to depart from you
  • while my life lasteth. And so they went to the hostelry and armed them,
  • and so rode forth with Balin. And as they came by an hermitage even by
  • a churchyard, there came the knight Garlon invisible, and smote this
  • knight, Perin de Mountbeliard, through the body with a spear. Alas,
  • said the knight, I am slain by this traitor knight that rideth
  • invisible. Alas, said Balin, it is not the first despite he hath done
  • me; and there the hermit and Balin buried the knight under a rich stone
  • and a tomb royal. And on the morn they found letters of gold written,
  • how Sir Gawaine shall revenge his father’s death, King Lot, on the King
  • Pellinore. Anon after this Balin and the damosel rode till they came to
  • a castle, and there Balin alighted, and he and the damosel went to go
  • into the castle, and anon as Balin came within the castle’s gate the
  • portcullis fell down at his back, and there fell many men about the
  • damosel, and would have slain her. When Balin saw that, he was sore
  • aggrieved, for he might not help the damosel. Then he went up into the
  • tower, and leapt over walls into the ditch, and hurt him not; and anon
  • he pulled out his sword and would have foughten with them. And they all
  • said nay, they would not fight with him, for they did nothing but the
  • old custom of the castle; and told him how their lady was sick, and had
  • lain many years, and she might not be whole but if she had a dish of
  • silver full of blood of a clean maid and a king’s daughter; and
  • therefore the custom of this castle is, there shall no damosel pass
  • this way but she shall bleed of her blood in a silver dish full. Well,
  • said Balin, she shall bleed as much as she may bleed, but I will not
  • lose the life of her whiles my life lasteth. And so Balin made her to
  • bleed by her good will, but her blood helped not the lady. And so he
  • and she rested there all night, and had there right good cheer, and on
  • the morn they passed on their ways. And as it telleth after in the
  • Sangreal, that Sir Percivale’s sister helped that lady with her blood,
  • whereof she was dead.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Balin met with that knight named Garlon at a feast,
  • and there he slew him, to have his blood to heal therewith the son of
  • his host.
  • Then they rode three or four days and never met with adventure, and by
  • hap they were lodged with a gentle man that was a rich man and well at
  • ease. And as they sat at their supper Balin overheard one complain
  • grievously by him in a chair. What is this noise? said Balin. Forsooth,
  • said his host, I will tell you. I was but late at a jousting, and there
  • I jousted with a knight that is brother unto King Pellam, and twice
  • smote I him down, and then he promised to quit me on my best friend;
  • and so he wounded my son, that cannot be whole till I have of that
  • knight’s blood, and he rideth alway invisible; but I know not his name.
  • Ah! said Balin, I know that knight, his name is Garlon, he hath slain
  • two knights of mine in the same manner, therefore I had liefer meet
  • with that knight than all the gold in this realm, for the despite he
  • hath done me. Well, said his host, I shall tell you, King Pellam of
  • Listeneise hath made do cry in all this country a great feast that
  • shall be within these twenty days, and no knight may come there but if
  • he bring his wife with him, or his paramour; and that knight, your
  • enemy and mine, ye shall see that day. Then I behote you, said Balin,
  • part of his blood to heal your son withal. We will be forward to-morn,
  • said his host. So on the morn they rode all three toward Pellam, and
  • they had fifteen days’ journey or they came thither; and that same day
  • began the great feast. And so they alighted and stabled their horses,
  • and went into the castle; but Balin’s host might not be let in because
  • he had no lady. Then Balin was well received and brought unto a chamber
  • and unarmed him; and there were brought him robes to his pleasure, and
  • would have had Balin leave his sword behind him. Nay, said Balin, that
  • do I not, for it is the custom of my country a knight always to keep
  • his weapon with him, and that custom will I keep, or else I will depart
  • as I came. Then they gave him leave to wear his sword, and so he went
  • unto the castle, and was set among knights of worship, and his lady
  • afore him.
  • Soon Balin asked a knight, Is there not a knight in this court whose
  • name is Garlon? Yonder he goeth, said a knight, he with the black face;
  • he is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many
  • good knights, for he goeth invisible. Ah well, said Balin, is that he?
  • Then Balin advised him long: If I slay him here I shall not escape, and
  • if I leave him now, peradventure I shall never meet with him again at
  • such a steven, and much harm he will do an he live. Therewith this
  • Garlon espied that this Balin beheld him, and then he came and smote
  • Balin on the face with the back of his hand, and said, Knight, why
  • beholdest me so? for shame therefore, eat thy meat and do that thou
  • came for. Thou sayest sooth, said Balin, this is not the first despite
  • that thou hast done me, and therefore I will do what I came for, and
  • rose up fiercely and clave his head to the shoulders. Give me the
  • truncheon, said Balin to his lady, wherewith he slew your knight. Anon
  • she gave it him, for alway she bare the truncheon with her. And
  • therewith Balin smote him through the body, and said openly, With that
  • truncheon thou hast slain a good knight, and now it sticketh in thy
  • body. And then Balin called unto him his host, saying, Now may ye fetch
  • blood enough to heal your son withal.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Balin fought with King Pellam, and how his sword brake,
  • and how he gat a spear wherewith he smote the dolorous stroke.
  • Anon all the knights arose from the table for to set on Balin, and King
  • Pellam himself arose up fiercely, and said, Knight, hast thou slain my
  • brother? thou shalt die therefore or thou depart. Well, said Balin, do
  • it yourself. Yes, said King Pellam, there shall no man have ado with
  • thee but myself, for the love of my brother. Then King Pellam caught in
  • his hand a grim weapon and smote eagerly at Balin; but Balin put the
  • sword betwixt his head and the stroke, and therewith his sword burst in
  • sunder. And when Balin was weaponless he ran into a chamber for to seek
  • some weapon, and so from chamber to chamber, and no weapon he could
  • find, and always King Pellam after him. And at the last he entered into
  • a chamber that was marvellously well dight and richly, and a bed
  • arrayed with cloth of gold, the richest that might be thought, and one
  • lying therein, and thereby stood a table of clean gold with four
  • pillars of silver that bare up the table, and upon the table stood a
  • marvellous spear strangely wrought. And when Balin saw that spear, he
  • gat it in his hand and turned him to King Pellam, and smote him
  • passingly sore with that spear, that King Pellam fell down in a swoon,
  • and therewith the castle roof and walls brake and fell to the earth,
  • and Balin fell down so that he might not stir foot nor hand. And so the
  • most part of the castle, that was fallen down through that dolorous
  • stroke, lay upon Pellam and Balin three days.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Balin was delivered by Merlin, and saved a knight that
  • would have slain himself for love.
  • Then Merlin came thither and took up Balin, and gat him a good horse,
  • for his was dead, and bade him ride out of that country. I would have
  • my damosel, said Balin. Lo, said Merlin, where she lieth dead. And King
  • Pellam lay so, many years sore wounded, and might never be whole till
  • Galahad the haut prince healed him in the quest of the Sangreal, for in
  • that place was part of the blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, that Joseph
  • of Arimathea brought into this land, and there himself lay in that rich
  • bed. And that was the same spear that Longius smote our Lord to the
  • heart; and King Pellam was nigh of Joseph’s kin, and that was the most
  • worshipful man that lived in those days, and great pity it was of his
  • hurt, for through that stroke, turned to great dole, tray and tene.
  • Then departed Balin from Merlin, and said, In this world we meet never
  • no more. So he rode forth through the fair countries and cities, and
  • found the people dead, slain on every side. And all that were alive
  • cried, O Balin, thou hast caused great damage in these countries; for
  • the dolorous stroke thou gavest unto King Pellam three countries are
  • destroyed, and doubt not but the vengeance will fall on thee at the
  • last. When Balin was past those countries he was passing fain.
  • So he rode eight days or he met with adventure. And at the last he came
  • into a fair forest in a valley, and was ware of a tower, and there
  • beside he saw a great horse of war, tied to a tree, and there beside
  • sat a fair knight on the ground and made great mourning, and he was a
  • likely man, and a well made. Balin said, God save you, why be ye so
  • heavy? tell me and I will amend it, an I may, to my power. Sir knight,
  • said he again, thou dost me great grief, for I was in merry thoughts,
  • and now thou puttest me to more pain. Balin went a little from him, and
  • looked on his horse; then heard Balin him say thus: Ah, fair lady, why
  • have ye broken my promise, for thou promisest me to meet me here by
  • noon, and I may curse thee that ever ye gave me this sword, for with
  • this sword I slay myself, and pulled it out. And therewith Balin stert
  • unto him and took him by the hand. Let go my hand, said the knight, or
  • else I shall slay thee. That shall not need, said Balin, for I shall
  • promise you my help to get you your lady, an ye will tell me where she
  • is. What is your name? said the knight. My name is Balin le Savage. Ah,
  • sir, I know you well enough, ye are the Knight with the Two Swords, and
  • the man of most prowess of your hands living. What is your name? said
  • Balin. My name is Garnish of the Mount, a poor man’s son, but by my
  • prowess and hardiness a duke hath made me knight, and gave me lands;
  • his name is Duke Hermel, and his daughter is she that I love, and she
  • me as I deemed. How far is she hence? said Balin. But six mile, said
  • the knight. Now ride we hence, said these two knights. So they rode
  • more than a pace, till that they came to a fair castle well walled and
  • ditched. I will into the castle, said Balin, and look if she be there.
  • So he went in and searched from chamber to chamber, and found her bed,
  • but she was not there. Then Balin looked into a fair little garden, and
  • under a laurel tree he saw her lie upon a quilt of green samite and a
  • knight in her arms, fast halsing either other, and under their heads
  • grass and herbs. When Balin saw her lie so with the foulest knight that
  • ever he saw, and she a fair lady, then Balin went through all the
  • chambers again, and told the knight how he found her as she had slept
  • fast, and so brought him in the place there she lay fast sleeping.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How that knight slew his love and a knight lying by her,
  • and after, how he slew himself with his own sword, and how Balin rode
  • toward a castle where he lost his life.
  • And when Garnish beheld her so lying, for pure sorrow his mouth and
  • nose burst out a-bleeding, and with his sword he smote off both their
  • heads, and then he made sorrow out of measure, and said, O Balin, much
  • sorrow hast thou brought unto me, for hadst thou not shewed me that
  • sight I should have passed my sorrow. Forsooth, said Balin, I did it to
  • this intent that it should better thy courage, and that ye might see
  • and know her falsehood, and to cause you to leave love of such a lady;
  • God knoweth I did none other but as I would ye did to me. Alas, said
  • Garnish, now is my sorrow double that I may not endure, now have I
  • slain that I most loved in all my life; and therewith suddenly he rove
  • himself on his own sword unto the hilts. When Balin saw that, he
  • dressed him thenceward, lest folk would say he had slain them; and so
  • he rode forth, and within three days he came by a cross, and thereon
  • were letters of gold written, that said, It is not for no knight alone
  • to ride toward this castle. Then saw he an old hoar gentleman coming
  • toward him, that said, Balin le Savage, thou passest thy bounds to come
  • this way, therefore turn again and it will avail thee. And he vanished
  • away anon; and so he heard an horn blow as it had been the death of a
  • beast. That blast, said Balin, is blown for me, for I am the prize and
  • yet am I not dead. Anon withal he saw an hundred ladies and many
  • knights, that welcomed him with fair semblant, and made him passing
  • good cheer unto his sight, and led him into the castle, and there was
  • dancing and minstrelsy and all manner of joy. Then the chief lady of
  • the castle said, Knight with the Two Swords, ye must have ado and joust
  • with a knight hereby that keepeth an island, for there may no man pass
  • this way but he must joust or he pass. That is an unhappy custom, said
  • Balin, that a knight may not pass this way but if he joust. Ye shall
  • not have ado but with one knight, said the lady.
  • Well, said Balin, since I shall thereto I am ready, but travelling men
  • are oft weary and their horses too, but though my horse be weary my
  • heart is not weary, I would be fain there my death should be. Sir, said
  • a knight to Balin, methinketh your shield is not good, I will lend you
  • a bigger. Thereof I pray you. And so he took the shield that was
  • unknown and left his own, and so rode unto the island, and put him and
  • his horse in a great boat; and when he came on the other side he met
  • with a damosel, and she said, O knight Balin, why have ye left your own
  • shield? alas ye have put yourself in great danger, for by your shield
  • ye should have been known; it is great pity of you as ever was of
  • knight, for of thy prowess and hardiness thou hast no fellow living. Me
  • repenteth, said Balin, that ever I came within this country, but I may
  • not turn now again for shame, and what adventure shall fall to me, be
  • it life or death, I will take the adventure that shall come to me. And
  • then he looked on his armour, and understood he was well armed, and
  • therewith blessed him and mounted upon his horse.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Balin met with his brother Balan, and how each of
  • them slew other unknown, till they were wounded to death.
  • Then afore him he saw come riding out of a castle a knight, and his
  • horse trapped all red, and himself in the same colour. When this knight
  • in the red beheld Balin, him thought it should be his brother Balin by
  • cause of his two swords, but by cause he knew not his shield he deemed
  • it was not he. And so they aventryd their spears and came marvellously
  • fast together, and they smote each other in the shields, but their
  • spears and their course were so big that it bare down horse and man,
  • that they lay both in a swoon. But Balin was bruised sore with the fall
  • of his horse, for he was weary of travel. And Balan was the first that
  • rose on foot and drew his sword, and went toward Balin, and he arose
  • and went against him; but Balan smote Balin first, and he put up his
  • shield and smote him through the shield and tamed his helm. Then Balin
  • smote him again with that unhappy sword, and well-nigh had felled his
  • brother Balan, and so they fought there together till their breaths
  • failed. Then Balin looked up to the castle and saw the towers stand
  • full of ladies. So they went unto battle again, and wounded everych
  • other dolefully, and then they breathed ofttimes, and so went unto
  • battle that all the place there as they fought was blood red. And at
  • that time there was none of them both but they had either smitten other
  • seven great wounds, so that the least of them might have been the death
  • of the mightiest giant in this world.
  • Then they went to battle again so marvellously that doubt it was to
  • hear of that battle for the great blood-shedding, and their hauberks
  • unnailed that naked they were on every side. At last Balan the younger
  • brother withdrew him a little and laid him down. Then said Balin le
  • Savage, What knight art thou? for or now I found never no knight that
  • matched me. My name is, said he, Balan, brother unto the good knight,
  • Balin. Alas, said Balin, that ever I should see this day, and therewith
  • he fell backward in a swoon. Then Balan yede on all four feet and
  • hands, and put off the helm off his brother, and might not know him by
  • the visage it was so ful hewn and bled; but when he awoke he said, O
  • Balan, my brother, thou hast slain me and I thee, wherefore all the
  • wide world shall speak of us both. Alas, said Balan, that ever I saw
  • this day, that through mishap I might not know you, for I espied well
  • your two swords, but by cause ye had another shield I deemed ye had
  • been another knight. Alas, said Balin, all that made an unhappy knight
  • in the castle, for he caused me to leave my own shield to our both’s
  • destruction, and if I might live I would destroy that castle for ill
  • customs. That were well done, said Balan, for I had never grace to
  • depart from them since that I came hither, for here it happed me to
  • slay a knight that kept this island, and since might I never depart,
  • and no more should ye, brother, an ye might have slain me as ye have,
  • and escaped yourself with the life.
  • Right so came the lady of the tower with four knights and six ladies
  • and six yeomen unto them, and there she heard how they made their moan
  • either to other, and said, We came both out of one tomb, that is to say
  • one mother’s belly, and so shall we lie both in one pit. So Balan
  • prayed the lady of her gentleness, for his true service, that she would
  • bury them both in that same place there the battle was done. And she
  • granted them, with weeping, it should be done richly in the best
  • manner. Now, will ye send for a priest, that we may receive our
  • sacrament, and receive the blessed body of our Lord Jesus Christ? Yea,
  • said the lady, it shall be done; and so she sent for a priest and gave
  • them their rights. Now, said Balin, when we are buried in one tomb, and
  • the mention made over us how two brethren slew each other, there will
  • never good knight, nor good man, see our tomb but they will pray for
  • our souls. And so all the ladies and gentlewomen wept for pity. Then
  • anon Balan died, but Balin died not till the midnight after, and so
  • were they buried both, and the lady let make a mention of Balan how he
  • was there slain by his brother’s hands, but she knew not Balin’s name.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How Merlin buried them both in one tomb, and of Balin’s
  • sword.
  • In the morn came Merlin and let write Balin’s name on the tomb with
  • letters of gold, that Here lieth Balin le Savage that was the Knight
  • with the Two Swords, and he that smote the Dolorous Stroke. Also Merlin
  • let make there a bed, that there should never man lie therein but he
  • went out of his wit, yet Launcelot de Lake fordid that bed through his
  • noblesse. And anon after Balin was dead, Merlin took his sword, and
  • took off the pommel and set on another pommel. So Merlin bade a knight
  • that stood afore him handle that sword, and he assayed, and he might
  • not handle it. Then Merlin laughed. Why laugh ye? said the knight. This
  • is the cause, said Merlin: there shall never man handle this sword but
  • the best knight of the world, and that shall be Sir Launcelot or else
  • Galahad his son, and Launcelot with this sword shall slay the man that
  • in the world he loved best, that shall be Sir Gawaine. All this he let
  • write in the pommel of the sword. Then Merlin let make a bridge of iron
  • and of steel into that island, and it was but half a foot broad, and
  • there shall never man pass that bridge, nor have hardiness to go over,
  • but if he were a passing good man and a good knight without treachery
  • or villainy. Also the scabbard of Balin’s sword Merlin left it on this
  • side the island, that Galahad should find it. Also Merlin let make by
  • his subtilty that Balin’s sword was put in a marble stone standing
  • upright as great as a mill stone, and the stone hoved always above the
  • water and did many years, and so by adventure it swam down the stream
  • to the City of Camelot, that is in English Winchester. And that same
  • day Galahad the haut prince came with King Arthur, and so Galahad
  • brought with him the scabbard and achieved the sword that was there in
  • the marble stone hoving upon the water. And on Whitsunday he achieved
  • the sword as it is rehearsed in the book of Sangreal.
  • Soon after this was done Merlin came to King Arthur and told him of the
  • dolorous stroke that Balin gave to King Pellam, and how Balin and Balan
  • fought together the marvellest battle that ever was heard of, and how
  • they were buried both in one tomb. Alas, said King Arthur, this is the
  • greatest pity that ever I heard tell of two knights, for in the world I
  • know not such two knights. Thus endeth the tale of Balin and of Balan,
  • two brethren born in Northumberland, good knights.
  • Sequitur iii. liber.
  • BOOK III.
  • CHAPTER I. How King Arthur took a wife, and wedded Guenever, daughter
  • to Leodegrance, King of the Land of Cameliard, with whom he had the
  • Round Table.
  • In the beginning of Arthur, after he was chosen king by adventure and
  • by grace; for the most part of the barons knew not that he was Uther
  • Pendragon’s son, but as Merlin made it openly known. But yet many kings
  • and lords held great war against him for that cause, but well Arthur
  • overcame them all, for the most part the days of his life he was ruled
  • much by the counsel of Merlin. So it fell on a time King Arthur said
  • unto Merlin, My barons will let me have no rest, but needs I must take
  • a wife, and I will none take but by thy counsel and by thine advice. It
  • is well done, said Merlin, that ye take a wife, for a man of your
  • bounty and noblesse should not be without a wife. Now is there any that
  • ye love more than another? Yea, said King Arthur, I love Guenever the
  • king’s daughter, Leodegrance of the land of Cameliard, the which
  • holdeth in his house the Table Round that ye told he had of my father
  • Uther. And this damosel is the most valiant and fairest lady that I
  • know living, or yet that ever I could find. Sir, said Merlin, as of her
  • beauty and fairness she is one of the fairest alive, but, an ye loved
  • her not so well as ye do, I should find you a damosel of beauty and of
  • goodness that should like you and please you, an your heart were not
  • set; but there as a man’s heart is set, he will be loath to return.
  • That is truth, said King Arthur. But Merlin warned the king covertly
  • that Guenever was not wholesome for him to take to wife, for he warned
  • him that Launcelot should love her, and she him again; and so he turned
  • his tale to the adventures of Sangreal.
  • Then Merlin desired of the king for to have men with him that should
  • enquire of Guenever, and so the king granted him, and Merlin went forth
  • unto King Leodegrance of Cameliard, and told him of the desires of the
  • king that he would have unto his wife Guenever his daughter. That is to
  • me, said King Leodegrance, the best tidings that ever I heard, that so
  • worthy a king of prowess and noblesse will wed my daughter. And as for
  • my lands, I will give him, wist I it might please him, but he hath
  • lands enow, him needeth none; but I shall send him a gift shall please
  • him much more, for I shall give him the Table Round, the which Uther
  • Pendragon gave me, and when it is full complete, there is an hundred
  • knights and fifty. And as for an hundred good knights I have myself,
  • but I faute fifty, for so many have been slain in my days. And so
  • Leodegrance delivered his daughter Guenever unto Merlin, and the Table
  • Round with the hundred knights, and so they rode freshly, with great
  • royalty, what by water and what by land, till that they came nigh unto
  • London.
  • CHAPTER II. How the Knights of the Round Table were ordained and their
  • sieges blessed by the Bishop of Canterbury.
  • When King Arthur heard of the coming of Guenever and the hundred
  • knights with the Table Round, then King Arthur made great joy for her
  • coming, and that rich present, and said openly, This fair lady is
  • passing welcome unto me, for I have loved her long, and therefore there
  • is nothing so lief to me. And these knights with the Round Table please
  • me more than right great riches. And in all haste the king let ordain
  • for the marriage and the coronation in the most honourable wise that
  • could be devised. Now, Merlin, said King Arthur, go thou and espy me in
  • all this land fifty knights which be of most prowess and worship.
  • Within short time Merlin had found such knights that should fulfil
  • twenty and eight knights, but no more he could find. Then the Bishop of
  • Canterbury was fetched, and he blessed the sieges with great royalty
  • and devotion, and there set the eight and twenty knights in their
  • sieges. And when this was done Merlin said, Fair sirs, ye must all
  • arise and come to King Arthur for to do him homage; he will have the
  • better will to maintain you. And so they arose and did their homage,
  • and when they were gone Merlin found in every sieges letters of gold
  • that told the knights’ names that had sitten therein. But two sieges
  • were void. And so anon came young Gawaine and asked the king a gift.
  • Ask, said the king, and I shall grant it you. Sir, I ask that ye will
  • make me knight that same day ye shall wed fair Guenever. I will do it
  • with a good will, said King Arthur, and do unto you all the worship
  • that I may, for I must by reason ye are my nephew, my sister’s son.
  • CHAPTER III. How a poor man riding upon a lean mare desired King Arthur
  • to make his son knight.
  • Forthwithal there came a poor man into the court, and brought with him
  • a fair young man of eighteen years of age riding upon a lean mare; and
  • the poor man asked all men that he met, Where shall I find King Arthur?
  • Yonder he is, said the knights, wilt thou anything with him? Yea, said
  • the poor man, therefore I came hither. Anon as he came before the king,
  • he saluted him and said: O King Arthur, the flower of all knights and
  • kings, I beseech Jesu save thee. Sir, it was told me that at this time
  • of your marriage ye would give any man the gift that he would ask, out
  • except that were unreasonable. That is truth, said the king, such cries
  • I let make, and that will I hold, so it apair not my realm nor mine
  • estate. Ye say well and graciously, said the poor man; Sir, I ask
  • nothing else but that ye will make my son here a knight. It is a great
  • thing thou askest of me, said the king. What is thy name? said the king
  • to the poor man. Sir, my name is Aries the cowherd. Whether cometh this
  • of thee or of thy son? said the king. Nay, sir, said Aries, this desire
  • cometh of my son and not of me, for I shall tell you I have thirteen
  • sons, and all they will fall to what labour I put them, and will be
  • right glad to do labour, but this child will not labour for me, for
  • anything that my wife or I may do, but always he will be shooting or
  • casting darts, and glad for to see battles and to behold knights, and
  • always day and night he desireth of me to be made a knight. What is thy
  • name? said the king unto the young man. Sir, my name is Tor. The king
  • beheld him fast, and saw he was passingly well-visaged and passingly
  • well made of his years. Well, said King Arthur unto Aries the cowherd,
  • fetch all thy sons afore me that I may see them. And so the poor man
  • did, and all were shaped much like the poor man. But Tor was not like
  • none of them all in shape nor in countenance, for he was much more than
  • any of them. Now, said King Arthur unto the cow herd, where is the
  • sword he shall be made knight withal? It is here, said Tor. Take it out
  • of the sheath, said the king, and require me to make you a knight.
  • Then Tor alighted off his mare and pulled out his sword, kneeling, and
  • requiring the king that he would make him knight, and that he might be
  • a knight of the Table Round. As for a knight I will make you, and
  • therewith smote him in the neck with the sword, saying, Be ye a good
  • knight, and so I pray to God so ye may be, and if ye be of prowess and
  • of worthiness ye shall be a knight of the Table Round. Now Merlin, said
  • Arthur, say whether this Tor shall be a good knight or no. Yea, sir, he
  • ought to be a good knight, for he is come of as good a man as any is
  • alive, and of kings’ blood. How so, sir? said the king. I shall tell
  • you, said Merlin: This poor man, Aries the cowherd, is not his father;
  • he is nothing sib to him, for King Pellinore is his father. I suppose
  • nay, said the cowherd. Fetch thy wife afore me, said Merlin, and she
  • shall not say nay. Anon the wife was fetched, which was a fair
  • housewife, and there she answered Merlin full womanly, and there she
  • told the king and Merlin that when she was a maid, and went to milk
  • kine, there met with her a stern knight, and half by force he had my
  • maidenhead, and at that time he begat my son Tor, and he took away from
  • me my greyhound that I had that time with me, and said that he would
  • keep the greyhound for my love. Ah, said the cowherd, I weened not
  • this, but I may believe it well, for he had never no tatches of me.
  • Sir, said Tor unto Merlin, dishonour not my mother. Sir, said Merlin,
  • it is more for your worship than hurt, for your father is a good man
  • and a king, and he may right well advance you and your mother, for ye
  • were begotten or ever she was wedded. That is truth, said the wife. It
  • is the less grief unto me, said the cowherd.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Sir Tor was known for son of King Pellinore, and how
  • Gawaine was made knight.
  • So on the morn King Pellinore came to the court of King Arthur, which
  • had great joy of him, and told him of Tor, how he was his son, and how
  • he had made him knight at the request of the cowherd. When Pellinore
  • beheld Tor, he pleased him much. So the king made Gawaine knight, but
  • Tor was the first he made at the feast. What is the cause, said King
  • Arthur, that there be two places void in the sieges? Sir, said Merlin,
  • there shall no man sit in those places but they that shall be of most
  • worship. But in the Siege Perilous there shall no man sit therein but
  • one, and if there be any so hardy to do it he shall be destroyed, and
  • he that shall sit there shall have no fellow. And therewith Merlin took
  • King Pellinore by the hand, and in the one hand next the two sieges and
  • the Siege Perilous he said, in open audience, This is your place and
  • best ye are worthy to sit therein of any that is here. Thereat sat Sir
  • Gawaine in great envy and told Gaheris his brother, yonder knight is
  • put to great worship, the which grieveth me sore, for he slew our
  • father King Lot, therefore I will slay him, said Gawaine, with a sword
  • that was sent me that is passing trenchant. Ye shall not so, said
  • Gaheris, at this time, for at this time I am but a squire, and when I
  • am made knight I will be avenged on him, and therefore, brother, it is
  • best ye suffer till another time, that we may have him out of the
  • court, for an we did so we should trouble this high feast. I will well,
  • said Gawaine, as ye will.
  • CHAPTER V. How at feast of the wedding of King Arthur to Guenever, a
  • white hart came into the hall, and thirty couple hounds, and how a
  • brachet pinched the hart which was taken away.
  • Then was the high feast made ready, and the king was wedded at Camelot
  • unto Dame Guenever in the church of Saint Stephen’s, with great
  • solemnity. And as every man was set after his degree, Merlin went to
  • all the knights of the Round Table, and bade them sit still, that none
  • of them remove. For ye shall see a strange and a marvellous adventure.
  • Right so as they sat there came running in a white hart into the hall,
  • and a white brachet next him, and thirty couple of black running hounds
  • came after with a great cry, and the hart went about the Table Round as
  • he went by other boards. The white brachet bit him by the buttock and
  • pulled out a piece, wherethrough the hart leapt a great leap and
  • overthrew a knight that sat at the board side; and therewith the knight
  • arose and took up the brachet, and so went forth out of the hall, and
  • took his horse and rode his way with the brachet. Right so anon came in
  • a lady on a white palfrey, and cried aloud to King Arthur, Sir, suffer
  • me not to have this despite, for the brachet was mine that the knight
  • led away. I may not do therewith, said the king.
  • With this there came a knight riding all armed on a great horse, and
  • took the lady away with him with force, and ever she cried and made
  • great dole. When she was gone the king was glad, for she made such a
  • noise. Nay, said Merlin, ye may not leave these adventures so lightly;
  • for these adventures must be brought again or else it would be
  • disworship to you and to your feast. I will, said the king, that all be
  • done by your advice. Then, said Merlin, let call Sir Gawaine, for he
  • must bring again the white hart. Also, sir, ye must let call Sir Tor,
  • for he must bring again the brachet and the knight, or else slay him.
  • Also let call King Pellinore, for he must bring again the lady and the
  • knight, or else slay him. And these three knights shall do marvellous
  • adventures or they come again. Then were they called all three as it
  • rehearseth afore, and each of them took his charge, and armed them
  • surely. But Sir Gawaine had the first request, and therefore we will
  • begin at him.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Gawaine rode for to fetch again the hart, and how
  • two brethren fought each against other for the hart.
  • Sir Gawaine rode more than a pace, and Gaheris his brother that rode
  • with him instead of a squire to do him service. So as they rode they
  • saw two knights fight on horseback passing sore, so Sir Gawaine and his
  • brother rode betwixt them, and asked them for what cause they fought
  • so. The one knight answered and said, We fight for a simple matter, for
  • we two be two brethren born and begotten of one man and of one woman.
  • Alas, said Sir Gawaine, why do ye so? Sir, said the elder, there came a
  • white hart this way this day, and many hounds chased him, and a white
  • brachet was alway next him, and we understood it was adventure made for
  • the high feast of King Arthur, and therefore I would have gone after to
  • have won me worship; and here my younger brother said he would go after
  • the hart, for he was better knight than I: and for this cause we fell
  • at debate, and so we thought to prove which of us both was better
  • knight. This is a simple cause, said Sir Gawaine; uncouth men ye should
  • debate withal, and not brother with brother; therefore but if you will
  • do by my counsel I will have ado with you, that is ye shall yield you
  • unto me, and that ye go unto King Arthur and yield you unto his grace.
  • Sir knight, said the two brethren, we are forfoughten and much blood
  • have we lost through our wilfulness, and therefore we would be loath to
  • have ado with you. Then do as I will have you, said Sir Gawaine. We
  • will agree to fulfil your will; but by whom shall we say that we be
  • thither sent? Ye may say, By the knight that followeth the quest of the
  • hart that was white. Now what is your name? said Gawaine. Sorlouse of
  • the Forest, said the elder. And my name is, said the younger, Brian of
  • the Forest. And so they departed and went to the king’s court, and Sir
  • Gawaine on his quest.
  • And as Gawaine followed the hart by the cry of the hounds, even afore
  • him there was a great river, and the hart swam over; and as Sir Gawaine
  • would follow after, there stood a knight over the other side, and said,
  • Sir knight, come not over after this hart but if thou wilt joust with
  • me. I will not fail as for that, said Sir Gawaine, to follow the quest
  • that I am in, and so made his horse to swim over the water. And anon
  • they gat their spears and ran together full hard; but Sir Gawaine smote
  • him off his horse, and then he turned his horse and bade him yield him.
  • Nay, said the knight, not so, though thou have the better of me on
  • horseback. I pray thee, valiant knight, alight afoot, and match we
  • together with swords. What is your name? said Sir Gawaine. Allardin of
  • the Isles, said the other. Then either dressed their shields and smote
  • together, but Sir Gawaine smote him so hard through the helm that it
  • went to the brains, and the knight fell down dead. Ah! said Gaheris,
  • that was a mighty stroke of a young knight.
  • CHAPTER VII How the hart was chased into a castle and there slain, and
  • how Sir Gawaine slew a lady.
  • Then Gawaine and Gaheris rode more than a pace after the white hart,
  • and let slip at the hart three couple of greyhounds, and so they chased
  • the hart into a castle, and in the chief place of the castle they slew
  • the hart; Sir Gawaine and Gaheris followed after. Right so there came a
  • knight out of a chamber with a sword drawn in his hand and slew two of
  • the greyhounds, even in the sight of Sir Gawaine, and the remnant he
  • chased them with his sword out of the castle. And when he came again,
  • he said, O my white hart, me repenteth that thou art dead, for my
  • sovereign lady gave thee to me, and evil have I kept thee, and thy
  • death shall be dear bought an I live. And anon he went into his chamber
  • and armed him, and came out fiercely, and there met he with Sir
  • Gawaine. Why have ye slain my hounds? said Sir Gawaine, for they did
  • but their kind, and liefer I had ye had wroken your anger upon me than
  • upon a dumb beast. Thou sayest truth, said the knight, I have avenged
  • me on thy hounds, and so I will on thee or thou go. Then Sir Gawaine
  • alighted afoot and dressed his shield, and struck together mightily,
  • and clave their shields, and stoned their helms, and brake their
  • hauberks that the blood ran down to their feet.
  • At the last Sir Gawaine smote the knight so hard that he fell to the
  • earth, and then he cried mercy, and yielded him, and besought him as he
  • was a knight and gentleman, to save his life. Thou shalt die, said Sir
  • Gawaine, for slaying of my hounds. I will make amends, said the knight,
  • unto my power. Sir Gawaine would no mercy have, but unlaced his helm to
  • have stricken off his head. Right so came his lady out of a chamber and
  • fell over him, and so he smote off her head by misadventure. Alas, said
  • Gaheris, that is foully and shamefully done, that shame shall never
  • from you; also ye should give mercy unto them that ask mercy, for a
  • knight without mercy is without worship. Sir Gawaine was so stonied of
  • the death of this fair lady that he wist not what he did, and said unto
  • the knight, Arise, I will give thee mercy. Nay, nay, said the knight, I
  • take no force of mercy now, for thou hast slain my love and my lady
  • that I loved best of all earthly things. Me sore repenteth it, said Sir
  • Gawaine, for I thought to strike unto thee; but now thou shalt go unto
  • King Arthur and tell him of thine adventures, and how thou art overcome
  • by the knight that went in the quest of the white hart. I take no
  • force, said the knight, whether I live or I die; but so for dread of
  • death he swore to go unto King Arthur, and he made him to bear one
  • greyhound before him on his horse, and another behind him. What is your
  • name? said Sir Gawaine, or we depart. My name is, said the knight,
  • Ablamar of the Marsh. So he departed toward Camelot.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How four knights fought against Gawaine and Gaheris, and
  • how they were overcome, and their lives saved at request of four
  • ladies.
  • And Sir Gawaine went into the castle, and made him ready to lie there
  • all night, and would have unarmed him. What will ye do, said Gaheris,
  • will ye unarm you in this country? Ye may think ye have many enemies
  • here. They had not sooner said that word but there came four knights
  • well armed, and assailed Sir Gawaine hard, and said unto him, Thou
  • new-made knight, thou hast shamed thy knighthood, for a knight without
  • mercy is dishonoured. Also thou hast slain a fair lady to thy great
  • shame to the world’s end, and doubt thou not thou shalt have great need
  • of mercy or thou depart from us. And therewith one of them smote Sir
  • Gawaine a great stroke that nigh he fell to the earth, and Gaheris
  • smote him again sore, and so they were on the one side and on the
  • other, that Sir Gawaine and Gaheris were in jeopardy of their lives;
  • and one with a bow, an archer, smote Sir Gawaine through the arm that
  • it grieved him wonderly sore. And as they should have been slain, there
  • came four fair ladies, and besought the knights of grace for Sir
  • Gawaine; and goodly at request of the ladies they gave Sir Gawaine and
  • Gaheris their lives, and made them to yield them as prisoners. Then
  • Gawaine and Gaheris made great dole. Alas! said Sir Gawaine, mine arm
  • grieveth me sore, I am like to be maimed; and so made his complaint
  • piteously.
  • Early on the morrow there came to Sir Gawaine one of the four ladies
  • that had heard all his complaint, and said, Sir knight, what cheer? Not
  • good, said he. It is your own default, said the lady, for ye have done
  • a passing foul deed in the slaying of the lady, the which will be great
  • villainy unto you. But be ye not of King Arthur’s kin? said the lady.
  • Yes truly, said Sir Gawaine. What is your name? said the lady, ye must
  • tell it me or ye pass. My name is Gawaine, the King Lot of Orkney’s
  • son, and my mother is King Arthur’s sister. Ah! then are ye nephew unto
  • King Arthur, said the lady, and I shall so speak for you that ye shall
  • have conduct to go to King Arthur for his love. And so she departed and
  • told the four knights how their prisoner was King Arthur’s nephew, and
  • his name is Sir Gawaine, King Lot’s son of Orkney. And they gave him
  • the hart’s head because it was in his quest. Then anon they delivered
  • Sir Gawaine under this promise, that he should bear the dead lady with
  • him in this manner; the head of her was hanged about his neck, and the
  • whole body of her lay before him on his horse’s mane. Right so rode he
  • forth unto Camelot. And anon as he was come, Merlin desired of King
  • Arthur that Sir Gawaine should be sworn to tell of all his adventures,
  • and how he slew the lady, and how he would give no mercy unto the
  • knight, wherethrough the lady was slain. Then the king and the queen
  • were greatly displeased with Sir Gawaine for the slaying of the lady.
  • And there by ordinance of the queen there was set a quest of ladies on
  • Sir Gawaine, and they judged him for ever while he lived to be with all
  • ladies, and to fight for their quarrels; and that ever he should be
  • courteous, and never to refuse mercy to him that asketh mercy. Thus was
  • Gawaine sworn upon the Four Evangelists that he should never be against
  • lady nor gentlewoman, but if he fought for a lady and his adversary
  • fought for another. And thus endeth the adventure of Sir Gawaine that
  • he did at the marriage of King Arthur. Amen.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Tor rode after the knight with the brachet, and of
  • his adventure by the way.
  • When Sir Tor was ready, he mounted upon his horseback, and rode after
  • the knight with the brachet. So as he rode he met with a dwarf suddenly
  • that smote his horse on the head with a staff, that he went backward
  • his spear length. Why dost thou so? said Sir Tor. For thou shalt not
  • pass this way, but if thou joust with yonder knights of the pavilions.
  • Then was Tor ware where two pavilions were, and great spears stood out,
  • and two shields hung on trees by the pavilions. I may not tarry, said
  • Sir Tor, for I am in a quest that I must needs follow. Thou shalt not
  • pass, said the dwarf, and therewithal he blew his horn. Then there came
  • one armed on horseback, and dressed his shield, and came fast toward
  • Tor, and he dressed him against him, and so ran together that Tor bare
  • him from his horse. And anon the knight yielded him to his mercy. But,
  • sir, I have a fellow in yonder pavilion that will have ado with you
  • anon. He shall be welcome, said Sir Tor. Then was he ware of another
  • knight coming with great raundon, and each of them dressed to other,
  • that marvel it was to see; but the knight smote Sir Tor a great stroke
  • in midst of the shield that his spear all to-shivered. And Sir Tor
  • smote him through the shield below of the shield that it went through
  • the cost of the knight, but the stroke slew him not. And therewith Sir
  • Tor alighted and smote him on the helm a great stroke, and therewith
  • the knight yielded him and besought him of mercy. I will well, said Sir
  • Tor, but thou and thy fellow must go unto King Arthur, and yield you
  • prisoners unto him. By whom shall we say are we thither sent? Ye shall
  • say by the knight that went in the quest of the knight that went with
  • the brachet. Now, what be your two names? said Sir Tor. My name is,
  • said the one, Sir Felot of Langduk; and my name is, said the other, Sir
  • Petipase of Winchelsea. Now go ye forth, said Sir Tor, and God speed
  • you and me. Then came the dwarf and said unto Sir Tor, I pray you give
  • me a gift. I will well, said Sir Tor, ask. I ask no more, said the
  • dwarf, but that ye will suffer me to do you service, for I will serve
  • no more recreant knights. Take an horse, said Sir Tor, and ride on with
  • me. I wot ye ride after the knight with the white brachet, and I shall
  • bring you where he is, said the dwarf. And so they rode throughout a
  • forest, and at the last they were ware of two pavilions, even by a
  • priory, with two shields, and the one shield was enewed with white, and
  • the other shield was red.
  • CHAPTER X. How Sir Tor found the brachet with a lady, and how a knight
  • assailed him for the said brachet.
  • Therewith Sir Tor alighted and took the dwarf his glaive, and so he
  • came to the white pavilion, and saw three damosels lie in it, on one
  • pallet, sleeping, and so he went to the other pavilion, and found a
  • lady lying sleeping therein, but there was the white brachet that bayed
  • at her fast, and therewith the lady yede out of the pavilion and all
  • her damosels. But anon as Sir Tor espied the white brachet, he took her
  • by force and took her to the dwarf. What, will ye so, said the lady,
  • take my brachet from me? Yea, said Sir Tor, this brachet have I sought
  • from King Arthur’s court hither. Well, said the lady, knight, ye shall
  • not go far with her, but that ye shall be met and grieved. I shall
  • abide what adventure that cometh by the grace of God, and so mounted
  • upon his horse, and passed on his way toward Camelot; but it was so
  • near night he might not pass but little further. Know ye any lodging?
  • said Tor. I know none, said the dwarf, but here beside is an hermitage,
  • and there ye must take lodging as ye find. And within a while they came
  • to the hermitage and took lodging; and was there grass, oats and bread
  • for their horses; soon it was sped, and full hard was their supper; but
  • there they rested them all night till on the morn, and heard a mass
  • devoutly, and took their leave of the hermit, and Sir Tor prayed the
  • hermit to pray for him. He said he would, and betook him to God. And so
  • mounted upon horseback and rode towards Camelot a long while.
  • With that they heard a knight call loud that came after them, and he
  • said, Knight, abide and yield my brachet that thou took from my lady.
  • Sir Tor returned again, and beheld him how he was a seemly knight and
  • well horsed, and well armed at all points; then Sir Tor dressed his
  • shield, and took his spear in his hands, and the other came fiercely
  • upon him, and smote both horse and man to the earth. Anon they arose
  • lightly and drew their swords as eagerly as lions, and put their
  • shields afore them, and smote through the shields, that the cantels
  • fell off both parties. Also they tamed their helms that the hot blood
  • ran out, and the thick mails of their hauberks they carved and rove in
  • sunder that the hot blood ran to the earth, and both they had many
  • wounds and were passing weary. But Sir Tor espied that the other knight
  • fainted, and then he sued fast upon him, and doubled his strokes, and
  • gart him go to the earth on the one side. Then Sir Tor bade him yield
  • him. That will I not, said Abelleus, while my life lasteth and the soul
  • is within my body, unless that thou wilt give me the brachet. That will
  • I not do, said Sir Tor, for it was my quest to bring again thy brachet,
  • thee, or both.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Tor overcame the knight, and how he lost his head
  • at the request of a lady.
  • With that came a damosel riding on a palfrey as fast as she might
  • drive, and cried with a loud voice unto Sir Tor. What will ye with me?
  • said Sir Tor. I beseech thee, said the damosel, for King Arthur’s love,
  • give me a gift; I require thee, gentle knight, as thou art a gentleman.
  • Now, said Tor, ask a gift and I will give it you. Gramercy, said the
  • damosel; now I ask the head of the false knight Abelleus, for he is the
  • most outrageous knight that liveth, and the greatest murderer. I am
  • loath, said Sir Tor, of that gift I have given you; let him make amends
  • in that he hath trespassed unto you. Now, said the damosel, he may not,
  • for he slew mine own brother before mine own eyes, that was a better
  • knight than he, an he had had grace; and I kneeled half an hour afore
  • him in the mire for to save my brother’s life, that had done him no
  • damage, but fought with him by adventure of arms, and so for all that I
  • could do he struck off his head; wherefore I require thee, as thou art
  • a true knight, to give me my gift, or else I shall shame thee in all
  • the court of King Arthur; for he is the falsest knight living, and a
  • great destroyer of good knights. Then when Abelleus heard this, he was
  • more afeard, and yielded him and asked mercy. I may not now, said Sir
  • Tor, but if I should be found false of my promise; for while I would
  • have taken you to mercy ye would none ask, but if ye had the brachet
  • again, that was my quest. And therewith he took off his helm, and he
  • arose and fled, and Sir Tor after him, and smote off his head quite.
  • Now sir, said the damosel, it is near night; I pray you come and lodge
  • with me here at my place, it is here fast by. I will well, said Sir
  • Tor, for his horse and he had fared evil since they departed from
  • Camelot, and so he rode with her, and had passing good cheer with her;
  • and she had a passing fair old knight to her husband that made him
  • passing good cheer, and well eased both his horse and him. And on the
  • morn he heard his mass, and brake his fast, and took his leave of the
  • knight and of the lady, that besought him to tell them his name. Truly,
  • he said, my name is Sir Tor that was late made knight, and this was the
  • first quest of arms that ever I did, to bring again that this knight
  • Abelleus took away from King Arthur’s court. O fair knight, said the
  • lady and her husband, an ye come here in our marches, come and see our
  • poor lodging, and it shall be always at your commandment. So Sir Tor
  • departed and came to Camelot on the third day by noon, and the king and
  • the queen and all the court was passing fain of his coming, and made
  • great joy that he was come again; for he went from the court with
  • little succour, but as King Pellinore his father gave him an old
  • courser, and King Arthur gave him armour and a sword, and else had he
  • none other succour, but rode so forth himself alone. And then the king
  • and the queen by Merlin’s advice made him to swear to tell of his
  • adventures, and so he told and made proofs of his deeds as it is afore
  • rehearsed, wherefore the king and the queen made great joy. Nay, nay,
  • said Merlin, these be but japes to that he shall do; for he shall prove
  • a noble knight of prowess, as good as any is living, and gentle and
  • courteous, and of good tatches, and passing true of his promise, and
  • never shall outrage. Wherethrough Merlin’s words King Arthur gave him
  • an earldom of lands that fell unto him. And here endeth the quest of
  • Sir Tor, King Pellinore’s son.
  • CHAPTER XII. How King Pellinore rode after the lady and the knight that
  • led her away, and how a lady desired help of him, and how he fought
  • with two knights for that lady, of whom he slew the one at the first
  • stroke.
  • Then King Pellinore armed him and mounted upon his horse, and rode more
  • than a pace after the lady that the knight led away. And as he rode in
  • a forest, he saw in a valley a damosel sit by a well, and a wounded
  • knight in her arms, and Pellinore saluted her. And when she was ware of
  • him, she cried overloud, Help me, knight; for Christ’s sake, King
  • Pellinore. And he would not tarry, he was so eager in his quest, and
  • ever she cried an hundred times after help. When she saw he would not
  • abide, she prayed unto God to send him as much need of help as she had,
  • and that he might feel it or he died. So, as the book telleth, the
  • knight there died that there was wounded, wherefore the lady for pure
  • sorrow slew herself with his sword. As King Pellinore rode in that
  • valley he met with a poor man, a labourer. Sawest thou not, said
  • Pellinore, a knight riding and leading away a lady? Yea, said the man,
  • I saw that knight, and the lady that made great dole; and yonder
  • beneath in a valley there shall ye see two pavilions, and one of the
  • knights of the pavilions challenged that lady of that knight, and said
  • she was his cousin near, wherefore he should lead her no farther. And
  • so they waged battle in that quarrel, the one said he would have her by
  • force, and the other said he would have the rule of her, by cause he
  • was her kinsman, and would lead her to her kin. For this quarrel he
  • left them fighting. And if ye will ride a pace ye shall find them
  • fighting, and the lady was beleft with the two squires in the
  • pavilions. God thank thee, said King Pellinore.
  • Then he rode a wallop till he had a sight of the two pavilions, and the
  • two knights fighting. Anon he rode unto the pavilions, and saw the lady
  • that was his quest, and said, Fair lady, ye must go with me unto the
  • court of King Arthur. Sir knight, said the two squires that were with
  • her, yonder are two knights that fight for this lady, go thither and
  • depart them, and be agreed with them, and then may ye have her at your
  • pleasure. Ye say well, said King Pellinore. And anon he rode betwixt
  • them, and departed them, and asked them the causes why that they
  • fought? Sir knight, said the one, I shall tell you, this lady is my
  • kinswoman nigh, mine aunt’s daughter, and when I heard her complain
  • that she was with him maugre her head, I waged battle to fight with
  • him. Sir knight, said the other, whose name was Hontzlake of Wentland,
  • and this lady I gat by my prowess of arms this day at Arthur’s court.
  • That is untruly said, said King Pellinore, for ye came in suddenly
  • there as we were at the high feast, and took away this lady or any man
  • might make him ready; and therefore it was my quest to bring her again
  • and you both, or else the one of us to abide in the field; therefore
  • the lady shall go with me, or I will die for it, for I have promised it
  • King Arthur. And therefore fight ye no more, for none of you shall have
  • no part of her at this time; and if ye list to fight for her, fight
  • with me, and I will defend her. Well, said the knights, make you ready,
  • and we shall assail you with all our power. And as King Pellinore would
  • have put his horse from them, Sir Hontzlake rove his horse through with
  • a sword, and said: Now art thou on foot as well as we are. When King
  • Pellinore espied that his horse was slain, lightly he leapt from his
  • horse and pulled out his sword, and put his shield afore him, and said,
  • Knight, keep well thy head, for thou shalt have a buffet for the
  • slaying of my horse. So King Pellinore gave him such a stroke upon the
  • helm that he clave the head down to the chin, that he fell to the earth
  • dead.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How King Pellinore gat the lady and brought her to
  • Camelot to the court of King Arthur.
  • And then he turned him to the other knight, that was sore wounded. But
  • when he saw the other’s buffet, he would not fight, but kneeled down
  • and said, Take my cousin the lady with you at your request, and I
  • require you, as ye be a true knight, put her to no shame nor villainy.
  • What, said King Pellinore, will ye not fight for her? No, sir, said the
  • knight, I will not fight with such a knight of prowess as ye be. Well,
  • said Pellinore, ye say well; I promise you she shall have no villainy
  • by me, as I am true knight; but now me lacketh an horse, said
  • Pellinore, but I will have Hontzlake’s horse. Ye shall not need, said
  • the knight, for I shall give you such an horse as shall please you, so
  • that you will lodge with me, for it is near night. I will well, said
  • King Pellinore, abide with you all night. And there he had with him
  • right good cheer, and fared of the best with passing good wine, and had
  • merry rest that night. And on the morn he heard a mass and dined; and
  • then was brought him a fair bay courser, and King Pellinore’s saddle
  • set upon him. Now, what shall I call you? said the knight, inasmuch as
  • ye have my cousin at your desire of your quest. Sir, I shall tell you,
  • my name is King Pellinore of the Isles and knight of the Table Round.
  • Now I am glad, said the knight, that such a noble man shall have the
  • rule of my cousin. Now, what is your name? said Pellinore, I pray you
  • tell me. Sir, my name is Sir Meliot of Logurs, and this lady my cousin
  • hight Nimue, and the knight that was in the other pavilion is my sworn
  • brother, a passing good knight, and his name is Brian of the Isles, and
  • he is full loath to do wrong, and full loath to fight with any man, but
  • if he be sore sought on, so that for shame he may not leave it. It is
  • marvel, said Pellinore, that he will not have ado with me. Sir, he will
  • not have ado with no man but if it be at his request. Bring him to the
  • court, said Pellinore, one of these days. Sir, we will come together.
  • And ye shall be welcome, said Pellinore, to the court of King Arthur,
  • and greatly allowed for your coming. And so he departed with the lady,
  • and brought her to Camelot.
  • So as they rode in a valley it was full of stones, and there the lady’s
  • horse stumbled and threw her down, that her arm was sore bruised and
  • near she swooned for pain. Alas! sir, said the lady, mine arm is out of
  • lithe, wherethrough I must needs rest me. Ye shall well, said King
  • Pellinore. And so he alighted under a fair tree where was fair grass,
  • and he put his horse thereto, and so laid him under the tree and slept
  • till it was nigh night. And when he awoke he would have ridden. Sir,
  • said the lady, it is so dark that ye may as well ride backward as
  • forward. So they abode still and made there their lodging. Then Sir
  • Pellinore put off his armour; then a little afore midnight they heard
  • the trotting of an horse. Be ye still, said King Pellinore, for we
  • shall hear of some adventure.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How on the way he heard two knights, as he lay by night in
  • a valley, and of their adventures.
  • And therewith he armed him. So right even afore him there met two
  • knights, the one came froward Camelot, and the other from the north,
  • and either saluted other. What tidings at Camelot? said the one. By my
  • head, said the other, there have I been and espied the court of King
  • Arthur, and there is such a fellowship they may never be broken, and
  • well-nigh all the world holdeth with Arthur, for there is the flower of
  • chivalry. Now for this cause I am riding into the north, to tell our
  • chieftains of the fellowship that is withholden with King Arthur. As
  • for that, said the other knight, I have brought a remedy with me, that
  • is the greatest poison that ever ye heard speak of, and to Camelot will
  • I with it, for we have a friend right nigh King Arthur, and well
  • cherished, that shall poison King Arthur; for so he hath promised our
  • chieftains, and received great gifts for to do it. Beware, said the
  • other knight, of Merlin, for he knoweth all things by the devil’s
  • craft. Therefore will I not let it, said the knight. And so they
  • departed asunder. Anon after Pellinore made him ready, and his lady,
  • [and] rode toward Camelot; and as they came by the well there as the
  • wounded knight was and the lady, there he found the knight, and the
  • lady eaten with lions or wild beasts, all save the head, wherefore he
  • made great sorrow, and wept passing sore, and said, Alas! her life
  • might I have saved; but I was so fierce in my quest, therefore I would
  • not abide. Wherefore make ye such dole? said the lady. I wot not, said
  • Pellinore, but my heart mourneth sore of the death of her, for she was
  • a passing fair lady and a young. Now, will ye do by mine advice? said
  • the lady, take this knight and let him be buried in an hermitage, and
  • then take the lady’s head and bear it with you unto Arthur. So King
  • Pellinore took this dead knight on his shoulders, and brought him to
  • the hermitage, and charged the hermit with the corpse, that service
  • should be done for the soul; and take his harness for your pain. It
  • shall be done, said the hermit, as I will answer unto God.
  • CHAPTER XV. How when he was come to Camelot he was sworn upon a book to
  • tell the truth of his quest.
  • And therewith they departed, and came there as the head of the lady lay
  • with a fair yellow hair that grieved King Pellinore passingly sore when
  • he looked on it, for much he cast his heart on the visage. And so by
  • noon they came to Camelot; and the king and the queen were passing fain
  • of his coming to the court. And there he was made to swear upon the
  • Four Evangelists, to tell the truth of his quest from the one to the
  • other. Ah! Sir Pellinore, said Queen Guenever, ye were greatly to blame
  • that ye saved not this lady’s life. Madam, said Pellinore, ye were
  • greatly to blame an ye would not save your own life an ye might, but,
  • save your pleasure, I was so furious in my quest that I would not
  • abide, and that repenteth me, and shall the days of my life. Truly,
  • said Merlin, ye ought sore to repent it, for that lady was your own
  • daughter begotten on the lady of the Rule, and that knight that was
  • dead was her love, and should have wedded her, and he was a right good
  • knight of a young man, and would have proved a good man, and to this
  • court was he coming, and his name was Sir Miles of the Launds, and a
  • knight came behind him and slew him with a spear, and his name is
  • Loraine le Savage, a false knight and a coward; and she for great
  • sorrow and dole slew herself with his sword, and her name was Eleine.
  • And because ye would not abide and help her, ye shall see your best
  • friend fail you when ye be in the greatest distress that ever ye were
  • or shall be. And that penance God hath ordained you for that deed, that
  • he that ye shall most trust to of any man alive, he shall leave you
  • there ye shall be slain. Me forthinketh, said King Pellinore, that this
  • shall me betide, but God may fordo well destiny.
  • Thus, when the quest was done of the white hart, the which followed Sir
  • Gawaine; and the quest of the brachet, followed of Sir Tor, Pellinore’s
  • son; and the quest of the lady that the knight took away, the which
  • King Pellinore at that time followed; then the king stablished all his
  • knights, and them that were of lands not rich he gave them lands, and
  • charged them never to do outrageousity nor murder, and always to flee
  • treason; also, by no means to be cruel, but to give mercy unto him that
  • asketh mercy, upon pain of forfeiture of their worship and lordship of
  • King Arthur for evermore; and always to do ladies, damosels, and
  • gentlewomen succour, upon pain of death. Also, that no man take no
  • battles in a wrongful quarrel for no law, nor for no world’s goods.
  • Unto this were all the knights sworn of the Table Round, both old and
  • young. And every year were they sworn at the high feast of Pentecost.
  • Explicit the Wedding of King Arthur. Sequitur quartus liber.
  • BOOK IV.
  • CHAPTER I. How Merlin was assotted and doted on one of the ladies of
  • the lake, and how he was shut in a rock under a stone and there died.
  • So after these quests of Sir Gawaine, Sir Tor, and King Pellinore, it
  • fell so that Merlin fell in a dotage on the damosel that King Pellinore
  • brought to court, and she was one of the damosels of the lake, that
  • hight Nimue. But Merlin would let her have no rest, but always he would
  • be with her. And ever she made Merlin good cheer till she had learned
  • of him all manner thing that she desired; and he was assotted upon her,
  • that he might not be from her. So on a time he told King Arthur that he
  • should not dure long, but for all his crafts he should be put in the
  • earth quick. And so he told the king many things that should befall,
  • but always he warned the king to keep well his sword and the scabbard,
  • for he told him how the sword and the scabbard should be stolen by a
  • woman from him that he most trusted. Also he told King Arthur that he
  • should miss him,—Yet had ye liefer than all your lands to have me
  • again. Ah, said the king, since ye know of your adventure, purvey for
  • it, and put away by your crafts that misadventure. Nay, said Merlin, it
  • will not be; so he departed from the king. And within a while the
  • Damosel of the Lake departed, and Merlin went with her evermore
  • wheresomever she went. And ofttimes Merlin would have had her privily
  • away by his subtle crafts; then she made him to swear that he should
  • never do none enchantment upon her if he would have his will. And so he
  • sware; so she and Merlin went over the sea unto the land of Benwick,
  • whereas King Ban was king that had great war against King Claudas, and
  • there Merlin spake with King Ban’s wife, a fair lady and a good, and
  • her name was Elaine, and there he saw young Launcelot. There the queen
  • made great sorrow for the mortal war that King Claudas made on her lord
  • and on her lands. Take none heaviness, said Merlin, for this same child
  • within this twenty year shall revenge you on King Claudas, that all
  • Christendom shall speak of it; and this same child shall be the most
  • man of worship of the world, and his first name is Galahad, that know I
  • well, said Merlin, and since ye have confirmed him Launcelot. That is
  • truth, said the queen, his first name was Galahad. O Merlin, said the
  • queen, shall I live to see my son such a man of prowess? Yea, lady, on
  • my peril ye shall see it, and live many winters after.
  • And so, soon after, the lady and Merlin departed, and by the way Merlin
  • showed her many wonders, and came into Cornwall. And always Merlin lay
  • about the lady to have her maidenhood, and she was ever passing weary
  • of him, and fain would have been delivered of him, for she was afeard
  • of him because he was a devil’s son, and she could not beskift him by
  • no mean. And so on a time it happed that Merlin showed to her in a rock
  • whereas was a great wonder, and wrought by enchantment, that went under
  • a great stone. So by her subtle working she made Merlin to go under
  • that stone to let her wit of the marvels there; but she wrought so
  • there for him that he came never out for all the craft he could do. And
  • so she departed and left Merlin.
  • CHAPTER II. How five kings came into this land to war against King
  • Arthur, and what counsel Arthur had against them.
  • And as King Arthur rode to Camelot, and held there a great feast with
  • mirth and joy, so soon after he returned unto Cardoile, and there came
  • unto Arthur new tidings that the king of Denmark, and the king of
  • Ireland that was his brother, and the king of the Vale, and the king of
  • Soleise, and the king of the Isle of Longtains, all these five kings
  • with a great host were entered into the land of King Arthur, and burnt
  • and slew clean afore them, both cities and castles, that it was pity to
  • hear. Alas, said Arthur, yet had I never rest one month since I was
  • crowned king of this land. Now shall I never rest till I meet with
  • those kings in a fair field, that I make mine avow; for my true liege
  • people shall not be destroyed in my default, go with me who will, and
  • abide who that will. Then the king let write unto King Pellinore, and
  • prayed him in all haste to make him ready with such people as he might
  • lightliest rear and hie him after in all haste. All the barons were
  • privily wroth that the king would depart so suddenly; but the king by
  • no mean would abide, but made writing unto them that were not there,
  • and bade them hie after him, such as were not at that time in the
  • court. Then the king came to Queen Guenever, and said, Lady, make you
  • ready, for ye shall go with me, for I may not long miss you; ye shall
  • cause me to be the more hardy, what adventure so befall me; I will not
  • wit my lady to be in no jeopardy. Sir, said she, I am at your
  • commandment, and shall be ready what time so ye be ready. So on the
  • morn the king and the queen departed with such fellowship as they had,
  • and came into the north, into a forest beside Humber, and there lodged
  • them. When the word and tiding came unto the five kings above said,
  • that Arthur was beside Humber in a forest, there was a knight, brother
  • unto one of the five kings, that gave them this counsel: Ye know well
  • that Sir Arthur hath the flower of chivalry of the world with him, as
  • it is proved by the great battle he did with the eleven kings; and
  • therefore hie unto him night and day till that we be nigh him, for the
  • longer he tarrieth the bigger he is, and we ever the weaker; and he is
  • so courageous of himself that he is come to the field with little
  • people, and therefore let us set upon him or day and we shall slay
  • down; of his knights there shall none escape.
  • CHAPTER III. How King Arthur had ado with them and overthrew them, and
  • slew the five kings and made the remnant to flee.
  • Unto this counsel these five kings assented, and so they passed forth
  • with their host through North Wales, and came upon Arthur by night, and
  • set upon his host as the king and his knights were in their pavilions.
  • King Arthur was unarmed, and had laid him to rest with his Queen
  • Guenever. Sir, said Sir Kay, it is not good we be unarmed. We shall
  • have no need, said Sir Gawaine and Sir Griflet, that lay in a little
  • pavilion by the king. With that they heard a great noise, and many
  • cried, Treason, treason! Alas, said King Arthur, we be betrayed! Unto
  • arms, fellows, then he cried. So they were armed anon at all points.
  • Then came there a wounded knight unto the king, and said, Sir, save
  • yourself and my lady the queen, for our host is destroyed, and much
  • people of ours slain. So anon the king and the queen and the three
  • knights took their horses, and rode toward Humber to pass over it, and
  • the water was so rough that they were afraid to pass over. Now may ye
  • choose, said King Arthur, whether ye will abide and take the adventure
  • on this side, for an ye be taken they will slay you. It were me liefer,
  • said the queen, to die in the water than to fall in your enemies’ hands
  • and there be slain.
  • And as they stood so talking, Sir Kay saw the five kings coming on
  • horseback by themselves alone, with their spears in their hands even
  • toward them. Lo, said Sir Kay, yonder be the five kings; let us go to
  • them and match them. That were folly, said Sir Gawaine, for we are but
  • three and they be five. That is truth, said Sir Griflet. No force, said
  • Sir Kay, I will undertake for two of them, and then may ye three
  • undertake for the other three. And therewithal, Sir Kay let his horse
  • run as fast as he might, and struck one of them through the shield and
  • the body a fathom, that the king fell to the earth stark dead. That saw
  • Sir Gawaine, and ran unto another king so hard that he smote him
  • through the body. And therewithal King Arthur ran to another, and smote
  • him through the body with a spear, that he fell to the earth dead Then
  • Sir Griflet ran unto the fourth king, and gave him such a fall that his
  • neck brake. Anon Sir Kay ran unto the fifth king, and smote him so hard
  • on the helm that the stroke clave the helm and the head to the earth.
  • That was well stricken, said King Arthur, and worshipfully hast thou
  • holden thy promise, therefore I shall honour thee while that I live.
  • And therewithal they set the queen in a barge into Humber; but always
  • Queen Guenever praised Sir Kay for his deeds, and said, What lady that
  • ye love, and she love you not again she were greatly to blame; and
  • among ladies, said the queen, I shall bear your noble fame, for ye
  • spake a great word, and fulfilled it worshipfully. And therewith the
  • queen departed.
  • Then the king and the three knights rode into the forest, for there
  • they supposed to hear of them that were escaped; and there he found the
  • most part of his people, and told them all how the five kings were
  • dead. And therefore let us hold us together till it be day, and when
  • their host have espied that their chieftains be slain, they will make
  • such dole that they shall no more help themselves. And right so as the
  • king said, so it was; for when they found the five kings dead, they
  • made such dole that they fell from their horses. Therewithal came King
  • Arthur but with a few people, and slew on the left hand and on the
  • right hand, that well-nigh there escaped no man, but all were slain to
  • the number thirty thousand. And when the battle was all ended, the king
  • kneeled down and thanked God meekly. And then he sent for the queen,
  • and soon she was come, and she made great joy of the overcoming of that
  • battle.
  • CHAPTER IV. How the battle was finished or he came, and how King Arthur
  • founded an abbey where the battle was.
  • Therewithal came one to King Arthur, and told him that King Pellinore
  • was within three mile with a great host; and he said, Go unto him, and
  • let him understand how we have sped. So within a while King Pellinore
  • came with a great host, and saluted the people and the king, and there
  • was great joy made on every side. Then the king let search how much
  • people of his party there was slain; and there were found but little
  • past two hundred men slain and eight knights of the Table Round in
  • their pavilions. Then the king let rear and devise in the same place
  • whereat the battle was done a fair abbey, and endowed it with great
  • livelihood, and let it call the Abbey of La Beale Adventure. But when
  • some of them came into their countries, whereof the five kings were
  • kings, and told them how they were slain, there was made great dole.
  • And all King Arthur’s enemies, as the King of North Wales, and the
  • kings of the North, [when they] wist of the battle, they were passing
  • heavy. And so the king returned unto Camelot in haste.
  • And when he was come to Camelot he called King Pellinore unto him, and
  • said, Ye understand well that we have lost eight knights of the best of
  • the Table Round, and by your advice we will choose eight again of the
  • best we may find in this court. Sir, said Pellinore, I shall counsel
  • you after my conceit the best: there are in your court full noble
  • knights both of old and young; and therefore by mine advice ye shall
  • choose half of the old and half of the young. Which be the old? said
  • King Arthur. Sir, said King Pellinore, meseemeth that King Uriens that
  • hath wedded your sister Morgan le Fay, and the King of the Lake, and
  • Sir Hervise de Revel, a noble knight, and Sir Galagars, the fourth.
  • This is well devised, said King Arthur, and right so shall it be. Now,
  • which are the four young knights? said Arthur. Sir, said Pellinore, the
  • first is Sir Gawaine, your nephew, that is as good a knight of his time
  • as any is in this land; and the second as meseemeth best is Sir Griflet
  • le Fise de Dieu, that is a good knight and full desirous in arms, and
  • who may see him live he shall prove a good knight; and the third as
  • meseemeth is well to be one of the knights of the Round Table, Sir Kay
  • the Seneschal, for many times he hath done full worshipfully, and now
  • at your last battle he did full honourably for to undertake to slay two
  • kings. By my head, said Arthur, he is best worth to be a knight of the
  • Round Table of any that ye have rehearsed, an he had done no more
  • prowess in his life days.
  • CHAPTER V. How Sir Tor was made knight of the Round Table, and how
  • Bagdemagus was displeased.
  • Now, said King Pellinore, I shall put to you two knights, and ye shall
  • choose which is most worthy, that is Sir Bagdemagus, and Sir Tor, my
  • son. But because Sir Tor is my son I may not praise him, but else, an
  • he were not my son, I durst say that of his age there is not in this
  • land a better knight than he is, nor of better conditions and loath to
  • do any wrong, and loath to take any wrong. By my head, said Arthur, he
  • is a passing good knight as any ye spake of this day, that wot I well,
  • said the king; for I have seen him proved, but he saith little and he
  • doth much more, for I know none in all this court an he were as well
  • born on his mother’s side as he is on your side, that is like him of
  • prowess and of might: and therefore I will have him at this time, and
  • leave Sir Bagdemagus till another time. So when they were so chosen by
  • the assent of all the barons, so were there found in their sieges every
  • knights’ names that here are rehearsed, and so were they set in their
  • sieges; whereof Sir Bagdemagus was wonderly wroth, that Sir Tor was
  • advanced afore him, and therefore suddenly he departed from the court,
  • and took his squire with him, and rode long in a forest till they came
  • to a cross, and there alighted and said his prayers devoutly. The
  • meanwhile his squire found written upon the cross, that Bagdemagus
  • should never return unto the court again, till he had won a knight’s
  • body of the Round Table, body for body. So, sir, said the squire, here
  • I find writing of you, therefore I rede you return again to the court.
  • That shall I never, said Bagdemagus, till men speak of me great
  • worship, and that I be worthy to be a knight of the Round Table. And so
  • he rode forth, and there by the way he found a branch of an holy herb
  • that was the sign of the Sangreal, and no knight found such tokens but
  • he were a good liver.
  • So, as Sir Bagdemagus rode to see many adventures, it happed him to
  • come to the rock whereas the Lady of the Lake had put Merlin under the
  • stone, and there he heard him make great dole; whereof Sir Bagdemagus
  • would have holpen him, and went unto the great stone, and it was so
  • heavy that an hundred men might not lift it up. When Merlin wist he was
  • there, he bade leave his labour, for all was in vain, for he might
  • never be holpen but by her that put him there. And so Bagdemagus
  • departed and did many adventures, and proved after a full good knight,
  • and came again to the court and was made knight of the Round Table. So
  • on the morn there fell new tidings and other adventures.
  • CHAPTER VI. How King Arthur, King Uriens, and Sir Accolon of Gaul,
  • chased an hart, and of their marvellous adventures.
  • Then it befell that Arthur and many of his knights rode a-hunting into
  • a great forest, and it happed King Arthur, King Uriens, and Sir Accolon
  • of Gaul, followed a great hart, for they three were well horsed, and so
  • they chased so fast that within a while they three were then ten mile
  • from their fellowship. And at the last they chased so sore that they
  • slew their horses underneath them. Then were they all three on foot,
  • and ever they saw the hart afore them passing weary and enbushed. What
  • will we do? said King Arthur, we are hard bestead. Let us go on foot,
  • said King Uriens, till we may meet with some lodging. Then were they
  • ware of the hart that lay on a great water bank, and a brachet biting
  • on his throat, and more other hounds came after. Then King Arthur blew
  • the prise and dight the hart.
  • Then the king looked about the world, and saw afore him in a great
  • water a little ship, all apparelled with silk down to the water, and
  • the ship came right unto them and landed on the sands. Then Arthur went
  • to the bank and looked in, and saw none earthly creature therein. Sirs,
  • said the king, come thence, and let us see what is in this ship. So
  • they went in all three, and found it richly behanged with cloth of
  • silk. By then it was dark night, and there suddenly were about them an
  • hundred torches set upon all the sides of the ship boards, and it gave
  • great light; and therewithal there came out twelve fair damosels and
  • saluted King Arthur on their knees, and called him by his name, and
  • said he was right welcome, and such cheer as they had he should have of
  • the best. The king thanked them fair. Therewithal they led the king and
  • his two fellows into a fair chamber, and there was a cloth laid, richly
  • beseen of all that longed unto a table, and there were they served of
  • all wines and meats that they could think; of that the king had great
  • marvel, for he fared never better in his life as for one supper. And so
  • when they had supped at their leisure, King Arthur was led into a
  • chamber, a richer beseen chamber saw he never none, and so was King
  • Uriens served, and led into such another chamber, and Sir Accolon was
  • led into the third chamber passing richly and well beseen; and so they
  • were laid in their beds easily. And anon they fell asleep, and slept
  • marvellously sore all the night. And on the morrow King Uriens was in
  • Camelot abed in his wife’s arms, Morgan le Fay. And when he awoke he
  • had great marvel, how he came there, for on the even afore he was two
  • days’ journey from Camelot. And when King Arthur awoke he found himself
  • in a dark prison, hearing about him many complaints of woful knights.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Arthur took upon him to fight to be delivered out of
  • prison, and also for to deliver twenty knights that were in prison.
  • What are ye that so complain? said King Arthur. We be here twenty
  • knights, prisoners, said they, and some of us have lain here seven
  • year, and some more and some less. For what cause? said Arthur. We
  • shall tell you, said the knights; this lord of this castle, his name is
  • Sir Damas, and he is the falsest knight that liveth, and full of
  • treason, and a very coward as any liveth, and he hath a younger
  • brother, a good knight of prowess, his name is Sir Ontzlake; and this
  • traitor Damas, the elder brother will give him no part of his
  • livelihood, but as Sir Ontzlake keepeth thorough prowess of his hands,
  • and so he keepeth from him a full fair manor and a rich, and therein
  • Sir Ontzlake dwelleth worshipfully, and is well beloved of all people.
  • And this Sir Damas, our master is as evil beloved, for he is without
  • mercy, and he is a coward, and great war hath been betwixt them both,
  • but Ontzlake hath ever the better, and ever he proffereth Sir Damas to
  • fight for the livelihood, body for body, but he will not do; other-else
  • to find a knight to fight for him. Unto that Sir Damas had granted to
  • find a knight, but he is so evil beloved and hated, that there is never
  • a knight will fight for him. And when Damas saw this, that there was
  • never a knight would fight for him, he hath daily lain await with many
  • knights with him, and taken all the knights in this country to see and
  • espy their adventures, he hath taken them by force and brought them to
  • his prison. And so he took us separately as we rode on our adventures,
  • and many good knights have died in this prison for hunger, to the
  • number of eighteen knights; and if any of us all that here is, or hath
  • been, would have foughten with his brother Ontzlake, he would have
  • delivered us, but for because this Damas is so false and so full of
  • treason we would never fight for him to die for it. And we be so lean
  • for hunger that unnethe we may stand on our feet. God deliver you, for
  • his mercy, said Arthur.
  • Anon, therewithal there came a damosel unto Arthur, and asked him, What
  • cheer? I cannot say, said he. Sir, said she, an ye will fight for my
  • lord, ye shall be delivered out of prison, and else ye escape never the
  • life. Now, said Arthur, that is hard, yet had I liefer to fight with a
  • knight than to die in prison; with this, said Arthur, I may be
  • delivered and all these prisoners, I will do the battle. Yes, said the
  • damosel. I am ready, said Arthur, an I had horse and armour. Ye shall
  • lack none, said the damosel. Meseemeth, damosel, I should have seen you
  • in the court of Arthur. Nay said the damosel, I came never there, I am
  • the lord’s daughter of this castle. Yet was she false, for she was one
  • of the damosels of Morgan le Fay.
  • Anon she went unto Sir Damas, and told him how he would do battle for
  • him, and so he sent for Arthur. And when he came he was well coloured,
  • and well made of his limbs, that all knights that saw him said it were
  • pity that such a knight should die in prison. So Sir Damas and he were
  • agreed that he should fight for him upon this covenant, that all other
  • knights should be delivered; and unto that was Sir Damas sworn unto
  • Arthur, and also to do the battle to the uttermost. And with that all
  • the twenty knights were brought out of the dark prison into the hall,
  • and delivered, and so they all abode to see the battle.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Accolon found himself by a well, and he took upon him
  • to do battle against Arthur.
  • Now turn we unto Accolon of Gaul, that when he awoke he found himself
  • by a deep well-side, within half a foot, in great peril of death. And
  • there came out of that fountain a pipe of silver, and out of that pipe
  • ran water all on high in a stone of marble. When Sir Accolon saw this,
  • he blessed him and said, Jesus save my lord King Arthur, and King
  • Uriens, for these damosels in this ship have betrayed us, they were
  • devils and no women; and if I may escape this misadventure, I shall
  • destroy all where I may find these false damosels that use
  • enchantments. Right with that there came a dwarf with a great mouth and
  • a flat nose, and saluted Sir Accolon, and said how he came from Queen
  • Morgan le Fay, and she greeteth you well, and biddeth you be of strong
  • heart, for ye shall fight to morrow with a knight at the hour of prime,
  • and therefore she hath sent you here Excalibur, Arthur’s sword, and the
  • scabbard, and she biddeth you as ye love her, that ye do the battle to
  • the uttermost, without any mercy, like as ye had promised her when ye
  • spake together in privity; and what damosel that bringeth her the
  • knight’s head, which ye shall fight withal, she will make her a queen.
  • Now I understand you well, said Accolon, I shall hold that I have
  • promised her now I have the sword: when saw ye my lady Queen Morgan le
  • Fay? Right late, said the dwarf. Then Accolon took him in his arms and
  • said, Recommend me unto my lady queen, and tell her all shall be done
  • that I have promised her, and else I will die for it. Now I suppose,
  • said Accolon, she hath made all these crafts and enchantments for this
  • battle. Ye may well believe it, said the dwarf. Right so there came a
  • knight and a lady with six squires, and saluted Accolon, and prayed him
  • for to arise, and come and rest him at his manor. And so Accolon
  • mounted upon a void horse, and went with the knight unto a fair manor
  • by a priory, and there he had passing good cheer.
  • Then Sir Damas sent unto his brother Sir Ontzlake, and bade make him
  • ready by to-morn at the hour of prime, and to be in the field to fight
  • with a good knight, for he had found a good knight that was ready to do
  • battle at all points. When this word came unto Sir Ontzlake he was
  • passing heavy, for he was wounded a little to-fore through both his
  • thighs with a spear, and made great dole; but as he was wounded, he
  • would have taken the battle on hand. So it happed at that time, by the
  • means of Morgan le Fay, Accolon was with Sir Ontzlake lodged; and when
  • he heard of that battle, and how Ontzlake was wounded, he said that he
  • would fight for him. Because Morgan le Fay had sent him Excalibur and
  • the sheath for to fight with the knight on the morn: this was the cause
  • Sir Accolon took the battle on hand. Then Sir Ontzlake was passing
  • glad, and thanked Sir Accolon with all his heart that he would do so
  • much for him. And therewithal Sir Ontzlake sent word unto his brother
  • Sir Damas, that he had a knight that for him should be ready in the
  • field by the hour of prime.
  • So on the morn Sir Arthur was armed and well horsed, and asked Sir
  • Damas, When shall we to the field? Sir, said Sir Damas, ye shall hear
  • mass. And so Arthur heard a mass, and when mass was done there came a
  • squire on a great horse, and asked Sir Damas if his knight were ready,
  • for our knight is ready in the field. Then Sir Arthur mounted upon
  • horseback, and there were all the knights and commons of that country;
  • and so by all advices there were chosen twelve good men of the country
  • for to wait upon the two knights. And right as Arthur was on horseback
  • there came a damosel from Morgan le Fay, and brought unto Sir Arthur a
  • sword like unto Excalibur, and the scabbard, and said unto Arthur,
  • Morgan le Fay sendeth here your sword for great love. And he thanked
  • her, and weened it had been so, but she was false, for the sword and
  • the scabbard was counterfeit, and brittle, and false.
  • CHAPTER IX. Of the battle between King Arthur and Accolon.
  • And then they dressed them on both parties of the field, and let their
  • horses run so fast that either smote other in the midst of the shield
  • with their spear-heads, that both horse and man went to the earth; and
  • then they started up both, and pulled out their swords. The meanwhile
  • that they were thus at the battle, came the Damosel of the Lake into
  • the field, that put Merlin under the stone; and she came thither for
  • love of King Arthur, for she knew how Morgan le Fay had so ordained
  • that King Arthur should have been slain that day, and therefore she
  • came to save his life. And so they went eagerly to the battle, and gave
  • many great strokes, but always Arthur’s sword bit not like Accolon’s
  • sword; but for the most part, every stroke that Accolon gave he wounded
  • sore Arthur, that it was marvel he stood, and always his blood fell
  • from him fast.
  • When Arthur beheld the ground so sore be-bled he was dismayed, and then
  • he deemed treason that his sword was changed; for his sword bit not
  • steel as it was wont to do, therefore he dreaded him sore to be dead,
  • for ever him seemed that the sword in Accolon’s hand was Excalibur, for
  • at every stroke that Accolon struck he drew blood on Arthur. Now,
  • knight, said Accolon unto Arthur, keep thee well from me; but Arthur
  • answered not again, and gave him such a buffet on the helm that it made
  • him to stoop, nigh falling down to the earth. Then Sir Accolon withdrew
  • him a little, and came on with Excalibur on high, and smote Sir Arthur
  • such a buffet that he fell nigh to the earth. Then were they wroth
  • both, and gave each other many sore strokes, but always Sir Arthur lost
  • so much blood that it was marvel he stood on his feet, but he was so
  • full of knighthood that knightly he endured the pain. And Sir Accolon
  • lost not a deal of blood, therefore he waxed passing light, and Sir
  • Arthur was passing feeble, and weened verily to have died; but for all
  • that he made countenance as though he might endure, and held Accolon as
  • short as he might. But Accolon was so bold because of Excalibur that he
  • waxed passing hardy. But all men that beheld him said they saw never
  • knight fight so well as Arthur did considering the blood that he bled.
  • So was all the people sorry for him, but the two brethren would not
  • accord. Then always they fought together as fierce knights, and Sir
  • Arthur withdrew him a little for to rest him, and Sir Accolon called
  • him to battle and said, It is no time for me to suffer thee to rest.
  • And therewith he came fiercely upon Arthur, and Sir Arthur was wroth
  • for the blood that he had lost, and smote Accolon on high upon the
  • helm, so mightily, that he made him nigh to fall to the earth; and
  • therewith Arthur’s sword brast at the cross, and fell in the grass
  • among the blood, and the pommel and the sure handles he held in his
  • hands. When Sir Arthur saw that, he was in great fear to die, but
  • always he held up his shield and lost no ground, nor bated no cheer.
  • CHAPTER X. How King Arthur’s sword that he fought with brake, and how
  • he recovered of Accolon his own sword Excalibur, and overcame his
  • enemy.
  • Then Sir Accolon began with words of treason, and said, Knight, thou
  • art overcome, and mayst not endure, and also thou art weaponless, and
  • thou hast lost much of thy blood, and I am full loath to slay thee,
  • therefore yield thee to me as recreant. Nay, said Sir Arthur, I may not
  • so, for I have promised to do the battle to the uttermost by the faith
  • of my body, while me lasteth the life, and therefore I had liefer to
  • die with honour than to live with shame; and if it were possible for me
  • to die an hundred times, I had liefer to die so oft than yield me to
  • thee; for though I lack weapon, I shall lack no worship, and if thou
  • slay me weaponless that shall be thy shame. Well, said Accolon, as for
  • the shame I will not spare, now keep thee from me, for thou art but a
  • dead man. And therewith Accolon gave him such a stroke that he fell
  • nigh to the earth, and would have had Arthur to have cried him mercy.
  • But Sir Arthur pressed unto Accolon with his shield, and gave him with
  • the pommel in his hand such a buffet that he went three strides aback.
  • When the Damosel of the Lake beheld Arthur, how full of prowess his
  • body was, and the false treason that was wrought for him to have had
  • him slain, she had great pity that so good a knight and such a man of
  • worship should so be destroyed. And at the next stroke Sir Accolon
  • struck him such a stroke that by the damosel’s enchantment the sword
  • Excalibur fell out of Accolon’s hand to the earth. And therewithal Sir
  • Arthur lightly leapt to it, and gat it in his hand, and forthwithal he
  • knew that it was his sword Excalibur, and said, Thou hast been from me
  • all too long, and much damage hast thou done me; and therewith he
  • espied the scabbard hanging by his side, and suddenly he sterte to him
  • and pulled the scabbard from him, and threw it from him as far as he
  • might throw it. O knight, said Arthur, this day hast thou done me great
  • damage with this sword; now are ye come unto your death, for I shall
  • not warrant you but ye shall as well be rewarded with this sword, or
  • ever we depart, as thou hast rewarded me; for much pain have ye made me
  • to endure, and much blood have I lost. And therewith Sir Arthur rushed
  • on him with all his might and pulled him to the earth, and then rushed
  • off his helm, and gave him such a buffet on the head that the blood
  • came out at his ears, his nose, and his mouth. Now will I slay thee,
  • said Arthur. Slay me ye may well, said Accolon, an it please you, for
  • ye are the best knight that ever I found, and I see well that God is
  • with you. But for I promised to do this battle, said Accolon, to the
  • uttermost, and never to be recreant while I lived, therefore shall I
  • never yield me with my mouth, but God do with my body what he will.
  • Then Sir Arthur remembered him, and thought he should have seen this
  • knight. Now tell me, said Arthur, or I will slay thee, of what country
  • art thou, and of what court? Sir Knight, said Sir Accolon, I am of the
  • court of King Arthur, and my name is Accolon of Gaul. Then was Arthur
  • more dismayed than he was beforehand; for then he remembered him of his
  • sister Morgan le Fay, and of the enchantment of the ship. O sir knight,
  • said he, I pray you tell me who gave you this sword, and by whom ye had
  • it.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Accolon confessed the treason of Morgan le Fay, King
  • Arthur’s sister, and how she would have done slay him.
  • Then Sir Accolon bethought him, and said, Woe worth this sword, for by
  • it have I got my death. It may well be, said the king. Now, sir, said
  • Accolon, I will tell you; this sword hath been in my keeping the most
  • part of this twelvemonth; and Morgan le Fay, King Uriens’ wife, sent it
  • me yesterday by a dwarf, to this intent, that I should slay King
  • Arthur, her brother. For ye shall understand King Arthur is the man in
  • the world that she most hateth, because he is most of worship and of
  • prowess of any of her blood; also she loveth me out of measure as
  • paramour, and I her again; and if she might bring about to slay Arthur
  • by her crafts, she would slay her husband King Uriens lightly, and then
  • had she me devised to be king in this land, and so to reign, and she to
  • be my queen; but that is now done, said Accolon, for I am sure of my
  • death. Well, said Sir Arthur, I feel by you ye would have been king in
  • this land. It had been great damage to have destroyed your lord, said
  • Arthur. It is truth, said Accolon, but now I have told you truth,
  • wherefore I pray you tell me of whence ye are, and of what court? O
  • Accolon, said King Arthur, now I let thee wit that I am King Arthur, to
  • whom thou hast done great damage. When Accolon heard that he cried
  • aloud, Fair, sweet lord, have mercy on me, for I knew not you. O Sir
  • Accolon, said King Arthur, mercy shalt thou have, because I feel by thy
  • words at this time thou knewest not my person; but I understand well by
  • thy words that thou hast agreed to the death of my person, and
  • therefore thou art a traitor; but I wite thee the less, for my sister
  • Morgan le Fay by her false crafts made thee to agree and consent to her
  • false lusts, but I shall be sore avenged upon her an I live, that all
  • Christendom shall speak of it; God knoweth I have honoured her and
  • worshipped her more than all my kin, and more have I trusted her than
  • mine own wife and all my kin after.
  • Then Sir Arthur called the keepers of the field, and said, Sirs, come
  • hither, for here are we two knights that have fought unto a great
  • damage unto us both, and like each one of us to have slain other, if it
  • had happed so; and had any of us known other, here had been no battle,
  • nor stroke stricken. Then all aloud cried Accolon unto all the knights
  • and men that were then there gathered together, and said to them in
  • this manner, O lords, this noble knight that I have fought withal, the
  • which me sore repenteth, is the most man of prowess, of manhood, and of
  • worship in the world, for it is himself King Arthur, our alther liege
  • lord, and with mishap and with misadventure have I done this battle
  • with the king and lord that I am holden withal.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Arthur accorded the two brethren, and delivered the
  • twenty knights, and how Sir Accolon died.
  • Then all the people fell down on their knees and cried King Arthur
  • mercy. Mercy shall ye have, said Arthur: here may ye see what
  • adventures befall ofttime of errant knights, how that I have fought
  • with a knight of mine own unto my great damage and his both. But, sirs,
  • because I am sore hurt, and he both, and I had great need of a little
  • rest, ye shall understand the opinion betwixt you two brethren: As to
  • thee, Sir Damas, for whom I have been champion and won the field of
  • this knight, yet will I judge because ye, Sir Damas, are called an
  • orgulous knight, and full of villainy, and not worth of prowess your
  • deeds, therefore I will that ye give unto your brother all the whole
  • manor with the appurtenance, under this form, that Sir Ontzlake hold
  • the manor of you, and yearly to give you a palfrey to ride upon, for
  • that will become you better to ride on than upon a courser. Also I
  • charge thee, Sir Damas, upon pain of death, that thou never distress no
  • knights errant that ride on their adventure. And also that thou restore
  • these twenty knights that thou hast long kept prisoners, of all their
  • harness, that they be content for; and if any of them come to my court
  • and complain of thee, by my head thou shalt die therefore. Also, Sir
  • Ontzlake, as to you, because ye are named a good knight, and full of
  • prowess, and true and gentle in all your deeds, this shall be your
  • charge I will give you, that in all goodly haste ye come unto me and my
  • court, and ye shall be a knight of mine, and if your deeds be
  • thereafter I shall so prefer you, by the grace of God, that ye shall in
  • short time be in ease for to live as worshipfully as your brother Sir
  • Damas. God thank your largeness of your goodness and of your bounty, I
  • shall be from henceforward at all times at your commandment; for, sir,
  • said Sir Ontzlake, as God would, as I was hurt but late with an
  • adventurous knight through both my thighs, that grieved me sore, and
  • else had I done this battle with you. God would, said Arthur, it had
  • been so, for then had not I been hurt as I am. I shall tell you the
  • cause why: for I had not been hurt as I am, had it not been mine own
  • sword, that was stolen from me by treason; and this battle was ordained
  • aforehand to have slain me, and so it was brought to the purpose by
  • false treason, and by false enchantment. Alas, said Sir Ontzlake, that
  • is great pity that ever so noble a man as ye are of your deeds and
  • prowess, that any man or woman might find in their hearts to work any
  • treason against you. I shall reward them, said Arthur, in short time,
  • by the grace of God. Now, tell me, said Arthur, how far am I from
  • Camelot? Sir, ye are two days’ journey therefrom. I would fain be at
  • some place of worship, said Sir Arthur, that I might rest me. Sir, said
  • Sir Ontzlake, hereby is a rich abbey of your elders’ foundation, of
  • nuns, but three miles hence. So the king took his leave of all the
  • people, and mounted upon horseback, and Sir Accolon with him. And when
  • they were come to the abbey, he let fetch leeches and search his wounds
  • and Accolon’s both; but Sir Accolon died within four days, for he had
  • bled so much blood that he might not live, but King Arthur was well
  • recovered. So when Accolon was dead he let send him on an horse-bier
  • with six knights unto Camelot, and said: Bear him to my sister Morgan
  • le Fay, and say that I send her him to a present, and tell her I have
  • my sword Excalibur and the scabbard; so they departed with the body.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Morgan would have slain Sir Uriens her husband, and
  • how Sir Uwaine her son saved him.
  • The meanwhile Morgan le Fay had weened King Arthur had been dead. So on
  • a day she espied King Uriens lay in his bed sleeping. Then she called
  • unto her a maiden of her counsel, and said, Go fetch me my lord’s
  • sword, for I saw never better time to slay him than now. O madam, said
  • the damosel, an ye slay my lord ye can never escape. Care not you, said
  • Morgan le Fay, for now I see my time in the which it is best to do it,
  • and therefore hie thee fast and fetch me the sword. Then the damosel
  • departed, and found Sir Uwaine sleeping upon a bed in another chamber,
  • so she went unto Sir Uwaine, and awaked him, and bade him, Arise, and
  • wait on my lady your mother, for she will slay the king your father
  • sleeping in his bed, for I go to fetch his sword. Well, said Sir
  • Uwaine, go on your way, and let me deal. Anon the damosel brought
  • Morgan the sword with quaking hands, and she lightly took the sword,
  • and pulled it out, and went boldly unto the bed’s side, and awaited how
  • and where she might slay him best. And as she lifted up the sword to
  • smite, Sir Uwaine leapt unto his mother, and caught her by the hand,
  • and said, Ah, fiend, what wilt thou do? An thou wert not my mother,
  • with this sword I should smite off thy head. Ah, said Sir Uwaine, men
  • saith that Merlin was begotten of a devil, but I may say an earthly
  • devil bare me. O fair son, Uwaine, have mercy upon me, I was tempted
  • with a devil, wherefore I cry thee mercy; I will never more do so; and
  • save my worship and discover me not. On this covenant, said Sir Uwaine,
  • I will forgive it you, so ye will never be about to do such deeds. Nay,
  • son, said she, and that I make you assurance.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Queen Morgan le Fay made great sorrow for the death of
  • Accolon, and how she stole away the scabbard from Arthur.
  • Then came tidings unto Morgan le Fay that Accolon was dead, and his
  • body brought unto the church, and how King Arthur had his sword again.
  • But when Queen Morgan wist that Accolon was dead, she was so sorrowful
  • that near her heart to-brast. But because she would not it were known,
  • outward she kept her countenance, and made no semblant of sorrow. But
  • well she wist an she abode till her brother Arthur came thither, there
  • should no gold go for her life.
  • Then she went unto Queen Guenever, and asked her leave to ride into the
  • country. Ye may abide, said Queen Guenever, till your brother the king
  • come home. I may not, said Morgan le Fay, for I have such hasty
  • tidings, that I may not tarry. Well, said Guenever, ye may depart when
  • ye will. So early on the morn, or it was day, she took her horse and
  • rode all that day and most part of the night, and on the morn by noon
  • she came to the same abbey of nuns whereas lay King Arthur; and she
  • knowing he was there, she asked where he was. And they answered how he
  • had laid him in his bed to sleep, for he had had but little rest these
  • three nights. Well, said she, I charge you that none of you awake him
  • till I do, and then she alighted off her horse, and thought for to
  • steal away Excalibur his sword, and so she went straight unto his
  • chamber, and no man durst disobey her commandment, and there she found
  • Arthur asleep in his bed, and Excalibur in his right hand naked. When
  • she saw that she was passing heavy that she might not come by the sword
  • without she had awaked him, and then she wist well she had been dead.
  • Then she took the scabbard and went her way on horseback. When the king
  • awoke and missed his scabbard, he was wroth, and he asked who had been
  • there, and they said his sister, Queen Morgan had been there, and had
  • put the scabbard under her mantle and was gone. Alas, said Arthur,
  • falsely ye have watched me. Sir, said they all, we durst not disobey
  • your sister’s commandment. Ah, said the king, let fetch the best horse
  • may be found, and bid Sir Ontzlake arm him in all haste, and take
  • another good horse and ride with me. So anon the king and Ontzlake were
  • well armed, and rode after this lady, and so they came by a cross and
  • found a cowherd, and they asked the poor man if there came any lady
  • riding that way. Sir, said this poor man, right late came a lady riding
  • with a forty horses, and to yonder forest she rode. Then they spurred
  • their horses, and followed fast, and within a while Arthur had a sight
  • of Morgan le Fay; then he chased as fast as he might. When she espied
  • him following her, she rode a greater pace through the forest till she
  • came to a plain, and when she saw she might not escape, she rode unto a
  • lake thereby, and said, Whatsoever come of me, my brother shall not
  • have this scabbard. And then she let throw the scabbard in the deepest
  • of the water so it sank, for it was heavy of gold and precious stones.
  • Then she rode into a valley where many great stones were, and when she
  • saw she must be overtaken, she shaped herself, horse and man, by
  • enchantment unto a great marble stone. Anon withal came Sir Arthur and
  • Sir Ontzlake whereas the king might know his sister and her men, and
  • one knight from another. Ah, said the king, here may ye see the
  • vengeance of God, and now am I sorry that this misadventure is
  • befallen. And then he looked for the scabbard, but it would not be
  • found, so he returned to the abbey where he came from. So when Arthur
  • was gone she turned all into the likeliness as she and they were
  • before, and said, Sirs, now may we go where we will.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Morgan le Fay saved a knight that should have been
  • drowned, and how King Arthur returned home again.
  • Then said Morgan, Saw ye Arthur, my brother? Yea, said her knights,
  • right well, and that ye should have found an we might have stirred from
  • one stead, for by his armyvestal countenance he would have caused us to
  • have fled. I believe you, said Morgan. Anon after as she rode she met a
  • knight leading another knight on his horse before him, bound hand and
  • foot, blindfold, to have drowned him in a fountain. When she saw this
  • knight so bound, she asked him, What will ye do with that knight? Lady,
  • said he, I will drown him. For what cause? she asked. For I found him
  • with my wife, and she shall have the same death anon. That were pity,
  • said Morgan le Fay. Now, what say ye, knight, is it truth that he saith
  • of you? she said to the knight that should be drowned. Nay truly,
  • madam, he saith not right on me. Of whence be ye, said Morgan le Fay,
  • and of what country? I am of the court of King Arthur, and my name is
  • Manassen, cousin unto Accolon of Gaul. Ye say well, said she, and for
  • the love of him ye shall be delivered, and ye shall have your adversary
  • in the same case ye be in. So Manassen was loosed and the other knight
  • bound. And anon Manassen unarmed him, and armed himself in his harness,
  • and so mounted on horseback, and the knight afore him, and so threw him
  • into the fountain and drowned him. And then he rode unto Morgan again,
  • and asked if she would anything unto King Arthur. Tell him that I
  • rescued thee, not for the love of him but for the love of Accolon, and
  • tell him I fear him not while I can make me and them that be with me in
  • likeness of stones; and let him wit I can do much more when I see my
  • time. And so she departed into the country of Gore, and there was she
  • richly received, and made her castles and towns passing strong, for
  • always she dreaded much King Arthur.
  • When the king had well rested him at the abbey, he rode unto Camelot,
  • and found his queen and his barons right glad of his coming. And when
  • they heard of his strange adventures as is afore rehearsed, then all
  • had marvel of the falsehood of Morgan le Fay; many knights wished her
  • burnt. Then came Manassen to court and told the king of his adventure.
  • Well, said the king, she is a kind sister; I shall so be avenged on her
  • an I live, that all Christendom shall speak of it. So on the morn there
  • came a damosel from Morgan to the king, and she brought with her the
  • richest mantle that ever was seen in that court, for it was set as full
  • of precious stones as one might stand by another, and there were the
  • richest stones that ever the king saw. And the damosel said, Your
  • sister sendeth you this mantle, and desireth that ye should take this
  • gift of her; and in what thing she hath offended you, she will amend it
  • at your own pleasure. When the king beheld this mantle it pleased him
  • much, but he said but little.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How the Damosel of the Lake saved King Arthur from mantle
  • that should have burnt him.
  • With that came the Damosel of the Lake unto the king, and said, Sir, I
  • must speak with you in privity. Say on, said the king, what ye will.
  • Sir, said the damosel, put not on you this mantle till ye have seen
  • more, and in no wise let it not come on you, nor on no knight of yours,
  • till ye command the bringer thereof to put it upon her. Well, said King
  • Arthur, it shall be done as ye counsel me. And then he said unto the
  • damosel that came from his sister, Damosel, this mantle that ye have
  • brought me, I will see it upon you. Sir, she said, It will not beseem
  • me to wear a king’s garment. By my head, said Arthur, ye shall wear it
  • or it come on my back, or any man’s that here is. And so the king made
  • it to be put upon her, and forth withal she fell down dead, and never
  • more spake word after and burnt to coals. Then was the king wonderly
  • wroth, more than he was to-forehand, and said unto King Uriens, My
  • sister, your wife, is alway about to betray me, and well I wot either
  • ye, or my nephew, your son, is of counsel with her to have me
  • destroyed; but as for you, said the king to King Uriens, I deem not
  • greatly that ye be of her counsel, for Accolon confessed to me by his
  • own mouth, that she would have destroyed you as well as me, therefore I
  • hold you excused; but as for your son, Sir Uwaine, I hold him suspect,
  • therefore I charge you put him out of my court. So Sir Uwaine was
  • discharged. And when Sir Gawaine wist that, he made him ready to go
  • with him; and said, Whoso banisheth my cousin-germain shall banish me.
  • So they two departed, and rode into a great forest, and so they came to
  • an abbey of monks, and there were well lodged. But when the king wist
  • that Sir Gawaine was departed from the court, there was made great
  • sorrow among all the estates. Now, said Gaheris, Gawaine’s brother, we
  • have lost two good knights for the love of one. So on the morn they
  • heard their masses in the abbey, and so they rode forth till that they
  • came to a great forest. Then was Sir Gawaine ware in a valley by a
  • turret [of] twelve fair damosels, and two knights armed on great
  • horses, and the damosels went to and fro by a tree. And then was Sir
  • Gawaine ware how there hung a white shield on that tree, and ever as
  • the damosels came by it they spit upon it, and some threw mire upon the
  • shield.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine met with twelve fair
  • damosels, and how they complained on Sir Marhaus.
  • Then Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine went and saluted them, and asked why
  • they did that despite to the shield. Sir, said the damosels, we shall
  • tell you. There is a knight in this country that owneth this white
  • shield, and he is a passing good man of his hands, but he hateth all
  • ladies and gentlewomen, and therefore we do all this despite to the
  • shield. I shall say you, said Sir Gawaine, it beseemeth evil a good
  • knight to despise all ladies and gentlewomen, and peradventure though
  • he hate you he hath some certain cause, and peradventure he loveth in
  • some other places ladies and gentlewomen, and to be loved again, an he
  • be such a man of prowess as ye speak of. Now, what is his name? Sir,
  • said they, his name is Marhaus, the king’s son of Ireland. I know him
  • well, said Sir Uwaine, he is a passing good knight as any is alive, for
  • I saw him once proved at a jousts where many knights were gathered, and
  • that time there might no man withstand him. Ah! said Sir Gawaine,
  • damosels, methinketh ye are to blame, for it is to suppose, he that
  • hung that shield there, he will not be long therefrom, and then may
  • those knights match him on horseback, and that is more your worship
  • than thus; for I will abide no longer to see a knight’s shield
  • dishonoured. And therewith Sir Uwaine and Gawaine departed a little
  • from them, and then were they ware where Sir Marhaus came riding on a
  • great horse straight toward them. And when the twelve damosels saw Sir
  • Marhaus they fled into the turret as they were wild, so that some of
  • them fell by the way. Then the one of the knights of the tower dressed
  • his shield, and said on high, Sir Marhaus, defend thee. And so they ran
  • together that the knight brake his spear on Marhaus, and Marhaus smote
  • him so hard that he brake his neck and the horse’s back. That saw the
  • other knight of the turret, and dressed him toward Marhaus, and they
  • met so eagerly together that the knight of the turret was soon smitten
  • down, horse and man, stark dead.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Sir Marhaus jousted with Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine,
  • and overthrew them both.
  • And then Sir Marhaus rode unto his shield, and saw how it was defouled,
  • and said, Of this despite I am a part avenged, but for her love that
  • gave me this white shield I shall wear thee, and hang mine where thou
  • wast; and so he hanged it about his neck. Then he rode straight unto
  • Sir Gawaine and to Sir Uwaine, and asked them what they did there? They
  • answered him that they came from King Arthur’s court to see adventures.
  • Well, said Sir Marhaus, here am I ready, an adventurous knight that
  • will fulfil any adventure that ye will desire; and so departed from
  • them, to fetch his range. Let him go, said Sir Uwaine unto Sir Gawaine,
  • for he is a passing good knight as any is living; I would not by my
  • will that any of us were matched with him. Nay, said Sir Gawaine, not
  • so, it were shame to us were he not assayed, were he never so good a
  • knight. Well, said Sir Uwaine, I will assay him afore you, for I am
  • more weaker than ye, and if he smite me down then may ye revenge me. So
  • these two knights came together with great raundon, that Sir Uwaine
  • smote Sir Marhaus that his spear brast in pieces on the shield, and Sir
  • Marhaus smote him so sore that horse and man he bare to the earth, and
  • hurt Sir Uwaine on the left side.
  • Then Sir Marhaus turned his horse and rode toward Gawaine with his
  • spear, and when Sir Gawaine saw that he dressed his shield, and they
  • aventred their spears, and they came together with all the might of
  • their horses, that either knight smote other so hard in midst of their
  • shields, but Sir Gawaine’s spear brake, but Sir Marhaus’ spear held;
  • and therewith Sir Gawaine and his horse rushed down to the earth. And
  • lightly Sir Gawaine rose on his feet, and pulled out his sword, and
  • dressed him toward Sir Marhaus on foot, and Sir Marhaus saw that, and
  • pulled out his sword and began to come to Sir Gawaine on horseback. Sir
  • knight, said Sir Gawaine, alight on foot, or else I will slay thy
  • horse. Gramercy, said Sir Marhaus, of your gentleness ye teach me
  • courtesy, for it is not for one knight to be on foot, and the other on
  • horseback. And therewith Sir Marhaus set his spear against a tree and
  • alighted and tied his horse to a tree, and dressed his shield, and
  • either came unto other eagerly, and smote together with their swords
  • that their shields flew in cantels, and they bruised their helms and
  • their hauberks, and wounded either other. But Sir Gawaine from it
  • passed nine of the clock waxed ever stronger and stronger, for then it
  • came to the hour of noon, and thrice his might was increased. All this
  • espied Sir Marhaus and had great wonder how his might increased, and so
  • they wounded other passing sore. And then when it was past noon, and
  • when it drew toward evensong, Sir Gawaine’s strength feebled, and waxed
  • passing faint that unnethes he might dure any longer, and Sir Marhaus
  • was then bigger and bigger. Sir knight, said Sir Marhaus, I have well
  • felt that ye are a passing good knight and a marvellous man of might as
  • ever I felt any, while it lasteth, and our quarrels are not great, and
  • therefore it were pity to do you hurt, for I feel ye are passing
  • feeble. Ah, said Sir Gawaine, gentle knight, ye say the word that I
  • should say. And therewith they took off their helms, and either kissed
  • other, and there they swore together either to love other as brethren.
  • And Sir Marhaus prayed Sir Gawaine to lodge with him that night. And so
  • they took their horses, and rode toward Sir Marhaus’ house. And as they
  • rode by the way, Sir knight, said Sir Gawaine, I have marvel that so
  • valiant a man as ye be love no ladies nor damosels. Sir, said Sir
  • Marhaus, they name me wrongfully those that give me that name, but well
  • I wot it be the damosels of the turret that so name me, and other such
  • as they be. Now shall I tell you for what cause I hate them: for they
  • be sorceresses and enchanters many of them, and be a knight never so
  • good of his body and full of prowess as man may be, they will make him
  • a stark coward to have the better of him, and this is the principal
  • cause that I hate them; and to all good ladies and gentlewomen I owe my
  • service as a knight ought to do.
  • As the book rehearseth in French, there were many knights that
  • overmatched Sir Gawaine, for all the thrice might that he had: Sir
  • Launcelot de Lake, Sir Tristram, Sir Bors de Ganis, Sir Percivale, Sir
  • Pelleas, and Sir Marhaus, these six knights had the better of Sir
  • Gawaine. Then within a little while they came to Sir Marhaus’ place,
  • which was in a little priory, and there they alighted, and ladies and
  • damosels unarmed them, and hastily looked to their hurts, for they were
  • all three hurt. And so they had all three good lodging with Sir
  • Marhaus, and good cheer; for when he wist that they were King Arthur’s
  • sister’s sons he made them all the cheer that lay in his power, and so
  • they sojourned there a sennight, and were well eased of their wounds,
  • and at the last departed. Now, said Sir Marhaus, we will not depart so
  • lightly, for I will bring you through the forest; and rode day by day
  • well a seven days or they found any adventure. At the last they came
  • into a great forest, that was named the country and forest of Arroy,
  • and the country of strange adventures. In this country, said Sir
  • Marhaus, came never knight since it was christened but he found strange
  • adventures; and so they rode, and came into a deep valley full of
  • stones, and thereby they saw a fair stream of water; above thereby was
  • the head of the stream a fair fountain, and three damosels sitting
  • thereby. And then they rode to them, and either saluted other, and the
  • eldest had a garland of gold about her head, and she was three score
  • winter of age or more, and her hair was white under the garland. The
  • second damosel was of thirty winter of age, with a circlet of gold
  • about her head. The third damosel was but fifteen year of age, and a
  • garland of flowers about her head. When these knights had so beheld
  • them, they asked them the cause why they sat at that fountain? We be
  • here, said the damosels, for this cause: if we may see any errant
  • knights, to teach them unto strange adventures; and ye be three knights
  • that seek adventures, and we be three damosels, and therefore each one
  • of you must choose one of us; and when ye have done so we will lead you
  • unto three highways, and there each of you shall choose a way and his
  • damosel with him. And this day twelvemonth ye must meet here again, and
  • God send you your lives, and thereto ye must plight your troth. This is
  • well said, said Sir Marhaus.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How Sir Marhaus, Sir Gawaine, and Sir Uwaine met three
  • damosels, and each of them took one.
  • Now shall everych of us choose a damosel. I shall tell you, said Sir
  • Uwaine, I am the youngest and most weakest of you both, therefore I
  • will have the eldest damosel, for she hath seen much, and can best help
  • me when I have need, for I have most need of help of you both. Now,
  • said Sir Marhaus, I will have the damosel of thirty winter age, for she
  • falleth best to me. Well, said Sir Gawaine, I thank you, for ye have
  • left me the youngest and the fairest, and she is most liefest to me.
  • Then every damosel took her knight by the reins of his bridle, and
  • brought him to the three ways, and there was their oath made to meet at
  • the fountain that day twelvemonth an they were living, and so they
  • kissed and departed, and each knight set his lady behind him. And Sir
  • Uwaine took the way that lay west, and Sir Marhaus took the way that
  • lay south, and Sir Gawaine took the way that lay north. Now will we
  • begin at Sir Gawaine, that held that way till that he came unto a fair
  • manor, where dwelled an old knight and a good householder, and there
  • Sir Gawaine asked the knight if he knew any adventures in that country.
  • I shall show you some to-morn, said the old knight, and that
  • marvellous. So, on the morn they rode into the forest of adventures to
  • a laund, and thereby they found a cross, and as they stood and hoved
  • there came by them the fairest knight and the seemliest man that ever
  • they saw, making the greatest dole that ever man made. And then he was
  • ware of Sir Gawaine, and saluted him, and prayed God to send him much
  • worship. As to that, said Sir Gawaine, gramercy; also I pray to God
  • that he send you honour and worship. Ah, said the knight, I may lay
  • that aside, for sorrow and shame cometh to me after worship.
  • CHAPTER XX. How a knight and a dwarf strove for a lady.
  • And therewith he passed unto the one side of the laund; and on the
  • other side saw Sir Gawaine ten knights that hoved still and made them
  • ready with their shields and spears against that one knight that came
  • by Sir Gawaine.
  • Then this one knight aventred a great spear, and one of the ten knights
  • encountered with him, but this woful knight smote him so hard that he
  • fell over his horse’s tail. So this same dolorous knight served them
  • all, that at the leastway he smote down horse and man, and all he did
  • with one spear; and so when they were all ten on foot, they went to
  • that one knight, and he stood stone still, and suffered them to pull
  • him down off his horse, and bound him hand and foot, and tied him under
  • the horse’s belly, and so led him with them. O Jesu! said Sir Gawaine,
  • this is a doleful sight, to see the yonder knight so to be entreated,
  • and it seemeth by the knight that he suffereth them to bind him so, for
  • he maketh no resistance. No, said his host, that is truth, for an he
  • would they all were too weak so to do him. Sir, said the damosel unto
  • Sir Gawaine, meseemeth it were your worship to help that dolorous
  • knight, for methinketh he is one of the best knights that ever I saw. I
  • would do for him, said Sir Gawaine, but it seemeth he will have no
  • help. Then, said the damosel, methinketh ye have no lust to help him.
  • Thus as they talked they saw a knight on the other side of the laund
  • all armed save the head. And on the other side there came a dwarf on
  • horseback all armed save the head, with a great mouth and a short nose;
  • and when the dwarf came nigh he said, Where is the lady should meet us
  • here? and therewithal she came forth out of the wood. And then they
  • began to strive for the lady; for the knight said he would have her,
  • and the dwarf said he would have her. Will we do well? said the dwarf;
  • yonder is a knight at the cross, let us put it both upon him, and as he
  • deemeth so shall it be. I will well, said the knight, and so they went
  • all three unto Sir Gawaine and told him wherefore they strove. Well,
  • sirs, said he, will ye put the matter in my hand? Yea, they said both.
  • Now damosel, said Sir Gawaine, ye shall stand betwixt them both, and
  • whether ye list better to go to, he shall have you. And when she was
  • set between them both, she left the knight and went to the dwarf, and
  • the dwarf took her and went his way singing, and the knight went his
  • way with great mourning.
  • Then came there two knights all armed, and cried on high, Sir Gawaine!
  • knight of King Arthur’s, make thee ready in all haste and joust with
  • me. So they ran together, that either fell down, and then on foot they
  • drew their swords, and did full actually. The meanwhile the other
  • knight went to the damosel, and asked her why she abode with that
  • knight, and if ye would abide with me, I will be your faithful knight.
  • And with you will I be, said the damosel, for with Sir Gawaine I may
  • not find in mine heart to be with him; for now here was one knight
  • discomfited ten knights, and at the last he was cowardly led away; and
  • therefore let us two go whilst they fight. And Sir Gawaine fought with
  • that other knight long, but at the last they accorded both. And then
  • the knight prayed Sir Gawaine to lodge with him that night. So as Sir
  • Gawaine went with this knight he asked him, What knight is he in this
  • country that smote down the ten knights? For when he had done so
  • manfully he suffered them to bind him hand and foot, and so led him
  • away. Ah, said the knight, that is the best knight I trow in the world,
  • and the most man of prowess, and he hath been served so as he was even
  • more than ten times, and his name hight Sir Pelleas, and he loveth a
  • great lady in this country and her name is Ettard. And so when he loved
  • her there was cried in this country a great jousts three days, and all
  • the knights of this country were there and gentlewomen, and who that
  • proved him the best knight should have a passing good sword and a
  • circlet of gold, and the circlet the knight should give it to the
  • fairest lady that was at the jousts. And this knight Sir Pelleas was
  • the best knight that was there, and there were five hundred knights,
  • but there was never man that ever Sir Pelleas met withal but he struck
  • him down, or else from his horse; and every day of three days he struck
  • down twenty knights, therefore they gave him the prize, and forthwithal
  • he went thereas the Lady Ettard was, and gave her the circlet, and said
  • openly she was the fairest lady that there was, and that would he prove
  • upon any knight that would say nay.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How King Pelleas suffered himself to be taken prisoner
  • because he would have a sight of his lady, and how Sir Gawaine promised
  • him to get to him the love of his lady.
  • And so he chose her for his sovereign lady, and never to love other but
  • her, but she was so proud that she had scorn of him, and said that she
  • would never love him though he would die for her. Wherefore all ladies
  • and gentlewomen had scorn of her that she was so proud, for there were
  • fairer than she, and there was none that was there but an Sir Pelleas
  • would have proffered them love, they would have loved him for his noble
  • prowess. And so this knight promised the Lady Ettard to follow her into
  • this country, and never to leave her till she loved him. And thus he is
  • here the most part nigh her, and lodged by a priory, and every week she
  • sendeth knights to fight with him. And when he hath put them to the
  • worse, then will he suffer them wilfully to take him prisoner, because
  • he would have a sight of this lady. And always she doth him great
  • despite, for sometime she maketh her knights to tie him to his horse’s
  • tail, and some to bind him under the horse’s belly; thus in the most
  • shamefullest ways that she can think he is brought to her. And all she
  • doth it for to cause him to leave this country, and to leave his
  • loving; but all this cannot make him to leave, for an he would have
  • fought on foot he might have had the better of the ten knights as well
  • on foot as on horseback. Alas, said Sir Gawaine, it is great pity of
  • him; and after this night I will seek him to-morrow, in this forest, to
  • do him all the help I can. So on the morn Sir Gawaine took his leave of
  • his host Sir Carados, and rode into the forest; and at the last he met
  • with Sir Pelleas, making great moan out of measure, so each of them
  • saluted other, and asked him why he made such sorrow. And as it is
  • above rehearsed, Sir Pelleas told Sir Gawaine: But always I suffer her
  • knights to fare so with me as ye saw yesterday, in trust at the last to
  • win her love, for she knoweth well all her knights should not lightly
  • win me, an me list to fight with them to the uttermost. Wherefore an I
  • loved her not so sore, I had liefer die an hundred times, an I might
  • die so oft, rather than I would suffer that despite; but I trust she
  • will have pity upon me at the last, for love causeth many a good knight
  • to suffer to have his entent, but alas I am unfortunate. And therewith
  • he made so great dole and sorrow that unnethe he might hold him on
  • horseback.
  • Now, said Sir Gawaine, leave your mourning and I shall promise you by
  • the faith of my body to do all that lieth in my power to get you the
  • love of your lady, and thereto I will plight you my troth. Ah, said Sir
  • Pelleas, of what court are ye? tell me, I pray you, my good friend. And
  • then Sir Gawaine said, I am of the court of King Arthur, and his
  • sister’s son, and King Lot of Orkney was my father, and my name is Sir
  • Gawaine. And then he said, My name is Sir Pelleas, born in the Isles,
  • and of many isles I am lord, and never have I loved lady nor damosel
  • till now in an unhappy time; and, sir knight, since ye are so nigh
  • cousin unto King Arthur, and a king’s son, therefore betray me not but
  • help me, for I may never come by her but by some good knight, for she
  • is in a strong castle here, fast by within this four mile, and over all
  • this country she is lady of. And so I may never come to her presence,
  • but as I suffer her knights to take me, and but if I did so that I
  • might have a sight of her, I had been dead long or this time; and yet
  • fair word had I never of her, but when I am brought to-fore her she
  • rebuketh me in the foulest manner. And then they take my horse and
  • harness and put me out of the gates, and she will not suffer me to eat
  • nor drink; and always I offer me to be her prisoner, but that she will
  • not suffer me, for I would desire no more, what pains so ever I had, so
  • that I might have a sight of her daily. Well, said Sir Gawaine, all
  • this shall I amend an ye will do as I shall devise: I will have your
  • horse and your armour, and so will I ride unto her castle and tell her
  • that I have slain you, and so shall I come within her to cause her to
  • cherish me, and then shall I do my true part that ye shall not fail to
  • have the love of her.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How Sir Gawaine came to the Lady Ettard, and how Sir
  • Pelleas found them sleeping.
  • And therewith Sir Gawaine plight his troth unto Sir Pelleas to be true
  • and faithful unto him; so each one plight their troth to other, and so
  • they changed horses and harness, and Sir Gawaine departed, and came to
  • the castle whereas stood the pavilions of this lady without the gate.
  • And as soon as Ettard had espied Sir Gawaine she fled in toward the
  • castle. Sir Gawaine spake on high, and bade her abide, for he was not
  • Sir Pelleas; I am another knight that have slain Sir Pelleas. Do off
  • your helm, said the Lady Ettard, that I may see your visage. And so
  • when she saw that it was not Sir Pelleas, she bade him alight and led
  • him unto her castle, and asked him faithfully whether he had slain Sir
  • Pelleas. And he said her yea, and told her his name was Sir Gawaine of
  • the court of King Arthur, and his sister’s son. Truly, said she, that
  • is great pity, for he was a passing good knight of his body, but of all
  • men alive I hated him most, for I could never be quit of him; and for
  • ye have slain him I shall be your woman, and to do anything that might
  • please you. So she made Sir Gawaine good cheer. Then Sir Gawaine said
  • that he loved a lady and by no means she would love him. She is to
  • blame, said Ettard, an she will not love you, for ye that be so well
  • born a man, and such a man of prowess, there is no lady in the world
  • too good for you. Will ye, said Sir Gawaine, promise me to do all that
  • ye may, by the faith of your body, to get me the love of my lady? Yea,
  • sir, said she, and that I promise you by the faith of my body. Now,
  • said Sir Gawaine, it is yourself that I love so well, therefore I pray
  • you hold your promise. I may not choose, said the Lady Ettard, but if I
  • should be forsworn; and so she granted him to fulfil all his desire.
  • So it was then in the month of May that she and Sir Gawaine went out of
  • the castle and supped in a pavilion, and there was made a bed, and
  • there Sir Gawaine and the Lady Ettard went to bed together, and in
  • another pavilion she laid her damosels, and in the third pavilion she
  • laid part of her knights, for then she had no dread of Sir Pelleas. And
  • there Sir Gawaine lay with her in that pavilion two days and two
  • nights. And on the third day, in the morning early, Sir Pelleas armed
  • him, for he had never slept since Sir Gawaine departed from him; for
  • Sir Gawaine had promised him by the faith of his body, to come to him
  • unto his pavilion by that priory within the space of a day and a night.
  • Then Sir Pelleas mounted upon horseback, and came to the pavilions that
  • stood without the castle, and found in the first pavilion three knights
  • in three beds, and three squires lying at their feet. Then went he to
  • the second pavilion and found four gentlewomen lying in four beds. And
  • then he yede to the third pavilion and found Sir Gawaine lying in bed
  • with his Lady Ettard, and either clipping other in arms, and when he
  • saw that his heart well-nigh brast for sorrow, and said: Alas! that
  • ever a knight should be found so false; and then he took his horse and
  • might not abide no longer for pure sorrow. And when he had ridden nigh
  • half a mile he turned again and thought to slay them both; and when he
  • saw them both so lie sleeping fast, unnethe he might hold him on
  • horseback for sorrow, and said thus to himself, Though this knight be
  • never so false, I will never slay him sleeping, for I will never
  • destroy the high order of knighthood; and therewith he departed again.
  • And or he had ridden half a mile he returned again, and thought then to
  • slay them both, making the greatest sorrow that ever man made. And when
  • he came to the pavilions, he tied his horse unto a tree, and pulled out
  • his sword naked in his hand, and went to them thereas they lay, and yet
  • he thought it were shame to slay them sleeping, and laid the naked
  • sword overthwart both their throats, and so took his horse and rode his
  • way.
  • And when Sir Pelleas came to his pavilions he told his knights and his
  • squires how he had sped, and said thus to them, For your true and good
  • service ye have done me I shall give you all my goods, for I will go
  • unto my bed and never arise until I am dead. And when that I am dead I
  • charge you that ye take the heart out of my body and bear it her
  • betwixt two silver dishes, and tell her how I saw her lie with the
  • false knight Sir Gawaine. Right so Sir Pelleas unarmed himself, and
  • went unto his bed making marvellous dole and sorrow.
  • When Sir Gawaine and Ettard awoke of their sleep, and found the naked
  • sword overthwart their throats, then she knew well it was Sir Pelleas’
  • sword. Alas! said she to Sir Gawaine, ye have betrayed me and Sir
  • Pelleas both, for ye told me ye had slain him, and now I know well it
  • is not so, he is alive. And if Sir Pelleas had been as uncourteous to
  • you as ye have been to him ye had been a dead knight; but ye have
  • deceived me and betrayed me falsely, that all ladies and damosels may
  • beware by you and me. And therewith Sir Gawaine made him ready, and
  • went into the forest. So it happed then that the Damosel of the Lake,
  • Nimue, met with a knight of Sir Pelleas, that went on his foot in the
  • forest making great dole, and she asked him the cause. And so the woful
  • knight told her how his master and lord was betrayed through a knight
  • and lady, and how he will never arise out of his bed till he be dead.
  • Bring me to him, said she anon, and I will warrant his life he shall
  • not die for love, and she that hath caused him so to love, she shall be
  • in as evil plight as he is or it be long to, for it is no joy of such a
  • proud lady that will have no mercy of such a valiant knight. Anon that
  • knight brought her unto him, and when she saw him lie in his bed, she
  • thought she saw never so likely a knight; and therewith she threw an
  • enchantment upon him, and he fell asleep. And therewhile she rode unto
  • the Lady Ettard, and charged no man to awake him till she came again.
  • So within two hours she brought the Lady Ettard thither, and both
  • ladies found him asleep: Lo, said the Damosel of the Lake, ye ought to
  • be ashamed for to murder such a knight. And therewith she threw such an
  • enchantment upon her that she loved him sore, that well-nigh she was
  • out of her mind. O Lord Jesu, said the Lady Ettard, how is it befallen
  • unto me that I love now him that I have most hated of any man alive?
  • That is the righteous judgment of God, said the damosel. And then anon
  • Sir Pelleas awaked and looked upon Ettard; and when he saw her he knew
  • her, and then he hated her more than any woman alive, and said: Away,
  • traitress, come never in my sight. And when she heard him say so, she
  • wept and made great sorrow out of measure.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How Sir Pelleas loved no more Ettard by means of the
  • Damosel of the Lake, whom he loved ever after.
  • Sir knight Pelleas, said the Damosel of the Lake, take your horse and
  • come forth with me out of this country, and ye shall love a lady that
  • shall love you. I will well, said Sir Pelleas, for this Lady Ettard
  • hath done me great despite and shame, and there he told her the
  • beginning and ending, and how he had purposed never to have arisen till
  • that he had been dead. And now such grace God hath sent me, that I hate
  • her as much as ever I loved her, thanked be our Lord Jesus! Thank me,
  • said the Damosel of the Lake. Anon Sir Pelleas armed him, and took his
  • horse, and commanded his men to bring after his pavilions and his stuff
  • where the Damosel of the Lake would assign. So the Lady Ettard died for
  • sorrow, and the Damosel of the Lake rejoiced Sir Pelleas, and loved
  • together during their life days.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Sir Marhaus rode with the damosel, and how he came to
  • the Duke of the South Marches.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Marhaus, that rode with the damosel of thirty
  • winter of age, southward. And so they came into a deep forest, and by
  • fortune they were nighted, and rode long in a deep way, and at the last
  • they came unto a courtelage, and there they asked harbour. But the man
  • of the courtelage would not lodge them for no treatise that they could
  • treat, but thus much the good man said, An ye will take the adventure
  • of your lodging, I shall bring you where ye shall be lodged. What
  • adventure is that that I shall have for my lodging? said Sir Marhaus.
  • Ye shall wit when ye come there, said the good man. Sir, what adventure
  • so it be, bring me thither I pray thee, said Sir Marhaus; for I am
  • weary, my damosel, and my horse. So the good man went and opened the
  • gate, and within an hour he brought him unto a fair castle, and then
  • the poor man called the porter, and anon he was let into the castle,
  • and so he told the lord how he brought him a knight errant and a
  • damosel that would be lodged with him. Let him in, said the lord, it
  • may happen he shall repent that they took their lodging here.
  • So Sir Marhaus was let in with torchlight, and there was a goodly sight
  • of young men that welcomed him. And then his horse was led into the
  • stable, and he and the damosel were brought into the hall, and there
  • stood a mighty duke and many goodly men about him. Then this lord asked
  • him what he hight, and from whence he came, and with whom he dwelt.
  • Sir, he said, I am a knight of King Arthur’s and knight of the Table
  • Round, and my name is Sir Marhaus, and born I am in Ireland. And then
  • said the duke to him, That me sore repenteth: the cause is this, for I
  • love not thy lord nor none of thy fellows of the Table Round; and
  • therefore ease thyself this night as well as thou mayest, for as
  • to-morn I and my six sons shall match with you. Is there no remedy but
  • that I must have ado with you and your six sons at once? said Sir
  • Marhaus. No, said the duke, for this cause I made mine avow, for Sir
  • Gawaine slew my seven sons in a recounter, therefore I made mine avow,
  • there should never knight of King Arthur’s court lodge with me, or come
  • thereas I might have ado with him, but that I would have a revenging of
  • my sons’ death. What is your name? said Sir Marhaus; I require you tell
  • me, an it please you. Wit thou well I am the Duke of South Marches. Ah,
  • said Sir Marhaus, I have heard say that ye have been long time a great
  • foe unto my lord Arthur and to his knights. That shall ye feel to-morn,
  • said the duke. Shall I have ado with you? said Sir Marhaus. Yea, said
  • the duke, thereof shalt thou not choose, and therefore take you to your
  • chamber, and ye shall have all that to you longeth. So Sir Marhaus
  • departed and was led to a chamber, and his damosel was led unto her
  • chamber. And on the morn the duke sent unto Sir Marhaus and bade make
  • him ready. And so Sir Marhaus arose and armed him, and then there was a
  • mass sung afore him, and brake his fast, and so mounted on horseback in
  • the court of the castle where they should do the battle. So there was
  • the duke all ready on horseback, clean armed, and his six sons by him,
  • and everych had a spear in his hand, and so they encountered, whereas
  • the duke and his two sons brake their spears upon him, but Sir Marhaus
  • held up his spear and touched none of them.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Sir Marhaus fought with the duke and his four sons and
  • made them to yield them.
  • Then came the four sons by couple, and two of them brake their spears,
  • and so did the other two. And all this while Sir Marhaus touched them
  • not. Then Sir Marhaus ran to the duke, and smote him with his spear
  • that horse and man fell to the earth, and so he served his sons; and
  • then Sir Marhaus alighted down and bade the duke yield him or else he
  • would slay him. And then some of his sons recovered, and would have set
  • upon Sir Marhaus; then Sir Marhaus said to the duke, Cease thy sons, or
  • else I will do the uttermost to you all. Then the duke saw he might not
  • escape the death, he cried to his sons, and charged them to yield them
  • to Sir Marhaus; and they kneeled all down and put the pommels of their
  • swords to the knight, and so he received them. And then they helped up
  • their father, and so by their cominal assent promised to Sir Marhaus
  • never to be foes unto King Arthur, and thereupon at Whitsuntide after
  • to come, he and his sons, and put them in the king’s grace.
  • Then Sir Marhaus departed, and within two days his damosel brought him
  • whereas was a great tournament that the Lady de Vawse had cried. And
  • who that did best should have a rich circlet of gold worth a thousand
  • besants. And there Sir Marhaus did so nobly that he was renowned, and
  • had sometime down forty knights, and so the circlet of gold was
  • rewarded him. Then he departed from them with great worship; and so
  • within seven nights his damosel brought him to an earl’s place, his
  • name was the Earl Fergus, that after was Sir Tristram’s knight; and
  • this earl was but a young man, and late come into his lands, and there
  • was a giant fast by him that hight Taulurd, and he had another brother
  • in Cornwall that hight Taulas, that Sir Tristram slew when he was out
  • of his mind. So this earl made his complaint unto Sir Marhaus, that
  • there was a giant by him that destroyed all his lands, and how he durst
  • nowhere ride nor go for him. Sir, said the knight, whether useth he to
  • fight on horseback or on foot? Nay, said the earl, there may no horse
  • bear him. Well, said Sir Marhaus, then will I fight with him on foot;
  • so on the morn Sir Marhaus prayed the earl that one of his men might
  • bring him whereas the giant was; and so he was, for he saw him sit
  • under a tree of holly, and many clubs of iron and gisarms about him. So
  • this knight dressed him to the giant, putting his shield afore him, and
  • the giant took an iron club in his hand, and at the first stroke he
  • clave Sir Marhaus’ shield in two pieces. And there he was in great
  • peril, for the giant was a wily fighter, but at last Sir Marhaus smote
  • off his right arm above the elbow.
  • Then the giant fled and the knight after him, and so he drove him into
  • a water, but the giant was so high that he might not wade after him.
  • And then Sir Marhaus made the Earl Fergus’ man to fetch him stones, and
  • with those stones the knight gave the giant many sore knocks, till at
  • the last he made him fall down into the water, and so was he there
  • dead. Then Sir Marhaus went unto the giant’s castle, and there he
  • delivered twenty-four ladies and twelve knights out of the giant’s
  • prison, and there he had great riches without number, so that the days
  • of his life he was never poor man. Then he returned to the Earl Fergus,
  • the which thanked him greatly, and would have given him half his lands,
  • but he would none take. So Sir Marhaus dwelled with the earl nigh half
  • a year, for he was sore bruised with the giant, and at the last he took
  • his leave. And as he rode by the way, he met with Sir Gawaine and Sir
  • Uwaine, and so by adventure he met with four knights of Arthur’s court,
  • the first was Sir Sagramore le Desirous, Sir Osanna, Sir Dodinas le
  • Savage, and Sir Felot of Listinoise; and there Sir Marhaus with one
  • spear smote down these four knights, and hurt them sore. So he departed
  • to meet at his day aforeset.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How Sir Uwaine rode with the damosel of sixty year of
  • age, and how he gat the prize at tourneying.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Uwaine, that rode westward with his damosel of
  • three score winter of age, and she brought him thereas was a tournament
  • nigh the march of Wales. And at that tournament Sir Uwaine smote down
  • thirty knights, therefore was given him the prize, and that was a
  • gerfalcon, and a white steed trapped with cloth of gold. So then Sir
  • Uwaine did many strange adventures by the means of the old damosel, and
  • so she brought him to a lady that was called the Lady of the Rock, the
  • which was much courteous. So there were in the country two knights that
  • were brethren, and they were called two perilous knights, the one
  • knight hight Sir Edward of the Red Castle, and the other Sir Hue of the
  • Red Castle; and these two brethren had disherited the Lady of the Rock
  • of a barony of lands by their extortion. And as this knight was lodged
  • with this lady she made her complaint to him of these two knights.
  • Madam, said Sir Uwaine, they are to blame, for they do against the high
  • order of knighthood, and the oath that they made; and if it like you I
  • will speak with them, because I am a knight of King Arthur’s, and I
  • will entreat them with fairness; and if they will not, I shall do
  • battle with them, and in the defence of your right. Gramercy said the
  • lady, and thereas I may not acquit you, God shall. So on the morn the
  • two knights were sent for, that they should come thither to speak with
  • the Lady of the Rock, and wit ye well they failed not, for they came
  • with an hundred horse. But when this lady saw them in this manner so
  • big, she would not suffer Sir Uwaine to go out to them upon no surety
  • nor for no fair language, but she made him speak with them over a
  • tower, but finally these two brethren would not be entreated, and
  • answered that they would keep that they had. Well, said Sir Uwaine,
  • then will I fight with one of you, and prove that ye do this lady
  • wrong. That will we not, said they, for an we do battle, we two will
  • fight with one knight at once, and therefore if ye will fight so, we
  • will be ready at what hour ye will assign. And if ye win us in battle
  • the lady shall have her lands again. Ye say well, said Sir Uwaine,
  • therefore make you ready so that ye be here to-morn in the defence of
  • the lady’s right.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How Sir Uwaine fought with two knights and overcame
  • them.
  • So was there sikerness made on both parties that no treason should be
  • wrought on neither party; so then the knights departed and made them
  • ready, and that night Sir Uwaine had great cheer. And on the morn he
  • arose early and heard mass, and brake his fast, and so he rode unto the
  • plain without the gates, where hoved the two brethren abiding him. So
  • they rode together passing sore, that Sir Edward and Sir Hue brake
  • their spears upon Sir Uwaine. And Sir Uwaine smote Sir Edward that he
  • fell over his horse and yet his spear brast not. And then he spurred
  • his horse and came upon Sir Hue and overthrew him, but they soon
  • recovered and dressed their shields and drew their swords and bade Sir
  • Uwaine alight and do his battle to the uttermost. Then Sir Uwaine
  • devoided his horse suddenly, and put his shield afore him and drew his
  • sword, and so they dressed together, and either gave other such
  • strokes, and there these two brethren wounded Sir Uwaine passing
  • grievously that the Lady of the Rock weened he should have died. And
  • thus they fought together five hours as men raged out of reason. And at
  • the last Sir Uwaine smote Sir Edward upon the helm such a stroke that
  • his sword carved unto his canel bone, and then Sir Hue abated his
  • courage, but Sir Uwaine pressed fast to have slain him. That saw Sir
  • Hue: he kneeled down and yielded him to Sir Uwaine. And he of his
  • gentleness received his sword, and took him by the hand, and went into
  • the castle together. Then the Lady of the Rock was passing glad, and
  • the other brother made great sorrow for his brother’s death. Then the
  • lady was restored of all her lands, and Sir Hue was commanded to be at
  • the court of King Arthur at the next feast of Pentecost. So Sir Uwaine
  • dwelt with the lady nigh half a year, for it was long or he might be
  • whole of his great hurts. And so when it drew nigh the term-day that
  • Sir Gawaine, Sir Marhaus, and Sir Uwaine should meet at the cross-way,
  • then every knight drew him thither to hold his promise that they had
  • made; and Sir Marhaus and Sir Uwaine brought their damosels with them,
  • but Sir Gawaine had lost his damosel, as it is afore rehearsed.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How at the year’s end all three knights with their
  • three damosels met at the fountain.
  • Right so at the twelvemonths’ end they met all three knights at the
  • fountain and their damosels, but the damosel that Sir Gawaine had could
  • say but little worship of him so they departed from the damosels and
  • rode through a great forest, and there they met with a messenger that
  • came from King Arthur, that had sought them well-nigh a twelvemonth
  • throughout all England, Wales, and Scotland, and charged if ever he
  • might find Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine to bring them to the court again.
  • And then were they all glad, and so prayed they Sir Marhaus to ride
  • with them to the king’s court. And so within twelve days they came to
  • Camelot, and the king was passing glad of their coming, and so was all
  • the court. Then the king made them to swear upon a book to tell him all
  • their adventures that had befallen them that twelvemonth, and so they
  • did. And there was Sir Marhaus well known, for there were knights that
  • he had matched aforetime, and he was named one of the best knights
  • living.
  • Against the feast of Pentecost came the Damosel of the Lake and brought
  • with her Sir Pelleas; and at that high feast there was great jousting
  • of knights, and of all knights that were at that jousts, Sir Pelleas
  • had the prize, and Sir Marhaus was named the next; but Sir Pelleas was
  • so strong there might but few knights sit him a buffet with a spear.
  • And at that next feast Sir Pelleas and Sir Marhaus were made knights of
  • the Table Round, for there were two sieges void, for two knights were
  • slain that twelvemonth, and great joy had King Arthur of Sir Pelleas
  • and of Sir Marhaus. But Pelleas loved never after Sir Gawaine, but as
  • he spared him for the love of King Arthur; but ofttimes at jousts and
  • tournaments Sir Pelleas quit Sir Gawaine, for so it rehearseth in the
  • book of French. So Sir Tristram many days after fought with Sir Marhaus
  • in an island, and there they did a great battle, but at the last Sir
  • Tristram slew him, so Sir Tristram was wounded that unnethe he might
  • recover, and lay at a nunnery half a year. And Sir Pelleas was a
  • worshipful knight, and was one of the four that achieved the Sangreal,
  • and the Damosel of the Lake made by her means that never he had ado
  • with Sir Launcelot de Lake, for where Sir Launcelot was at any jousts
  • or any tournament, she would not suffer him be there that day, but if
  • it were on the side of Sir Launcelot.
  • Explicit liber quartus.
  • Incipit liber quintus.
  • BOOK V.
  • CHAPTER I. How twelve aged ambassadors of Rome came to King Arthur to
  • demand truage for Britain.
  • When King Arthur had after long war rested, and held a royal feast and
  • Table Round with his allies of kings, princes, and noble knights all of
  • the Round Table, there came into his hall, he sitting in his throne
  • royal, twelve ancient men, bearing each of them a branch of olive, in
  • token that they came as ambassadors and messengers from the Emperor
  • Lucius, which was called at that time, Dictator or Procuror of the
  • Public Weal of Rome. Which said messengers, after their entering and
  • coming into the presence of King Arthur, did to him their obeisance in
  • making to him reverence, and said to him in this wise: The high and
  • mighty Emperor Lucius sendeth to the King of Britain greeting,
  • commanding thee to acknowledge him for thy lord, and to send him the
  • truage due of this realm unto the Empire, which thy father and other
  • to-fore thy precessors have paid as is of record, and thou as rebel not
  • knowing him as thy sovereign, withholdest and retainest contrary to the
  • statutes and decrees made by the noble and worthy Julius Cesar,
  • conqueror of this realm, and first Emperor of Rome. And if thou refuse
  • his demand and commandment know thou for certain that he shall make
  • strong war against thee, thy realms and lands, and shall chastise thee
  • and thy subjects, that it shall be ensample perpetual unto all kings
  • and princes, for to deny their truage unto that noble empire which
  • domineth upon the universal world. Then when they had showed the effect
  • of their message, the king commanded them to withdraw them, and said he
  • should take advice of council and give to them an answer. Then some of
  • the young knights, hearing this their message, would have run on them
  • to have slain them, saying that it was a rebuke to all the knights
  • there being present to suffer them to say so to the king. And anon the
  • king commanded that none of them, upon pain of death, to missay them
  • nor do them any harm, and commanded a knight to bring them to their
  • lodging, and see that they have all that is necessary and requisite for
  • them, with the best cheer, and that no dainty be spared, for the Romans
  • be great lords, and though their message please me not nor my court,
  • yet I must remember mine honour.
  • After this the king let call all his lords and knights of the Round
  • Table to counsel upon this matter, and desired them to say their
  • advice. Then Sir Cador of Cornwall spake first and said, Sir, this
  • message liketh me well, for we have many days rested us and have been
  • idle, and now I hope ye shall make sharp war on the Romans, where I
  • doubt not we shall get honour. I believe well, said Arthur, that this
  • matter pleaseth thee well, but these answers may not be answered, for
  • the demand grieveth me sore, for truly I will never pay truage to Rome,
  • wherefore I pray you to counsel me. I have understood that Belinus and
  • Brenius, kings of Britain, have had the empire in their hands many
  • days, and also Constantine the son of Heleine, which is an open
  • evidence that we owe no tribute to Rome but of right we that be
  • descended of them have right to claim the title of the empire.
  • CHAPTER II. How the kings and lords promised to King Arthur aid and
  • help against the Romans.
  • Then answered King Anguish of Scotland, Sir, ye ought of right to be
  • above all other kings, for unto you is none like nor pareil in
  • Christendom, of knighthood nor of dignity, and I counsel you never to
  • obey the Romans, for when they reigned on us they distressed our
  • elders, and put this land to great extortions and tallies, wherefore I
  • make here mine avow to avenge me on them; and for to strengthen your
  • quarrel I shall furnish twenty thousand good men of war, and wage them
  • on my costs, which shall await on you with myself when it shall please
  • you. And the king of Little Britain granted him to the same thirty
  • thousand; wherefore King Arthur thanked them. And then every man agreed
  • to make war, and to aid after their power; that is to wit, the lord of
  • West Wales promised to bring thirty thousand men, and Sir Uwaine, Sir
  • Ider his son, with their cousins, promised to bring thirty thousand.
  • Then Sir Launcelot with all other promised in likewise every man a
  • great multitude.
  • And when King Arthur understood their courages and good wills he
  • thanked them heartily, and after let call the ambassadors to hear their
  • answer. And in presence of all his lords and knights he said to them in
  • this wise: I will that ye return unto your lord and Procuror of the
  • Common Weal for the Romans, and say ye to him, Of his demand and
  • commandment I set nothing, and that I know of no truage nor tribute
  • that I owe to him, nor to none earthly prince, Christian nor heathen;
  • but I pretend to have and occupy the sovereignty of the empire, wherein
  • I am entitled by the right of my predecessors, sometime kings of this
  • land; and say to him that I am delibered and fully concluded, to go
  • with mine army with strength and power unto Rome, by the grace of God,
  • to take possession in the empire and subdue them that be rebel.
  • Wherefore I command him and all them of Rome, that incontinent they
  • make to me their homage, and to acknowledge me for their Emperor and
  • Governor, upon pain that shall ensue. And then he commanded his
  • treasurer to give to them great and large gifts, and to pay all their
  • dispenses, and assigned Sir Cador to convey them out of the land. And
  • so they took their leave and departed, and took their shipping at
  • Sandwich, and passed forth by Flanders, Almaine, the mountains, and all
  • Italy, until they came unto Lucius. And after the reverence made, they
  • made relation of their answer, like as ye to-fore have heard.
  • When the Emperor Lucius had well understood their credence, he was sore
  • moved as he had been all araged, and said, I had supposed that Arthur
  • would have obeyed to my commandment, and have served you himself, as
  • him well beseemed or any other king to do. O Sir, said one of the
  • senators, let be such vain words, for we let you wit that I and my
  • fellows were full sore afeard to behold his countenance; I fear me ye
  • have made a rod for yourself, for he intendeth to be lord of this
  • empire, which sore is to be doubted if he come, for he is all another
  • man than ye ween, and holdeth the most noble court of the world, all
  • other kings nor princes may not compare unto his noble maintenance. On
  • New Year’s Day we saw him in his estate, which was the royalest that
  • ever we saw, for he was served at his table with nine kings, and the
  • noblest fellowship of other princes, lords, and knights that be in the
  • world, and every knight approved and like a lord, and holdeth Table
  • Round: and in his person the most manly man that liveth, and is like to
  • conquer all the world, for unto his courage it is too little: wherefore
  • I advise you to keep well your marches and straits in the mountains;
  • for certainly he is a lord to be doubted. Well, said Lucius, before
  • Easter I suppose to pass the mountains, and so forth into France, and
  • there bereave him his lands with Genoese and other mighty warriors of
  • Tuscany and Lombardy. And I shall send for them all that be subjects
  • and allied to the empire of Rome to come to mine aid. And forthwith
  • sent old wise knights unto these countries following: first to Ambage
  • and Arrage, to Alexandria, to India, to Armenia, whereas the river of
  • Euphrates runneth into Asia, to Africa, and Europe the Large, to
  • Ertayne and Elamye, to Araby, Egypt, and to Damascus, to Damietta and
  • Cayer, to Cappadocia, to Tarsus, Turkey, Pontus and Pamphylia, to Syria
  • and Galatia. And all these were subject to Rome and many more, as
  • Greece, Cyprus, Macedonia, Calabria, Cateland, Portugal, with many
  • thousands of Spaniards. Thus all these kings, dukes, and admirals,
  • assembled about Rome, with sixteen kings at once, with great multitude
  • of people. When the emperor understood their coming he made ready his
  • Romans and all the people between him and Flanders.
  • Also he had gotten with him fifty giants which had been engendered of
  • fiends; and they were ordained to guard his person, and to break the
  • front of the battle of King Arthur. And thus departed from Rome, and
  • came down the mountains for to destroy the lands that Arthur had
  • conquered, and came unto Cologne, and besieged a castle thereby, and
  • won it soon, and stuffed it with two hundred Saracens or Infidels, and
  • after destroyed many fair countries which Arthur had won of King
  • Claudas. And thus Lucius came with all his host, which were disperplyd
  • sixty mile in breadth, and commanded them to meet with him in Burgoyne,
  • for he purposed to destroy the realm of Little Britain.
  • CHAPTER III. How King Arthur held a parliament at York, and how he
  • ordained the realm should be governed in his absence.
  • Now leave we of Lucius the Emperor and speak we of King Arthur, that
  • commanded all them of his retinue to be ready at the utas of Hilary for
  • to hold a parliament at York. And at that parliament was concluded to
  • arrest all the navy of the land, and to be ready within fifteen days at
  • Sandwich, and there he showed to his army how he purposed to conquer
  • the empire which he ought to have of right. And there he ordained two
  • governors of this realm, that is to say, Sir Baudwin of Britain, for to
  • counsel to the best, and Sir Constantine, son to Sir Cador of Cornwall,
  • which after the death of Arthur was king of this realm. And in the
  • presence of all his lords he resigned the rule of the realm and
  • Guenever his queen to them, wherefore Sir Launcelot was wroth, for he
  • left Sir Tristram with King Mark for the love of Beale Isould. Then the
  • Queen Guenever made great sorrow for the departing of her lord and
  • other, and swooned in such wise that the ladies bare her into her
  • chamber. Thus the king with his great army departed, leaving the queen
  • and realm in the governance of Sir Baudwin and Constantine. And when he
  • was on his horse he said with an high voice, If I die in this journey I
  • will that Sir Constantine be mine heir and king crowned of this realm
  • as next of my blood. And after departed and entered into the sea at
  • Sandwich with all his army, with a great multitude of ships, galleys,
  • cogs, and dromounds, sailing on the sea.
  • CHAPTER IV. How King Arthur being shipped and lying in his cabin had a
  • marvellous dream and of the exposition thereof.
  • And as the king lay in his cabin in the ship, he fell in a slumbering
  • and dreamed a marvellous dream: him seemed that a dreadful dragon did
  • drown much of his people, and he came flying out of the west, and his
  • head was enamelled with azure, and his shoulders shone as gold, his
  • belly like mails of a marvellous hue, his tail full of tatters, his
  • feet full of fine sable, and his claws like fine gold; and an hideous
  • flame of fire flew out of his mouth, like as the land and water had
  • flamed all of fire. After, him seemed there came out of the orient, a
  • grimly boar all black in a cloud, and his paws as big as a post; he was
  • rugged looking roughly, he was the foulest beast that ever man saw, he
  • roared and romed so hideously that it were marvel to hear. Then the
  • dreadful dragon advanced him and came in the wind like a falcon giving
  • great strokes on the boar, and the boar hit him again with his grizzly
  • tusks that his breast was all bloody, and that the hot blood made all
  • the sea red of his blood. Then the dragon flew away all on an height,
  • and came down with such a swough, and smote the boar on the ridge,
  • which was ten foot large from the head to the tail, and smote the boar
  • all to powder both flesh and bones, that it flittered all abroad on the
  • sea.
  • And therewith the king awoke anon, and was sore abashed of this dream,
  • and sent anon for a wise philosopher, commanding to tell him the
  • signification of his dream. Sir, said the philosopher, the dragon that
  • thou dreamedst of betokeneth thine own person that sailest here, and
  • the colours of his wings be thy realms that thou hast won, and his tail
  • which is all to-tattered signifieth the noble knights of the Round
  • Table; and the boar that the dragon slew coming from the clouds
  • betokeneth some tyrant that tormenteth the people, or else thou art
  • like to fight with some giant thyself, being horrible and abominable,
  • whose peer ye saw never in your days, wherefore of this dreadful dream
  • doubt thee nothing, but as a conqueror come forth thyself.
  • Then after this soon they had sight of land, and sailed till they
  • arrived at Barflete in Flanders, and when they were there he found many
  • of his great lords ready, as they had been commanded to wait upon him.
  • CHAPTER V. How a man of the country told to him of a marvellous giant,
  • and how he fought and conquered him.
  • Then came to him an husbandman of the country, and told him how there
  • was in the country of Constantine beside Brittany, a great giant which
  • had slain, murdered and devoured much people of the country, and had
  • been sustained seven year with the children of the commons of that
  • land, insomuch that all the children be all slain and destroyed; and
  • now late he hath taken the Duchess of Brittany as she rode with her
  • meiny, and hath led her to his lodging which is in a mountain, for to
  • ravish and lie by her to her life’s end, and many people followed her,
  • more than five hundred, but all they might not rescue her, but they
  • left her shrieking and crying lamentably, wherefore I suppose that he
  • hath slain her in fulfilling his foul lust of lechery. She was wife
  • unto thy cousin Sir Howell, whom we call full nigh of thy blood. Now,
  • as thou art a rightful king, have pity on this lady, and revenge us all
  • as thou art a noble conqueror. Alas, said King Arthur, this is a great
  • mischief, I had liefer than the best realm that I have that I had been
  • a furlong way to-fore him for to have rescued that lady. Now, fellow,
  • said King Arthur, canst thou bring me thereas this giant haunteth? Yea,
  • Sir, said the good man, look yonder whereas thou seest those two great
  • fires, there shalt thou find him, and more treasure than I suppose is
  • in all France. When the king had understood this piteous case, he
  • returned into his tent.
  • Then he called to him Sir Kay and Sir Bedivere, and commanded them
  • secretly to make ready horse and harness for himself and them twain;
  • for after evensong he would ride on pilgrimage with them two only unto
  • Saint Michael’s mount. And then anon he made him ready, and armed him
  • at all points, and took his horse and his shield. And so they three
  • departed thence and rode forth as fast as ever they might till that
  • they came to the foreland of that mount. And there they alighted, and
  • the king commanded them to tarry there, for he would himself go up into
  • that mount. And so he ascended up into that hill till he came to a
  • great fire, and there he found a careful widow wringing her hands and
  • making great sorrow, sitting by a grave new made. And then King Arthur
  • saluted her, and demanded of her wherefore she made such lamentation,
  • to whom she answered and said, Sir knight, speak soft, for yonder is a
  • devil, if he hear thee speak he will come and destroy thee; I hold thee
  • unhappy; what dost thou here in this mountain? for if ye were such
  • fifty as ye be, ye were not able to make resistance against this devil:
  • here lieth a duchess dead, the which was the fairest of all the world,
  • wife to Sir Howell, Duke of Brittany, he hath murdered her in forcing
  • her, and hath slit her unto the navel.
  • Dame, said the king, I come from the noble conqueror King Arthur, for
  • to treat with that tyrant for his liege people. Fie on such treaties,
  • said she, he setteth not by the king nor by no man else; but an if thou
  • have brought Arthur’s wife, dame Guenever, he shall be gladder than
  • thou hadst given to him half France. Beware, approach him not too nigh,
  • for he hath vanquished fifteen kings, and hath made him a coat full of
  • precious stones embroidered with their beards, which they sent him to
  • have his love for salvation of their people at this last Christmas. And
  • if thou wilt, speak with him at yonder great fire at supper. Well, said
  • Arthur, I will accomplish my message for all your fearful words; and
  • went forth by the crest of that hill, and saw where he sat at supper
  • gnawing on a limb of a man, baking his broad limbs by the fire, and
  • breechless, and three fair damosels turning three broaches whereon were
  • broached twelve young children late born, like young birds.
  • When King Arthur beheld that piteous sight he had great compassion on
  • them, so that his heart bled for sorrow, and hailed him, saying in this
  • wise: He that all the world wieldeth give thee short life and shameful
  • death; and the devil have thy soul; why hast thou murdered these young
  • innocent children, and murdered this duchess? Therefore, arise and
  • dress thee, thou glutton, for this day shalt thou die of my hand. Then
  • the glutton anon started up, and took a great club in his hand, and
  • smote at the king that his coronal fell to the earth. And the king hit
  • him again that he carved his belly and cut off his genitours, that his
  • guts and his entrails fell down to the ground. Then the giant threw
  • away his club, and caught the king in his arms that he crushed his
  • ribs. Then the three maidens kneeled down and called to Christ for help
  • and comfort of Arthur. And then Arthur weltered and wrung, that he was
  • other while under and another time above. And so weltering and
  • wallowing they rolled down the hill till they came to the sea mark, and
  • ever as they so weltered Arthur smote him with his dagger.
  • And it fortuned they came to the place whereas the two knights were and
  • kept Arthur’s horse; then when they saw the king fast in the giant’s
  • arms they came and loosed him. And then the king commanded Sir Kay to
  • smite off the giant’s head, and to set it upon a truncheon of a spear,
  • and bear it to Sir Howell, and tell him that his enemy was slain; and
  • after let this head be bound to a barbican that all the people may see
  • and behold it; and go ye two up to the mountain, and fetch me my
  • shield, my sword, and the club of iron; and as for the treasure, take
  • ye it, for ye shall find there goods out of number; so I have the
  • kirtle and the club I desire no more. This was the fiercest giant that
  • ever I met with, save one in the mount of Araby, which I overcame, but
  • this was greater and fiercer. Then the knights fetched the club and the
  • kirtle, and some of the treasure they took to themselves, and returned
  • again to the host. And anon this was known through all the country,
  • wherefore the people came and thanked the king. And he said again, Give
  • the thanks to God, and depart the goods among you.
  • And after that King Arthur said and commanded his cousin Howell, that
  • he should ordain for a church to be builded on the same hill in the
  • worship of Saint Michael. And on the morn the king removed with his
  • great battle, and came into Champayne and in a valley, and there they
  • pight their tents; and the king being set at his dinner, there came in
  • two messengers, of whom that one was Marshal of France, and said to the
  • king that the emperor was entered into France, and had destroyed a
  • great part, and was in Burgoyne, and had destroyed and made great
  • slaughter of people, and burnt towns and boroughs; wherefore, if thou
  • come not hastily, they must yield up their bodies and goods.
  • CHAPTER VI. How King Arthur sent Sir Gawaine and other to Lucius, and
  • how they were assailed and escaped with worship.
  • Then the king did do call Sir Gawaine, Sir Bors, Sir Lionel, and Sir
  • Bedivere, and commanded them to go straight to Sir Lucius, and say ye
  • to him that hastily he remove out of my land; and if he will not, bid
  • him make him ready to battle and not distress the poor people. Then
  • anon these noble knights dressed them to horseback, and when they came
  • to the green wood, they saw many pavilions set in a meadow, of silk of
  • divers colours, beside a river, and the emperor’s pavilion was in the
  • middle with an eagle displayed above. To the which tent our knights
  • rode toward, and ordained Sir Gawaine and Sir Bors to do the message,
  • and left in a bushment Sir Lionel and Sir Bedivere. And then Sir
  • Gawaine and Sir Bors did their message, and commanded Lucius, in
  • Arthur’s name to avoid his land, or shortly to address him to battle.
  • To whom Lucius answered and said, Ye shall return to your lord, and say
  • ye to him that I shall subdue him and all his lands. Then Sir Gawaine
  • was wroth and said, I had liefer than all France fight against thee;
  • and so had I, said Sir Bors, liefer than all Brittany or Burgoyne.
  • Then a knight named Sir Gainus, nigh cousin to the emperor, said, Lo,
  • how these Britons be full of pride and boast, and they brag as though
  • they bare up all the world. Then Sir Gawaine was sore grieved with
  • these words, and pulled out his sword and smote off his head. And
  • therewith turned their horses and rode over waters and through woods
  • till they came to their bushment, whereas Sir Lionel and Sir Bedivere
  • were hoving. The Romans followed fast after, on horseback and on foot,
  • over a champaign unto a wood; then Sir Bors turned his horse and saw a
  • knight come fast on, whom he smote through the body with a spear that
  • he fell dead down to the earth; then came Caliburn one of the strongest
  • of Pavie, and smote down many of Arthur’s knights. And when Sir Bors
  • saw him do so much harm, he addressed toward him, and smote him through
  • the breast, that he fell down dead to the earth. Then Sir Feldenak
  • thought to revenge the death of Gainus upon Sir Gawaine, but Sir
  • Gawaine was ware thereof, and smote him on the head, which stroke
  • stinted not till it came to his breast. And then he returned and came
  • to his fellows in the bushment. And there was a recounter, for the
  • bushment brake on the Romans, and slew and hew down the Romans, and
  • forced the Romans to flee and return, whom the noble knights chased
  • unto their tents.
  • Then the Romans gathered more people, and also footmen came on, and
  • there was a new battle, and so much people that Sir Bors and Sir Berel
  • were taken. But when Sir Gawaine saw that, he took with him Sir Idrus
  • the good knight, and said he would never see King Arthur but if he
  • rescued them, and pulled out Galatine his good sword, and followed them
  • that led those two knights away; and he smote him that led Sir Bors,
  • and took Sir Bors from him and delivered him to his fellows. And Sir
  • Idrus in likewise rescued Sir Berel. Then began the battle to be great,
  • that our knights were in great jeopardy, wherefore Sir Gawaine sent to
  • King Arthur for succour, and that he hie him, for I am sore wounded,
  • and that our prisoners may pay goods out of number. And the messenger
  • came to the king and told him his message. And anon the king did do
  • assemble his army, but anon, or he departed the prisoners were come,
  • and Sir Gawaine and his fellows gat the field and put the Romans to
  • flight, and after returned and came with their fellowship in such wise
  • that no man of worship was lost of them, save that Sir Gawaine was sore
  • hurt. Then the king did do ransack his wounds and comforted him. And
  • thus was the beginning of the first journey of the Britons and Romans,
  • and there were slain of the Romans more than ten thousand, and great
  • joy and mirth was made that night in the host of King Arthur. And on
  • the morn he sent all the prisoners into Paris under the guard of Sir
  • Launcelot, with many knights, and of Sir Cador.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Lucius sent certain spies in a bushment for to have
  • taken his knights being prisoners, and how they were letted.
  • Now turn we to the Emperor of Rome, which espied that these prisoners
  • should be sent to Paris, and anon he sent to lie in a bushment certain
  • knights and princes with sixty thousand men, for to rescue his knights
  • and lords that were prisoners. And so on the morn as Launcelot and Sir
  • Cador, chieftains and governors of all them that conveyed the
  • prisoners, as they should pass through a wood, Sir Launcelot sent
  • certain knights to espy if any were in the woods to let them. And when
  • the said knights came into the wood, anon they espied and saw the great
  • embushment, and returned and told Sir Launcelot that there lay in await
  • for them three score thousand Romans. And then Sir Launcelot with such
  • knights as he had, and men of war to the number of ten thousand, put
  • them in array, and met with them and fought with them manly, and slew
  • and detrenched many of the Romans, and slew many knights and admirals
  • of the party of the Romans and Saracens; there was slain the king of
  • Lyly and three great lords, Aladuke, Herawd, and Heringdale. But Sir
  • Launcelot fought so nobly that no man might endure a stroke of his
  • hand, but where he came he showed his prowess and might, for he slew
  • down right on every side; and the Romans and Saracens fled from him as
  • the sheep from the wolf or from the lion, and put them, all that abode
  • alive, to flight.
  • And so long they fought that tidings came to King Arthur, and anon he
  • graithed him and came to the battle, and saw his knights how they had
  • vanquished the battle, he embraced them knight by knight in his arms,
  • and said, Ye be worthy to wield all your honour and worship; there was
  • never king save myself that had so noble knights. Sir, said Cador,
  • there was none of us failed other, but of the prowess and manhood of
  • Sir Launcelot were more than wonder to tell, and also of his cousins
  • which did that day many noble feats of war. And also Sir Cador told who
  • of his knights were slain, as Sir Berel, and other Sir Moris and Sir
  • Maurel, two good knights. Then the king wept, and dried his eyes with a
  • kerchief, and said, Your courage had near-hand destroyed you, for
  • though ye had returned again, ye had lost no worship; for I call it
  • folly, knights to abide when they be overmatched. Nay, said Launcelot
  • and the other, for once shamed may never be recovered.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How a senator told to Lucius of their discomfiture, and
  • also of the great battle between Arthur and Lucius.
  • Now leave we King Arthur and his noble knights which had won the field,
  • and had brought their prisoners to Paris, and speak we of a senator
  • which escaped from the battle, and came to Lucius the emperor, and said
  • to him, Sir emperor, I advise thee for to withdraw thee; what dost thou
  • here? thou shalt win nothing in these marches but great strokes out of
  • all measure, for this day one of Arthur’s knights was worth in the
  • battle an hundred of ours. Fie on thee, said Lucius, thou speakest
  • cowardly; for thy words grieve me more than all the loss that I had
  • this day. And anon he sent forth a king, which hight Sir Leomie, with a
  • great army, and bade him hie him fast to-fore, and he would follow
  • hastily after. King Arthur was warned privily, and sent his people to
  • Sessoine, and took up the towns and castles from the Romans. Then the
  • king commanded Sir Cador to take the rearward, and to take with him
  • certain knights of the Round Table, and Sir Launcelot, Sir Bors, Sir
  • Kay, Sir Marrok, with Sir Marhaus, shall await on our person. Thus the
  • King Arthur disperpled his host in divers parties, to the end that his
  • enemies should not escape.
  • When the emperor was entered into the vale of Sessoine, he might see
  • where King Arthur was embattled and his banner displayed; and he was
  • beset round about with his enemies, that needs he must fight or yield
  • him, for he might not flee, but said openly unto the Romans, Sirs, I
  • admonish you that this day ye fight and acquit you as men, and remember
  • how Rome domineth and is chief and head over all the earth and
  • universal world, and suffer not these Britons this day to abide against
  • us; and therewith he did command his trumpets to blow the bloody
  • sounds, in such wise that the ground trembled and dindled.
  • Then the battles approached and shoved and shouted on both sides, and
  • great strokes were smitten on both sides, many men overthrown, hurt,
  • and slain; and great valiances, prowesses and appertices of war were
  • that day showed, which were over long to recount the noble feats of
  • every man, for they should contain an whole volume. But in especial,
  • King Arthur rode in the battle exhorting his knights to do well, and
  • himself did as nobly with his hands as was possible a man to do; he
  • drew out Excalibur his sword, and awaited ever whereas the Romans were
  • thickest and most grieved his people, and anon he addressed him on that
  • part, and hew and slew down right, and rescued his people; and he slew
  • a great giant named Galapas, which was a man of an huge quantity and
  • height, he shorted him and smote off both his legs by the knees,
  • saying, Now art thou better of a size to deal with than thou were, and
  • after smote off his head. There Sir Gawaine fought nobly and slew three
  • admirals in that battle. And so did all the knights of the Round Table.
  • Thus the battle between King Arthur and Lucius the Emperor endured
  • long. Lucius had on his side many Saracens which were slain. And thus
  • the battle was great, and oftsides that one party was at a fordeal and
  • anon at an afterdeal, which endured so long till at the last King
  • Arthur espied where Lucius the Emperor fought, and did wonder with his
  • own hands. And anon he rode to him. And either smote other fiercely,
  • and at last Lucius smote Arthur thwart the visage, and gave him a large
  • wound. And when King Arthur felt himself hurt, anon he smote him again
  • with Excalibur that it cleft his head, from the summit of his head, and
  • stinted not till it came to his breast. And then the emperor fell down
  • dead and there ended his life.
  • And when it was known that the emperor was slain, anon all the Romans
  • with all their host put them to flight, and King Arthur with all his
  • knights followed the chase, and slew down right all them that they
  • might attain. And thus was the victory given to King Arthur, and the
  • triumph; and there were slain on the part of Lucius more than an
  • hundred thousand. And after King Arthur did do ransack the dead bodies,
  • and did do bury them that were slain of his retinue, every man
  • according to the estate and degree that he was of. And them that were
  • hurt he let the surgeons do search their hurts and wounds, and
  • commanded to spare no salves nor medicines till they were whole.
  • Then the king rode straight to the place where the Emperor Lucius lay
  • dead, and with him he found slain the Soudan of Syria, the King of
  • Egypt and of Ethiopia, which were two noble kings, with seventeen other
  • kings of divers regions, and also sixty senators of Rome, all noble
  • men, whom the king did do balm and gum with many good gums aromatic,
  • and after did do cere them in sixty fold of cered cloth of sendal, and
  • laid them in chests of lead, because they should not chafe nor savour,
  • and upon all these bodies their shields with their arms and banners
  • were set, to the end they should be known of what country they were.
  • And after he found three senators which were alive, to whom he said,
  • For to save your lives I will that ye take these dead bodies, and carry
  • them with you unto great Rome, and present them to the Potestate on my
  • behalf, shewing him my letters, and tell them that I in my person shall
  • hastily be at Rome. And I suppose the Romans shall beware how they
  • shall demand any tribute of me. And I command you to say when ye shall
  • come to Rome, to the Potestate and all the Council and Senate, that I
  • send to them these dead bodies for the tribute that they have demanded.
  • And if they be not content with these, I shall pay more at my coming,
  • for other tribute owe I none, nor none other will I pay. And methinketh
  • this sufficeth for Britain, Ireland and all Almaine with Germany. And
  • furthermore, I charge you to say to them, that I command them upon pain
  • of their heads never to demand tribute nor tax of me nor of my lands.
  • Then with this charge and commandment, the three senators aforesaid
  • departed with all the said dead bodies, laying the body of Lucius in a
  • car covered with the arms of the Empire all alone; and after alway two
  • bodies of kings in a chariot, and then the bodies of the senators after
  • them, and so went toward Rome, and showed their legation and message to
  • the Potestate and Senate, recounting the battle done in France, and how
  • the field was lost and much people and innumerable slain. Wherefore
  • they advised them in no wise to move no more war against that noble
  • conqueror Arthur, for his might and prowess is most to be doubted, seen
  • the noble kings and great multitude of knights of the Round Table, to
  • whom none earthly prince may compare.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Arthur, after he had achieved the battle against the
  • Romans, entered into Almaine, and so into Italy.
  • Now turn we unto King Arthur and his noble knights, which, after the
  • great battle achieved against the Romans, entered into Lorraine,
  • Brabant and Flanders, and sithen returned into Haut Almaine, and so
  • over the mountains into Lombardy, and after, into Tuscany wherein was a
  • city which in no wise would yield themself nor obey, wherefore King
  • Arthur besieged it, and lay long about it, and gave many assaults to
  • the city; and they within defended them valiantly. Then, on a time, the
  • king called Sir Florence, a knight, and said to him they lacked
  • victual, And not far from hence be great forests and woods, wherein be
  • many of mine enemies with much bestial: I will that thou make thee
  • ready and go thither in foraying, and take with thee Sir Gawaine my
  • nephew, Sir Wisshard, Sir Clegis, Sir Cleremond, and the Captain of
  • Cardiff with other, and bring with you all the beasts that ye there can
  • get.
  • And anon these knights made them ready, and rode over holts and hills,
  • through forests and woods, till they came into a fair meadow full of
  • fair flowers and grass; and there they rested them and their horses all
  • that night. And in the springing of the day in the next morn, Sir
  • Gawaine took his horse and stole away from his fellowship, to seek some
  • adventures. And anon he was ware of a man armed, walking his horse
  • easily by a wood’s side, and his shield laced to his shoulder, sitting
  • on a strong courser, without any man saving a page bearing a mighty
  • spear. The knight bare in his shield three griffins of gold, in sable
  • carbuncle, the chief of silver. When Sir Gawaine espied this gay
  • knight, he feutred his spear, and rode straight to him, and demanded of
  • him from whence that he was. That other answered and said he was of
  • Tuscany, and demanded of Sir Gawaine, What, profferest thou, proud
  • knight, thee so boldly? here gettest thou no prey, thou mayest prove
  • what thou wilt, for thou shalt be my prisoner or thou depart. Then said
  • Gawaine, thou avauntest thee greatly and speakest proud words, I
  • counsel thee for all thy boast that thou make thee ready, and take thy
  • gear to thee, to-fore greater grame fall to thee.
  • CHAPTER X. Of a battle done by Sir Gawaine against a Saracen, which
  • after was yielden and became Christian.
  • Then they took their spears and ran each at other with all the might
  • they had, and smote each other through their shields into their
  • shoulders, wherefore anon they pulled out their swords, and smote great
  • strokes that the fire sprang out of their helms. Then Sir Gawaine was
  • all abashed, and with Galatine his good sword he smote through shield
  • and thick hauberk made of thick mails, and all to-rushed and break the
  • precious stones, and made him a large wound, that men might see both
  • liver and lung. Then groaned that knight, and addressed him to Sir
  • Gawaine, and with an awk stroke gave him a great wound and cut a vein,
  • which grieved Gawaine sore, and he bled sore. Then the knight said to
  • Sir Gawaine, bind thy wound or thy blee[ding] change, for thou
  • be-bleedest all thy horse and thy fair arms, for all the barbers of
  • Brittany shall not con staunch thy blood, for whosomever is hurt with
  • this blade he shall never be staunched of bleeding. Then answered
  • Gawaine, it grieveth me but little, thy great words shall not fear me
  • nor lessen my courage, but thou shalt suffer teen and sorrow or we
  • depart, but tell me in haste who may staunch my bleeding. That may I
  • do, said the knight, if I will, and so will I if thou wilt succour and
  • aid me, that I may be christened and believe on God, and thereof I
  • require thee of thy manhood, and it shall be great merit for thy soul.
  • I grant, said Gawaine, so God help me, to accomplish all thy desire,
  • but first tell me what thou soughtest here thus alone, and of what land
  • and liegiance thou art of. Sir, he said, my name is Priamus, and a
  • great prince is my father, and he hath been rebel unto Rome and
  • overridden many of their lands. My father is lineally descended of
  • Alexander and of Hector by right line. And Duke Joshua and Maccabaeus
  • were of our lineage. I am right inheritor of Alexandria and Africa, and
  • all the out isles, yet will I believe on thy Lord that thou believest
  • on; and for thy labour I shall give thee treasure enough. I was so
  • elate and hauteyn in my heart that I thought no man my peer, nor to me
  • semblable. I was sent into this war with seven score knights, and now I
  • have encountered with thee, which hast given to me of fighting my fill,
  • wherefore sir knight, I pray thee to tell me what thou art. I am no
  • knight, said Gawaine, I have been brought up in the guardrobe with the
  • noble King Arthur many years, for to take heed to his armour and his
  • other array, and to point his paltocks that long to himself. At Yule
  • last he made me yeoman, and gave to me horse and harness, and an
  • hundred pound in money; and if fortune be my friend, I doubt not but to
  • be well advanced and holpen by my liege lord. Ah, said Priamus, if his
  • knaves be so keen and fierce, his knights be passing good: now for the
  • King’s love of Heaven, whether thou be a knave or a knight, tell thou
  • me thy name. By God, said Sir Gawaine, now I will say thee sooth, my
  • name is Sir Gawaine, and known I am in his court and in his chamber,
  • and one of the knights of the Round Table, he dubbed me a duke with his
  • own hand. Therefore grudge not if this grace is to me fortuned, it is
  • the goodness of God that lent to me my strength. Now am I better
  • pleased, said Priamus, than thou hadst given to me all the Provence and
  • Paris the rich. I had liefer to have been torn with wild horses, than
  • any varlet had won such loos, or any page or priker should have had
  • prize on me. But now sir knight I warn thee that hereby is a Duke of
  • Lorraine with his army, and the noblest men of Dolphiny, and lords of
  • Lombardy, with the garrison of Godard, and Saracens of Southland,
  • y-numbered sixty thousand of good men of arms; wherefore but if we hie
  • us hence, it will harm us both, for we be sore hurt, never like to
  • recover; but take heed to my page, that he no horn blow, for if he do,
  • there be hoving here fast by an hundred knights awaiting on my person,
  • and if they take thee, there shall no ransom of gold nor silver acquit
  • thee.
  • Then Sir Gawaine rode over a water for to save him, and the knight
  • followed him, and so rode forth till they came to his fellows which
  • were in the meadow, where they had been all the night. Anon as Sir
  • Wisshard was ware of Sir Gawaine and saw that he was hurt, he ran to
  • him sorrowfully weeping, and demanded of him who had so hurt him; and
  • Gawaine told how he had foughten with that man, and each of them had
  • hurt other, and how he had salves to heal them; but I can tell you
  • other tidings, that soon we shall have ado with many enemies.
  • Then Sir Priamus and Sir Gawaine alighted, and let their horses graze
  • in the meadow, and unarmed them, and then the blood ran freshly from
  • their wounds. And Priamus took from his page a vial full of the four
  • waters that came out of Paradise, and with certain balm anointed their
  • wounds, and washed them with that water, and within an hour after they
  • were both as whole as ever they were. And then with a trumpet were they
  • all assembled to council, and there Priamus told unto them what lords
  • and knights had sworn to rescue him, and that without fail they should
  • be assailed with many thousands, wherefore he counselled them to
  • withdraw them. Then Sir Gawaine said, it were great shame to them to
  • avoid without any strokes; Wherefore I advise to take our arms and to
  • make us ready to meet with these Saracens and misbelieving men, and
  • with the help of God we shall overthrow them and have a fair day on
  • them. And Sir Florence shall abide still in this field to keep the
  • stale as a noble knight, and we shall not forsake yonder fellows. Now,
  • said Priamus, cease your words, for I warn you ye shall find in yonder
  • woods many perilous knights; they will put forth beasts to call you on,
  • they be out of number, and ye are not past seven hundred, which be over
  • few to fight with so many. Nevertheless, said Sir Gawaine, we shall
  • once encounter them, and see what they can do, and the best shall have
  • the victory.
  • CHAPTER XI. How the Saracens came out of a wood for to rescue their
  • beasts, and of a great battle.
  • Then Sir Florence called to him Sir Floridas, with an hundred knights,
  • and drove forth the herd of beasts. Then followed him seven hundred men
  • of arms; and Sir Ferant of Spain on a fair steed came springing out of
  • the woods, and came to Sir Florence and asked him why he fled. Then Sir
  • Florence took his spear and rode against him, and smote him in the
  • forehead and brake his neck bone. Then all the other were moved, and
  • thought to avenge the death of Sir Ferant, and smote in among them, and
  • there was great fight, and many slain and laid down to ground, and Sir
  • Florence with his hundred knights alway kept the stale, and fought
  • manly.
  • Then when Priamus the good knight perceived the great fight, he went to
  • Sir Gawaine, and bade him that he should go and succour his fellowship,
  • which were sore bestead with their enemies. Sir, grieve you not, said
  • Sir Gawaine, for their gree shall be theirs. I shall not once move my
  • horse to them ward, but if I see more than there be; for they be strong
  • enough to match them.
  • And with that he saw an earl called Sir Ethelwold and the duke of
  • Dutchmen, came leaping out of a wood with many thousands, and Priamus’
  • knights, and came straight unto the battle. Then Sir Gawaine comforted
  • his knights, and bade them not to be abashed, for all shall be ours.
  • Then they began to wallop and met with their enemies, there were men
  • slain and overthrown on every side. Then thrust in among them the
  • knights of the Table Round, and smote down to the earth all them that
  • withstood them, in so much that they made them to recoil and flee. By
  • God, said Sir Gawaine, this gladdeth my heart, for now be they less in
  • number by twenty thousand. Then entered into the battle Jubance a
  • giant, and fought and slew down right, and distressed many of our
  • knights, among whom was slain Sir Gherard, a knight of Wales. Then our
  • knights took heart to them, and slew many Saracens. And then came in
  • Sir Priamus with his pennon, and rode with the knights of the Round
  • Table, and fought so manfully that many of their enemies lost their
  • lives. And there Sir Priamus slew the Marquis of Moises land, and Sir
  • Gawaine with his fellows so quit them that they had the field, but in
  • that stour was Sir Chestelaine, a child and ward of Sir Gawaine slain,
  • wherefore was much sorrow made, and his death was soon avenged. Thus
  • was the battle ended, and many lords of Lombardy and Saracens left dead
  • in the field.
  • Then Sir Florence and Sir Gawaine harboured surely their people, and
  • took great plenty of bestial, of gold and silver, and great treasure
  • and riches, and returned unto King Arthur, which lay still at the
  • siege. And when they came to the king they presented their prisoners
  • and recounted their adventures, and how they had vanquished their
  • enemies.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Gawaine returned to King Arthur with his
  • prisoners, and how the King won a city, and how he was crowned Emperor.
  • Now thanked be God, said the noble King Arthur. But what manner man is
  • he that standeth by himself, him seemeth no prisoner. Sir, said
  • Gawaine, this is a good man of arms, he hath matched me, but he is
  • yielden unto God, and to me, for to become Christian; had not he have
  • been we should never have returned, wherefore I pray you that he may be
  • baptised, for there liveth not a nobler man nor better knight of his
  • hands. Then the king let him anon be christened, and did do call him
  • his first name Priamus, and made him a duke and knight of the Table
  • Round. And then anon the king let do cry assault to the city, and there
  • was rearing of ladders, breaking of walls, and the ditch filled, that
  • men with little pain might enter into the city. Then came out a
  • duchess, and Clarisin the countess, with many ladies and damosels, and
  • kneeling before King Arthur, required him for the love of God to
  • receive the city, and not to take it by assault, for then should many
  • guiltless be slain. Then the king avaled his visor with a meek and
  • noble countenance, and said, Madam, there shall none of my subjects
  • misdo you nor your maidens, nor to none that to you belong, but the
  • duke shall abide my judgment. Then anon the king commanded to leave the
  • assault, and anon the duke’s oldest son brought out the keys, and
  • kneeling delivered them to the king, and besought him of grace; and the
  • king seized the town by assent of his lords, and took the duke and sent
  • him to Dover, there for to abide prisoner term of his life, and
  • assigned certain rents for the dower of the duchess and for her
  • children.
  • Then he made lords to rule those lands, and laws as a lord ought to do
  • in his own country; and after he took his journey toward Rome, and sent
  • Sir Floris and Sir Floridas to-fore, with five hundred men of arms, and
  • they came to the city of Urbino and laid there a bushment, thereas them
  • seemed most best for them, and rode to-fore the town, where anon issued
  • out much people and skirmished with the fore-riders. Then brake out the
  • bushment and won the bridge, and after the town, and set upon the walls
  • the king’s banner. Then came the king upon an hill, and saw the city
  • and his banner on the walls, by which he knew that the city was won.
  • And anon he sent and commanded that none of his liege men should defoul
  • nor lie by no lady, wife nor maid; and when he came into the city, he
  • passed to the castle, and comforted them that were in sorrow, and
  • ordained there a captain, a knight of his own country.
  • And when they of Milan heard that thilk city was won, they sent to King
  • Arthur great sums of money, and besought him as their lord to have pity
  • on them, promising to be his subjects for ever, and yield to him homage
  • and fealty for the lands of Pleasance and Pavia, Petersaint, and the
  • Port of Tremble, and to give him yearly a million of gold all his
  • lifetime. Then he rideth into Tuscany, and winneth towns and castles,
  • and wasted all in his way that to him will not obey, and so to Spolute
  • and Viterbe, and from thence he rode into the Vale of Vicecount among
  • the vines. And from thence he sent to the senators, to wit whether they
  • would know him for their lord. But soon after on a Saturday came unto
  • King Arthur all the senators that were left alive, and the noblest
  • cardinals that then dwelt in Rome, and prayed him of peace, and
  • proferred him full large, and besought him as governor to give licence
  • for six weeks for to assemble all the Romans, and then to crown him
  • emperor with chrism as it belongeth to so high estate. I assent, said
  • the king, like as ye have devised, and at Christmas there to be
  • crowned, and to hold my Round Table with my knights as me liketh. And
  • then the senators made ready for his enthronization. And at the day
  • appointed, as the romance telleth, he came into Rome, and was crowned
  • emperor by the pope’s hand, with all the royalty that could be made,
  • and sojourned there a time, and established all his lands from Rome
  • into France, and gave lands and realms unto his servants and knights,
  • to everych after his desert, in such wise that none complained, rich
  • nor poor. And he gave to Sir Priamus the duchy of Lorraine; and he
  • thanked him, and said he would serve him the days of his life; and
  • after made dukes and earls, and made every man rich.
  • Then after this all his knights and lords assembled them afore him, and
  • said: Blessed be God, your war is finished and your conquest achieved,
  • in so much that we know none so great nor mighty that dare make war
  • against you: wherefore we beseech you to return homeward, and give us
  • licence to go home to our wives, from whom we have been long, and to
  • rest us, for your journey is finished with honour and worship. Then
  • said the king, Ye say truth, and for to tempt God it is no wisdom, and
  • therefore make you ready and return we into England. Then there was
  • trussing of harness and baggage and great carriage. And after licence
  • given, he returned and commanded that no man in pain of death should
  • not rob nor take victual, nor other thing by the way but that he should
  • pay therefore. And thus he came over the sea and landed at Sandwich,
  • against whom Queen Guenever his wife came and met him, and he was nobly
  • received of all his commons in every city and burgh, and great gifts
  • presented to him at his home-coming to welcome him with.
  • Thus endeth the fifth book of the conquest that King Arthur had against
  • Lucius the Emperor of Rome, and here followeth the sixth book, which is
  • of Sir Launcelot du Lake.
  • BOOK VI.
  • CHAPTER I. How Sir Launcelot and Sir Lionel departed from the court,
  • and how Sir Lionel left him sleeping and was taken.
  • Soon after that King Arthur was come from Rome into England, then all
  • the knights of the Table Round resorted unto the king, and made many
  • jousts and tournaments, and some there were that were but knights,
  • which increased so in arms and worship that they passed all their
  • fellows in prowess and noble deeds, and that was well proved on many;
  • but in especial it was proved on Sir Launcelot du Lake, for in all
  • tournaments and jousts and deeds of arms, both for life and death, he
  • passed all other knights, and at no time he was never overcome but if
  • it were by treason or enchantment; so Sir Launcelot increased so
  • marvellously in worship, and in honour, therefore is he the first
  • knight that the French book maketh mention of after King Arthur came
  • from Rome. Wherefore Queen Guenever had him in great favour above all
  • other knights, and in certain he loved the queen again above all other
  • ladies and damosels of his life, and for her he did many deeds of arms,
  • and saved her from the fire through his noble chivalry.
  • Thus Sir Launcelot rested him long with play and game. And then he
  • thought himself to prove himself in strange adventures, then he bade
  • his nephew, Sir Lionel, for to make him ready; for we two will seek
  • adventures. So they mounted on their horses, armed at all rights, and
  • rode into a deep forest and so into a deep plain. And then the weather
  • was hot about noon, and Sir Launcelot had great lust to sleep. Then Sir
  • Lionel espied a great apple-tree that stood by an hedge, and said,
  • Brother, yonder is a fair shadow, there may we rest us [and] our
  • horses. It is well said, fair brother, said Sir Launcelot, for this
  • eight year I was not so sleepy as I am now; and so they there alighted
  • and tied their horses unto sundry trees, and so Sir Launcelot laid him
  • down under an appletree, and his helm he laid under his head. And Sir
  • Lionel waked while he slept. So Sir Launcelot was asleep passing fast.
  • And in the meanwhile there came three knights riding, as fast fleeing
  • as ever they might ride. And there followed them three but one knight.
  • And when Sir Lionel saw him, him thought he saw never so great a
  • knight, nor so well faring a man, neither so well apparelled unto all
  • rights. So within a while this strong knight had overtaken one of these
  • knights, and there he smote him to the cold earth that he lay still.
  • And then he rode unto the second knight, and smote him so that man and
  • horse fell down. And then straight to the third knight he rode, and
  • smote him behind his horse’s arse a spear length. And then he alighted
  • down and reined his horse on the bridle, and bound all the three
  • knights fast with the reins of their own bridles. When Sir Lionel saw
  • him do thus, he thought to assay him, and made him ready, and stilly
  • and privily he took his horse, and thought not for to awake Sir
  • Launcelot. And when he was mounted upon his horse, he overtook this
  • strong knight, and bade him turn, and the other smote Sir Lionel so
  • hard that horse and man he bare to the earth, and so he alighted down
  • and bound him fast, and threw him overthwart his own horse, and so he
  • served them all four, and rode with them away to his own castle. And
  • when he came there he gart unarm them, and beat them with thorns all
  • naked, and after put them in a deep prison where were many more
  • knights, that made great dolour.
  • CHAPTER II. How Sir Ector followed for to seek Sir Launcelot, and how
  • he was taken by Sir Turquine.
  • When Sir Ector de Maris wist that Sir Launcelot was passed out of the
  • court to seek adventures, he was wroth with himself, and made him ready
  • to seek Sir Launcelot, and as he had ridden long in a great forest he
  • met with a man was like a forester. Fair fellow, said Sir Ector,
  • knowest thou in this country any adventures that be here nigh hand?
  • Sir, said the forester, this country know I well, and hereby, within
  • this mile, is a strong manor, and well dyked, and by that manor, on the
  • left hand, there is a fair ford for horses to drink of, and over that
  • ford there groweth a fair tree, and thereon hang many fair shields that
  • wielded sometime good knights, and at the hole of the tree hangeth a
  • basin of copper and latten, and strike upon that basin with the butt of
  • thy spear thrice, and soon after thou shalt hear new tidings, and else
  • hast thou the fairest grace that many a year had ever knight that
  • passed through this forest. Gramercy, said Sir Ector, and departed and
  • came to the tree, and saw many fair shields. And among them he saw his
  • brother’s shield, Sir Lionel, and many more that he knew that were his
  • fellows of the Round Table, the which grieved his heart, and promised
  • to revenge his brother.
  • Then anon Sir Ector beat on the basin as he were wood, and then he gave
  • his horse drink at the ford, and there came a knight behind him and
  • bade him come out of the water and make him ready; and Sir Ector anon
  • turned him shortly, and in feuter cast his spear, and smote the other
  • knight a great buffet that his horse turned twice about. This was well
  • done, said the strong knight, and knightly thou hast stricken me; and
  • therewith he rushed his horse on Sir Ector, and cleight him under his
  • right arm, and bare him clean out of the saddle, and rode with him away
  • into his own hall, and threw him down in midst of the floor. The name
  • of this knight was Sir Turquine. Then he said unto Sir Ector, For thou
  • hast done this day more unto me than any knight did these twelve years,
  • now will I grant thee thy life, so thou wilt be sworn to be my prisoner
  • all thy life days. Nay, said Sir Ector, that will I never promise thee,
  • but that I will do mine advantage. That me repenteth, said Sir
  • Turquine. And then he gart to unarm him, and beat him with thorns all
  • naked, and sithen put him down in a deep dungeon, where he knew many of
  • his fellows. But when Sir Ector saw Sir Lionel, then made he great
  • sorrow. Alas, brother, said Sir Ector, where is my brother Sir
  • Launcelot? Fair brother, I left him asleep when that I from him yode,
  • under an apple-tree, and what is become of him I cannot tell you. Alas,
  • said the knights, but Sir Launcelot help us we may never be delivered,
  • for we know now no knight that is able to match our master Turquine.
  • CHAPTER III. How four queens found Launcelot sleeping, and how by
  • enchantment he was taken and led into a castle.
  • Now leave we these knights prisoners, and speak we of Sir Launcelot du
  • Lake that lieth under the apple-tree sleeping. Even about the noon
  • there came by him four queens of great estate; and, for the heat should
  • not annoy them, there rode four knights about them, and bare a cloth of
  • green silk on four spears, betwixt them and the sun, and the queens
  • rode on four white mules. Thus as they rode they heard by them a great
  • horse grimly neigh, then were they ware of a sleeping knight, that lay
  • all armed under an apple-tree; anon as these queens looked on his face,
  • they knew it was Sir Launcelot. Then they began for to strive for that
  • knight, everych one said they would have him to her love. We shall not
  • strive, said Morgan le Fay, that was King Arthur’s sister, I shall put
  • an enchantment upon him that he shall not awake in six hours, and then
  • I will lead him away unto my castle, and when he is surely within my
  • hold, I shall take the enchantment from him, and then let him choose
  • which of us he will have unto paramour.
  • So this enchantment was cast upon Sir Launcelot, and then they laid him
  • upon his shield, and bare him so on horseback betwixt two knights, and
  • brought him unto the castle Chariot, and there they laid him in a
  • chamber cold, and at night they sent unto him a fair damosel with his
  • supper ready dight. By that the enchantment was past, and when she came
  • she saluted him, and asked him what cheer. I cannot say, fair damosel,
  • said Sir Launcelot, for I wot not how I came into this castle but it be
  • by an enchantment. Sir, said she, ye must make good cheer, and if ye be
  • such a knight as it is said ye be, I shall tell you more to-morn by
  • prime of the day. Gramercy, fair damosel, said Sir Launcelot, of your
  • good will I require you. And so she departed. And there he lay all that
  • night without comfort of anybody. And on the morn early came these four
  • queens, passingly well beseen, all they bidding him good morn, and he
  • them again.
  • Sir knight, the four queens said, thou must understand thou art our
  • prisoner, and we here know thee well that thou art Sir Launcelot du
  • Lake, King Ban’s son, and because we understand your worthiness, that
  • thou art the noblest knight living, and as we know well there can no
  • lady have thy love but one, and that is Queen Guenever, and now thou
  • shalt lose her for ever, and she thee, and therefore thee behoveth now
  • to choose one of us four. I am the Queen Morgan le Fay, queen of the
  • land of Gore, and here is the queen of Northgalis, and the queen of
  • Eastland, and the queen of the Out Isles; now choose one of us which
  • thou wilt have to thy paramour, for thou mayest not choose or else in
  • this prison to die. This is an hard case, said Sir Launcelot, that
  • either I must die or else choose one of you, yet had I liefer to die in
  • this prison with worship, than to have one of you to my paramour maugre
  • my head. And therefore ye be answered, I will none of you, for ye be
  • false enchantresses, and as for my lady, Dame Guenever, were I at my
  • liberty as I was, I would prove it on you or on yours, that she is the
  • truest lady unto her lord living. Well, said the queens, is this your
  • answer, that ye will refuse us. Yea, on my life, said Sir Launcelot,
  • refused ye be of me. So they departed and left him there alone that
  • made great sorrow.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Sir Launcelot was delivered by the mean of a damosel.
  • Right so at the noon came the damosel unto him with his dinner, and
  • asked him what cheer. Truly, fair damosel, said Sir Launcelot, in my
  • life days never so ill. Sir, she said, that me repenteth, but an ye
  • will be ruled by me, I shall help you out of this distress, and ye
  • shall have no shame nor villainy, so that ye hold me a promise. Fair
  • damosel, I will grant you, and sore I am of these queen-sorceresses
  • afeard, for they have destroyed many a good knight. Sir, said she, that
  • is sooth, and for the renown and bounty that they hear of you they
  • would have your love, and Sir, they say, your name is Sir Launcelot du
  • Lake, the flower of knights, and they be passing wroth with you that ye
  • have refused them. But Sir, an ye would promise me to help my father on
  • Tuesday next coming, that hath made a tournament betwixt him and the
  • King of Northgalis—for the last Tuesday past my father lost the field
  • through three knights of Arthur’s court—an ye will be there on Tuesday
  • next coming, and help my father, to-morn or prime, by the grace of God,
  • I shall deliver you clean. Fair maiden, said Sir Launcelot, tell me
  • what is your father’s name, and then shall I give you an answer. Sir
  • knight, she said, my father is King Bagdemagus, that was foul rebuked
  • at the last tournament. I know your father well, said Sir Launcelot,
  • for a noble king and a good knight, and by the faith of my body, ye
  • shall have my body ready to do your father and you service at that day.
  • Sir, she said, gramercy, and to-morn await ye be ready betimes and I
  • shall be she that shall deliver you and take you your armour and your
  • horse, shield and spear, and hereby within this ten mile, is an abbey
  • of white monks, there I pray you that ye me abide, and thither shall I
  • bring my father unto you. All this shall be done, said Sir Launcelot as
  • I am true knight.
  • And so she departed, and came on the morn early, and found him ready;
  • then she brought him out of twelve locks, and brought him unto his
  • armour, and when he was clean armed, she brought him until his own
  • horse, and lightly he saddled him and took a great spear in his hand
  • and so rode forth, and said, Fair damosel, I shall not fail you, by the
  • grace of God. And so he rode into a great forest all that day, and
  • never could find no highway and so the night fell on him, and then was
  • he ware in a slade, of a pavilion of red sendal. By my faith, said Sir
  • Launcelot, in that pavilion will I lodge all this night, and so there
  • he alighted down, and tied his horse to the pavilion, and there he
  • unarmed him, and there he found a bed, and laid him therein and fell
  • asleep sadly.
  • CHAPTER V. How a knight found Sir Launcelot lying in his leman’s bed,
  • and how Sir Launcelot fought with the knight.
  • Then within an hour there came the knight to whom the pavilion ought,
  • and he weened that his leman had lain in that bed, and so he laid him
  • down beside Sir Launcelot, and took him in his arms and began to kiss
  • him. And when Sir Launcelot felt a rough beard kissing him, he started
  • out of the bed lightly, and the other knight after him, and either of
  • them gat their swords in their hands, and out at the pavilion door went
  • the knight of the pavilion, and Sir Launcelot followed him, and there
  • by a little slake Sir Launcelot wounded him sore, nigh unto the death.
  • And then he yielded him unto Sir Launcelot, and so he granted him, so
  • that he would tell him why he came into the bed. Sir, said the knight,
  • the pavilion is mine own, and there this night I had assigned my lady
  • to have slept with me, and now I am likely to die of this wound. That
  • me repenteth, said Launcelot, of your hurt, but I was adread of
  • treason, for I was late beguiled, and therefore come on your way into
  • your pavilion and take your rest, and as I suppose I shall staunch your
  • blood. And so they went both into the pavilion, and anon Sir Launcelot
  • staunched his blood.
  • Therewithal came the knight’s lady, that was a passing fair lady, and
  • when she espied that her lord Belleus was sore wounded, she cried out
  • on Sir Launcelot, and made great dole out of measure. Peace, my lady
  • and my love, said Belleus, for this knight is a good man, and a knight
  • adventurous, and there he told her all the cause how he was wounded;
  • And when that I yielded me unto him, he left me goodly and hath
  • staunched my blood. Sir, said the lady, I require thee tell me what
  • knight ye be, and what is your name? Fair lady, he said, my name is Sir
  • Launcelot du Lake. So me thought ever by your speech, said the lady,
  • for I have seen you oft or this, and I know you better than ye ween.
  • But now an ye would promise me of your courtesy, for the harms that ye
  • have done to me and my Lord Belleus, that when he cometh unto Arthur’s
  • court for to cause him to be made knight of the Round Table, for he is
  • a passing good man of arms, and a mighty lord of lands of many out
  • isles.
  • Fair lady, said Sir Launcelot, let him come unto the court the next
  • high feast, and look that ye come with him, and I shall do my power, an
  • ye prove you doughty of your hands, that ye shall have your desire. So
  • thus within a while, as they thus talked, the night passed, and the day
  • shone, and then Sir Launcelot armed him, and took his horse, and they
  • taught him to the Abbey, and thither he rode within the space of two
  • hours.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Launcelot was received of King Bagdemagus’
  • daughter, and how he made his complaint to her father.
  • And soon as Sir Launcelot came within the abbey yard, the daughter of
  • King Bagdemagus heard a great horse go on the pavement. And she then
  • arose and yede unto a window, and there she saw Sir Launcelot, and anon
  • she made men fast to take his horse from him and let lead him into a
  • stable, and himself was led into a fair chamber, and unarmed him, and
  • the lady sent him a long gown, and anon she came herself. And then she
  • made Launcelot passing good cheer, and she said he was the knight in
  • the world was most welcome to her. Then in all haste she sent for her
  • father Bagdemagus that was within twelve mile of that Abbey, and afore
  • even he came, with a fair fellowship of knights with him. And when the
  • king was alighted off his horse he yode straight unto Sir Launcelot’s
  • chamber and there he found his daughter, and then the king embraced Sir
  • Launcelot in his arms, and either made other good cheer.
  • Anon Sir Launcelot made his complaint unto the king how he was
  • betrayed, and how his brother Sir Lionel was departed from him he wist
  • not where, and how his daughter had delivered him out of prison;
  • Therefore while I live I shall do her service and all her kindred. Then
  • am I sure of your help, said the king, on Tuesday next coming. Yea,
  • sir, said Sir Launcelot, I shall not fail you, for so I have promised
  • my lady your daughter. But, sir, what knights be they of my lord
  • Arthur’s that were with the King of Northgalis? And the king said it
  • was Sir Mador de la Porte, and Sir Mordred and Sir Gahalantine that all
  • for-fared my knights, for against them three I nor my knights might
  • bear no strength. Sir, said Sir Launcelot, as I hear say that the
  • tournament shall be here within this three mile of this abbey, ye shall
  • send unto me three knights of yours, such as ye trust, and look that
  • the three knights have all white shields, and I also, and no painture
  • on the shields, and we four will come out of a little wood in midst of
  • both parties, and we shall fall in the front of our enemies and grieve
  • them that we may; and thus shall I not be known what knight I am.
  • So they took their rest that night, and this was on the Sunday, and so
  • the king departed, and sent unto Sir Launcelot three knights with the
  • four white shields. And on the Tuesday they lodged them in a little
  • leaved wood beside there the tournament should be. And there were
  • scaffolds and holes that lords and ladies might behold and to give the
  • prize. Then came into the field the King of Northgalis with eight score
  • helms. And then the three knights of Arthur’s stood by themselves. Then
  • came into the field King Bagdemagus with four score of helms. And then
  • they feutred their spears, and came together with a great dash, and
  • there were slain of knights at the first recounter twelve of King
  • Bagdemagus’ party, and six of the King of Northgalis’ party, and King
  • Bagdemagus’ party was far set aback.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Sir Launcelot behaved him in a tournament, and how he
  • met with Sir Turquine leading Sir Gaheris.
  • With that came Sir Launcelot du Lake, and he thrust in with his spear
  • in the thickest of the press, and there he smote down with one spear
  • five knights, and of four of them he brake their backs. And in that
  • throng he smote down the King of Northgalis, and brake his thigh in
  • that fall. All this doing of Sir Launcelot saw the three knights of
  • Arthur’s. Yonder is a shrewd guest, said Sir Mador de la Porte,
  • therefore have here once at him. So they encountered, and Sir Launcelot
  • bare him down horse and man, so that his shoulder went out of lith. Now
  • befalleth it to me to joust, said Mordred, for Sir Mador hath a sore
  • fall. Sir Launcelot was ware of him, and gat a great spear in his hand,
  • and met him, and Sir Mordred brake a spear upon him, and Sir Launcelot
  • gave him such a buffet that the arson of his saddle brake, and so he
  • flew over his horse’s tail, that his helm butted into the earth a foot
  • and more, that nigh his neck was broken, and there he lay long in a
  • swoon.
  • Then came in Sir Gahalantine with a great spear and Launcelot against
  • him, with all their strength that they might drive, that both their
  • spears to-brast even to their hands, and then they flang out with their
  • swords and gave many a grim stroke. Then was Sir Launcelot wroth out of
  • measure, and then he smote Sir Gahalantine on the helm that his nose
  • brast out on blood, and ears and mouth both, and therewith his head
  • hung low. And therewith his horse ran away with him, and he fell down
  • to the earth. Anon therewithal Sir Launcelot gat a great spear in his
  • hand, and or ever that great spear brake, he bare down to the earth
  • sixteen knights, some horse and man, and some the man and not the
  • horse, and there was none but that he hit surely, he bare none arms
  • that day. And then he gat another great spear, and smote down twelve
  • knights, and the most part of them never throve after. And then the
  • knights of the King of Northgalis would joust no more. And there the
  • gree was given to King Bagdemagus.
  • So either party departed unto his own place, and Sir Launcelot rode
  • forth with King Bagdemagus unto his castle, and there he had passing
  • good cheer both with the king and with his daughter, and they proffered
  • him great gifts. And on the morn he took his leave, and told the king
  • that he would go and seek his brother Sir Lionel, that went from him
  • when that he slept, so he took his horse, and betaught them all to God.
  • And there he said unto the king’s daughter, If ye have need any time of
  • my service I pray you let me have knowledge, and I shall not fail you
  • as I am true knight. And so Sir Launcelot departed, and by adventure he
  • came into the same forest there he was taken sleeping. And in the midst
  • of a highway he met a damosel riding on a white palfrey, and there
  • either saluted other. Fair damosel, said Sir Launcelot, know ye in this
  • country any adventures? Sir knight, said that damosel, here are
  • adventures near hand, an thou durst prove them. Why should I not prove
  • adventures? said Sir Launcelot for that cause come I hither. Well, said
  • she, thou seemest well to be a good knight, and if thou dare meet with
  • a good knight, I shall bring thee where is the best knight, and the
  • mightiest that ever thou found, so thou wilt tell me what is thy name,
  • and what knight thou art. Damosel, as for to tell thee my name I take
  • no great force; truly my name is Sir Launcelot du Lake. Sir, thou
  • beseemest well, here be adventures by that fall for thee, for hereby
  • dwelleth a knight that will not be overmatched for no man I know but ye
  • overmatch him, and his name is Sir Turquine. And, as I understand, he
  • hath in his prison, of Arthur’s court, good knights three score and
  • four, that he hath won with his own hands. But when ye have done that
  • journey ye shall promise me as ye are a true knight for to go with me,
  • and to help me and other damosels that are distressed daily with a
  • false knight. All your intent, damosel, and desire I will fulfil, so ye
  • will bring me unto this knight. Now, fair knight, come on your way; and
  • so she brought him unto the ford and the tree where hung the basin.
  • So Sir Launcelot let his horse drink, and then he beat on the basin
  • with the butt of his spear so hard with all his might till the bottom
  • fell out, and long he did so, but he saw nothing. Then he rode endlong
  • the gates of that manor nigh half-an-hour. And then was he ware of a
  • great knight that drove an horse afore him, and overthwart the horse
  • there lay an armed knight bound. And ever as they came near and near,
  • Sir Launcelot thought he should know him. Then Sir Launcelot was ware
  • that it was Sir Gaheris, Gawaine’s brother, a knight of the Table
  • Round. Now, fair damosel, said Sir Launcelot, I see yonder cometh a
  • knight fast bounden that is a fellow of mine, and brother he is unto
  • Sir Gawaine. And at the first beginning I promise you, by the leave of
  • God, to rescue that knight; but if his master sit better in the saddle
  • I shall deliver all the prisoners that he hath out of danger, for I am
  • sure he hath two brethren of mine prisoners with him. By that time that
  • either had seen other, they gripped their spears unto them. Now, fair
  • knight, said Sir Launcelot, put that wounded knight off the horse, and
  • let him rest awhile, and let us two prove our strengths; for as it is
  • informed me, thou doest and hast done great despite and shame unto
  • knights of the Round Table, and therefore now defend thee. An thou be
  • of the Table Round, said Turquine, I defy thee and all thy fellowship.
  • That is overmuch said, said Sir Launcelot.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Sir Launcelot and Sir Turquine fought together.
  • And then they put their spears in the rests, and came together with
  • their horses as fast as they might run, and either smote other in midst
  • of their shields, that both their horses’ backs brast under them, and
  • the knights were both stonied. And as soon as they might avoid their
  • horses, they took their shields afore them, and drew out their swords,
  • and came together eagerly, and either gave other many strong strokes,
  • for there might neither shields nor harness hold their strokes. And so
  • within a while they had both grimly wounds, and bled passing
  • grievously. Thus they fared two hours or more trasing and rasing either
  • other, where they might hit any bare place.
  • Then at the last they were breathless both, and stood leaning on their
  • swords. Now fellow, said Sir Turquine, hold thy hand a while, and tell
  • me what I shall ask thee. Say on. Then Turquine said, Thou art the
  • biggest man that ever I met withal, and the best breathed, and like one
  • knight that I hate above all other knights; so be it that thou be not
  • he I will lightly accord with thee, and for thy love I will deliver all
  • the prisoners that I have, that is three score and four, so thou wilt
  • tell me thy name. And thou and I we will be fellows together, and never
  • to fail thee while that I live. It is well said, said Sir Launcelot,
  • but sithen it is so that I may have thy friendship, what knight is he
  • that thou so hatest above all other? Faithfully, said Sir Turquine, his
  • name is Sir Launcelot du Lake, for he slew my brother, Sir Carados, at
  • the dolorous tower, that was one of the best knights alive; and
  • therefore him I except of all knights, for may I once meet with him,
  • the one of us shall make an end of other, I make mine avow. And for Sir
  • Launcelot’s sake I have slain an hundred good knights, and as many I
  • have maimed all utterly that they might never after help themselves,
  • and many have died in prison, and yet have I three score and four, and
  • all shall be delivered so thou wilt tell me thy name, so be it that
  • thou be not Sir Launcelot.
  • Now, see I well, said Sir Launcelot, that such a man I might be, I
  • might have peace, and such a man I might be, that there should be war
  • mortal betwixt us. And now, sir knight, at thy request I will that thou
  • wit and know that I am Launcelot du Lake, King Ban’s son of Benwick,
  • and very knight of the Table Round. And now I defy thee, and do thy
  • best. Ah, said Turquine, Launcelot, thou art unto me most welcome that
  • ever was knight, for we shall never depart till the one of us be dead.
  • Then they hurtled together as two wild bulls rushing and lashing with
  • their shields and swords, that sometime they fell both over their
  • noses. Thus they fought still two hours and more, and never would have
  • rest, and Sir Turquine gave Sir Launcelot many wounds that all the
  • ground thereas they fought was all bespeckled with blood.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Turquine was slain, and how Sir Launcelot bade Sir
  • Gaheris deliver all the prisoners.
  • Then at the last Sir Turquine waxed faint, and gave somewhat aback, and
  • bare his shield low for weariness. That espied Sir Launcelot, and leapt
  • upon him fiercely and gat him by the beaver of his helmet, and plucked
  • him down on his knees, and anon he raced off his helm, and smote his
  • neck in sunder. And when Sir Launcelot had done this, he yode unto the
  • damosel and said, Damosel, I am ready to go with you where ye will have
  • me, but I have no horse. Fair sir, said she, take this wounded knight’s
  • horse and send him into this manor, and command him to deliver all the
  • prisoners. So Sir Launcelot went unto Gaheris, and prayed him not to be
  • aggrieved for to lend him his horse. Nay, fair lord, said Gaheris, I
  • will that ye take my horse at your own commandment, for ye have both
  • saved me and my horse, and this day I say ye are the best knight in the
  • world, for ye have slain this day in my sight the mightiest man and the
  • best knight except you that ever I saw, and, fair sir, said Gaheris, I
  • pray you tell me your name. Sir, my name is Sir Launcelot du Lake, that
  • ought to help you of right for King Arthur’s sake, and in especial for
  • my lord Sir Gawaine’s sake, your own dear brother; and when that ye
  • come within yonder manor, I am sure ye shall find there many knights of
  • the Round Table, for I have seen many of their shields that I know on
  • yonder tree. There is Kay’s shield, and Sir Brandel’s shield, and Sir
  • Marhaus’ shield, and Sir Galind’s shield, and Sir Brian de Listnois’
  • shield, and Sir Aliduke’s shield, with many more that I am not now
  • advised of, and also my two brethren’s shields, Sir Ector de Maris and
  • Sir Lionel; wherefore I pray you greet them all from me, and say that I
  • bid them take such stuff there as they find, and that in any wise my
  • brethren go unto the court and abide me there till that I come, for by
  • the feast of Pentecost I cast me to be there, for as at this time I
  • must ride with this damosel for to save my promise.
  • And so he departed from Gaheris, and Gaheris yede in to the manor, and
  • there he found a yeoman porter keeping there many keys. Anon withal Sir
  • Gaheris threw the porter unto the ground and took the keys from him,
  • and hastily he opened the prison door, and there he let out all the
  • prisoners, and every man loosed other of their bonds. And when they saw
  • Sir Gaheris, all they thanked him, for they weened that he was wounded.
  • Not so, said Gaheris, it was Launcelot that slew him worshipfully with
  • his own hands. I saw it with mine own eyes. And he greeteth you all
  • well, and prayeth you to haste you to the court; and as unto Sir Lionel
  • and Ector de Maris he prayeth you to abide him at the court. That shall
  • we not do, says his brethren, we will find him an we may live. So shall
  • I, said Sir Kay, find him or I come at the court, as I am true knight.
  • Then all those knights sought the house thereas the armour was, and
  • then they armed them, and every knight found his own horse, and all
  • that ever longed unto him. And when this was done, there came a
  • forester with four horses laden with fat venison. Anon, Sir Kay said,
  • Here is good meat for us for one meal, for we had not many a day no
  • good repast. And so that venison was roasted, baken, and sodden, and so
  • after supper some abode there all night, but Sir Lionel and Ector de
  • Maris and Sir Kay rode after Sir Launcelot to find him if they might.
  • CHAPTER X. How Sir Launcelot rode with a damosel and slew a knight that
  • distressed all ladies and also a villain that kept a bridge.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Launcelot, that rode with the damosel in a fair
  • highway. Sir, said the damosel, here by this way haunteth a knight that
  • distressed all ladies and gentlewomen, and at the least he robbeth them
  • or lieth by them. What, said Sir Launcelot, is he a thief and a knight
  • and a ravisher of women? he doth shame unto the order of knighthood,
  • and contrary unto his oath; it is pity that he liveth. But, fair
  • damosel, ye shall ride on afore, yourself, and I will keep myself in
  • covert, and if that he trouble you or distress you I shall be your
  • rescue and learn him to be ruled as a knight.
  • So the maid rode on by the way a soft ambling pace, and within a while
  • came out that knight on horseback out of the wood, and his page with
  • him, and there he put the damosel from her horse, and then she cried.
  • With that came Launcelot as fast as he might till he came to that
  • knight, saying, O thou false knight and traitor unto knighthood, who
  • did learn thee to distress ladies and gentlewomen? When the knight saw
  • Sir Launcelot thus rebuking him he answered not, but drew his sword and
  • rode unto Sir Launcelot, and Sir Launcelot threw his spear from him,
  • and drew out his sword, and struck him such a buffet on the helmet that
  • he clave his head and neck unto the throat. Now hast thou thy payment
  • that long thou hast deserved! That is truth, said the damosel, for like
  • as Sir Turquine watched to destroy knights, so did this knight attend
  • to destroy and distress ladies, damosels, and gentlewomen, and his name
  • was Sir Peris de Forest Savage. Now, damosel, said Sir Launcelot, will
  • ye any more service of me? Nay, sir, she said, at this time, but
  • almighty Jesu preserve you wheresomever ye ride or go, for the curteist
  • knight thou art, and meekest unto all ladies and gentlewomen, that now
  • liveth. But one thing, sir knight, methinketh ye lack, ye that are a
  • knight wifeless, that he will not love some maiden or gentlewoman, for
  • I could never hear say that ever ye loved any of no manner degree, and
  • that is great pity; but it is noised that ye love Queen Guenever, and
  • that she hath ordained by enchantment that ye shall never love none
  • other but her, nor none other damosel nor lady shall rejoice you;
  • wherefore many in this land, of high estate and low, make great sorrow.
  • Fair damosel, said Sir Launcelot, I may not warn people to speak of me
  • what it pleaseth them; but for to be a wedded man, I think it not; for
  • then I must couch with her, and leave arms and tournaments, battles,
  • and adventures; and as for to say for to take my pleasaunce with
  • paramours, that will I refuse in principal for dread of God; for
  • knights that be adventurous or lecherous shall not be happy nor
  • fortunate unto the wars, for other they shall be overcome with a
  • simpler knight than they be themselves, other else they shall by unhap
  • and their cursedness slay better men than they be themselves. And so
  • who that useth paramours shall be unhappy, and all thing is unhappy
  • that is about them.
  • And so Sir Launcelot and she departed. And then he rode in a deep
  • forest two days and more, and had strait lodging. So on the third day
  • he rode over a long bridge, and there stert upon him suddenly a passing
  • foul churl, and he smote his horse on the nose that he turned about,
  • and asked him why he rode over that bridge without his licence. Why
  • should I not ride this way? said Sir Launcelot, I may not ride beside.
  • Thou shalt not choose, said the churl, and lashed at him with a great
  • club shod with iron. Then Sir Launcelot drew his sword and put the
  • stroke aback, and clave his head unto the paps. At the end of the
  • bridge was a fair village, and all the people, men and women, cried on
  • Sir Launcelot, and said, A worse deed didst thou never for thyself, for
  • thou hast slain the chief porter of our castle. Sir Launcelot let them
  • say what they would, and straight he went into the castle; and when he
  • came into the castle he alighted, and tied his horse to a ring on the
  • wall and there he saw a fair green court, and thither he dressed him,
  • for there him thought was a fair place to fight in. So he looked about,
  • and saw much people in doors and windows that said, Fair knight, thou
  • art unhappy.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Launcelot slew two giants, and made a castle free.
  • Anon withal came there upon him two great giants, well armed all save
  • the heads, with two horrible clubs in their hands. Sir Launcelot put
  • his shield afore him and put the stroke away of the one giant, and with
  • his sword he clave his head asunder. When his fellow saw that, he ran
  • away as he were wood, for fear of the horrible strokes, and Launcelot
  • after him with all his might, and smote him on the shoulder, and clave
  • him to the navel. Then Sir Launcelot went into the hall, and there came
  • afore him three score ladies and damosels, and all kneeled unto him,
  • and thanked God and him of their deliverance; For sir, said they, the
  • most party of us have been here this seven year their prisoners, and we
  • have worked all manner of silk works for our meat, and we are all great
  • gentlewomen born; and blessed be the time, knight, that ever thou be
  • born, for thou hast done the most worship that ever did knight in this
  • world, that will we bear record, and we all pray you to tell us your
  • name, that we may tell our friends who delivered us out of prison. Fair
  • damosel, he said, my name is Sir Launcelot du Lake. Ah, sir, said they
  • all, well mayest thou be he, for else save yourself, as we deemed,
  • there might never knight have the better of these two giants; for many
  • fair knights have assayed it, and here have ended, and many times have
  • we wished after you, and these two giants dread never knight but you.
  • Now may ye say, said Sir Launcelot, unto your friends how and who hath
  • delivered you, and greet them all from me, and if that I come in any of
  • your marches, show me such cheer as ye have cause, and what treasure
  • that there in this castle is I give it you for a reward for your
  • grievance, and the lord that is owner of this castle I would he
  • received it as is right. Fair sir, said they, the name of this castle
  • is Tintagil, and a duke ought it sometime that had wedded fair Igraine,
  • and after wedded her Uther Pendragon, and gat on her Arthur. Well, said
  • Sir Launcelot, I understand to whom this castle longeth; and so he
  • departed from them, and betaught them unto God.
  • And then he mounted upon his horse, and rode into many strange and wild
  • countries, and through many waters and valleys, and evil was he lodged.
  • And at the last by fortune him happened, against a night, to come to a
  • fair courtelage, and therein he found an old gentlewoman that lodged
  • him with good will, and there he had good cheer for him and his horse.
  • And when time was, his host brought him into a fair garret, over the
  • gate, to his bed. There Sir Launcelot unarmed him, and set his harness
  • by him, and went to bed, and anon he fell asleep. So, soon after, there
  • came one on horseback, and knocked at the gate in great haste, and when
  • Sir Launcelot heard this, he arose up and looked out at the window, and
  • saw by the moonlight three knights came riding after that one man, and
  • all three lashed on him at once with swords, and that one knight turned
  • on them knightly again, and defended him. Truly, said Sir Launcelot,
  • yonder one knight shall I help, for it were shame for me to see three
  • knights on one, and if he be slain I am partner of his death; and
  • therewith he took his harness, and went out at a window by a sheet down
  • to the four knights, and then Sir Launcelot said on high, Turn you
  • knights unto me, and leave your fighting with that knight. And then
  • they all three left Sir Kay, and turned unto Sir Launcelot, and there
  • began great battle, for they alighted all three, and struck many great
  • strokes at Sir Launcelot, and assailed him on every side. Then Sir Kay
  • dressed him for to have holpen Sir Launcelot. Nay, sir, said he, I will
  • none of your help; therefore as ye will have my help, let me alone with
  • them. Sir Kay, for the pleasure of the knight, suffered him for to do
  • his will, and so stood aside. And then anon within six strokes, Sir
  • Launcelot had stricken them to the earth.
  • And then they all three cried: Sir knight, we yield us unto you as a
  • man of might makeless. As to that, said Sir Launcelot, I will not take
  • your yielding unto me. But so that ye will yield you unto Sir Kay the
  • Seneschal, on that covenant I will save your lives, and else not. Fair
  • knight, said they, that were we loath to do; for as for Sir Kay, we
  • chased him hither, and had overcome him had not ye been, therefore to
  • yield us unto him it were no reason. Well, as to that, said Launcelot,
  • advise you well, for ye may choose whether ye will die or live, for an
  • ye be yolden it shall be unto Sir Kay. Fair knight, then they said, in
  • saving of our lives we will do as thou commandest us. Then shall ye,
  • said Sir Launcelot, on Whitsunday next coming, go unto the court of
  • King Arthur, and there shall ye yield you unto Queen Guenever, and put
  • you all three in her grace and mercy, and say that Sir Kay sent you
  • thither to be her prisoners. Sir, they said, it shall be done by the
  • faith of our bodies, an we be living, and there they swore every knight
  • upon his sword. And so Sir Launcelot suffered them so to depart. And
  • then Sir Launcelot knocked at the gate with the pommel of his sword,
  • and with that came his host, and in they entered Sir Kay and he. Sir,
  • said his host, I weened ye had been in your bed. So I was, said Sir
  • Launcelot, but I rose and leapt out at my window for to help an old
  • fellow of mine. And so when they came nigh the light, Sir Kay knew well
  • that it was Sir Launcelot, and therewith he kneeled down and thanked
  • him of all his kindness that he had holpen him twice from the death.
  • Sir, he said, I have nothing done but that me ought for to do, and ye
  • are welcome, and here shall ye repose you and take your rest.
  • So when Sir Kay was unarmed, he asked after meat; so there was meat
  • fetched him, and he ate strongly. And when he had supped they went to
  • their beds and were lodged together in one bed. On the morn Sir
  • Launcelot arose early, and left Sir Kay sleeping, and Sir Launcelot
  • took Sir Kay’s armour and his shield, and armed him, and so he went to
  • the stable, and took his horse, and took his leave of his host, and so
  • he departed. Then soon after arose Sir Kay and missed Sir Launcelot.
  • And then he espied that he had his armour and his horse. Now by my
  • faith I know well that he will grieve some of the court of King Arthur;
  • for on him knights will be bold, and deem that it is I, and that will
  • beguile them. And because of his armour and shield I am sure I shall
  • ride in peace. And then soon after departed Sir Kay and thanked his
  • host.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Launcelot rode disguised in Sir Kay’s harness, and
  • how he smote down a knight.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Launcelot that had ridden long in a great forest,
  • and at the last he came into a low country, full of fair rivers and
  • meadows. And afore him he saw a long bridge, and three pavilions stood
  • thereon, of silk and sendal of divers hue. And without the pavilions
  • hung three white shields on truncheons of spears, and great long spears
  • stood upright by the pavilions, and at every pavilion’s door stood
  • three fresh squires, and so Sir Launcelot passed by them and spake no
  • word. When he was passed the three knights said them that it was the
  • proud Kay; He weeneth no knight so good as he, and the contrary is
  • ofttime proved. By my faith, said one of the knights, his name was Sir
  • Gaunter, I will ride after him and assay him for all his pride, and ye
  • may behold how that I speed. So this knight, Sir Gaunter, armed him,
  • and hung his shield upon his shoulder, and mounted upon a great horse,
  • and gat his spear in his hand, and walloped after Sir Launcelot. And
  • when he came nigh him, he cried, Abide, thou proud knight Sir Kay, for
  • thou shalt not pass quit. So Sir Launcelot turned him, and either
  • feutred their spears, and came together with all their mights, and Sir
  • Gaunter’s spear brake, but Sir Launcelot smote him down horse and man.
  • And when Sir Gaunter was at the earth his brethren said each one to
  • other, Yonder knight is not Sir Kay, for he is bigger than he. I dare
  • lay my head, said Sir Gilmere, yonder knight hath slain Sir Kay and
  • hath taken his horse and his harness. Whether it be so or no, said Sir
  • Raynold, the third brother, let us now go mount upon our horses and
  • rescue our brother Sir Gaunter, upon pain of death. We all shall have
  • work enough to match that knight, for ever meseemeth by his person it
  • is Sir Launcelot, or Sir Tristram, or Sir Pelleas, the good knight.
  • Then anon they took their horses and overtook Sir Launcelot, and Sir
  • Gilmere put forth his spear, and ran to Sir Launcelot, and Sir
  • Launcelot smote him down that he lay in a swoon. Sir knight, said Sir
  • Raynold, thou art a strong man, and as I suppose thou hast slain my two
  • brethren, for the which raseth my heart sore against thee, and if I
  • might with my worship I would not have ado with you, but needs I must
  • take part as they do, and therefore, knight, he said, keep thyself. And
  • so they hurtled together with all their mights, and all to-shivered
  • both their spears. And then they drew their swords and lashed together
  • eagerly. Anon therewith arose Sir Gaunter, and came unto his brother
  • Sir Gilmere, and bade him, Arise, and help we our brother Sir Raynold,
  • that yonder marvellously matched yonder good knight. Therewithal, they
  • leapt on their horses and hurtled unto Sir Launcelot.
  • And when he saw them come he smote a sore stroke unto Sir Raynold, that
  • he fell off his horse to the ground, and then he struck to the other
  • two brethren, and at two strokes he struck them down to the earth. With
  • that Sir Raynold began to start up with his head all bloody, and came
  • straight unto Sir Launcelot. Now let be, said Sir Launcelot, I was not
  • far from thee when thou wert made knight, Sir Raynold, and also I know
  • thou art a good knight, and loath I were to slay thee. Gramercy, said
  • Sir Raynold, as for your goodness; and I dare say as for me and my
  • brethren, we will not be loath to yield us unto you, with that we knew
  • your name, for well we know ye are not Sir Kay. As for that be it as it
  • be may, for ye shall yield you unto dame Guenever, and look that ye be
  • with her on Whitsunday, and yield you unto her as prisoners, and say
  • that Sir Kay sent you unto her. Then they swore it should be done, and
  • so passed forth Sir Launcelot, and each one of the brethren holp other
  • as well as they might.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Sir Launcelot jousted against four knights of the
  • Round Table and overthrew them.
  • So Sir Launcelot rode into a deep forest, and thereby in a slade, he
  • saw four knights hoving under an oak, and they were of Arthur’s court,
  • one was Sir Sagramour le Desirous, and Ector de Maris, and Sir Gawaine,
  • and Sir Uwaine. Anon as these four knights had espied Sir Launcelot,
  • they weened by his arms it had been Sir Kay. Now by my faith, said Sir
  • Sagramour, I will prove Sir Kay’s might, and gat his spear in his hand,
  • and came toward Sir Launcelot. Therewith Sir Launcelot was ware and
  • knew him well, and feutred his spear against him, and smote Sir
  • Sagramour so sore that horse and man fell both to the earth. Lo, my
  • fellows, said he, yonder ye may see what a buffet he hath; that knight
  • is much bigger than ever was Sir Kay. Now shall ye see what I may do to
  • him. So Sir Ector gat his spear in his hand and walloped toward Sir
  • Launcelot, and Sir Launcelot smote him through the shield and shoulder,
  • that man and horse went to the earth, and ever his spear held.
  • By my faith, said Sir Uwaine, yonder is a strong knight, and I am sure
  • he hath slain Sir Kay; and I see by his great strength it will be hard
  • to match him. And therewithal, Sir Uwaine gat his spear in his hand and
  • rode toward Sir Launcelot, and Sir Launcelot knew him well, and so he
  • met him on the plain, and gave him such a buffet that he was astonied,
  • that long he wist not where he was. Now see I well, said Sir Gawaine, I
  • must encounter with that knight. Then he dressed his shield and gat a
  • good spear in his hand, and Sir Launcelot knew him well; and then they
  • let run their horses with all their mights, and either knight smote
  • other in midst of the shield. But Sir Gawaine’s spear to-brast, and Sir
  • Launcelot charged so sore upon him that his horse reversed up-so-down.
  • And much sorrow had Sir Gawaine to avoid his horse, and so Sir
  • Launcelot passed on a pace and smiled, and said, God give him joy that
  • this spear made, for there came never a better in my hand.
  • Then the four knights went each one to other and comforted each other.
  • What say ye by this guest? said Sir Gawaine, that one spear hath felled
  • us all four. We commend him unto the devil, they said all, for he is a
  • man of great might. Ye may well say it, said Sir Gawaine, that he is a
  • man of might, for I dare lay my head it is Sir Launcelot, I know it by
  • his riding. Let him go, said Sir Gawaine, for when we come to the court
  • then shall we wit; and then had they much sorrow to get their horses
  • again.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Sir Launcelot followed a brachet into a castle, where
  • he found a dead knight, and how he after was required of a damosel to
  • heal her brother.
  • Now leave we there and speak of Sir Launcelot that rode a great while
  • in a deep forest, where he saw a black brachet, seeking in manner as it
  • had been in the feute of an hurt deer. And therewith he rode after the
  • brachet, and he saw lie on the ground a large feute of blood. And then
  • Sir Launcelot rode after. And ever the brachet looked behind her, and
  • so she went through a great marsh, and ever Sir Launcelot followed. And
  • then was he ware of an old manor, and thither ran the brachet, and so
  • over the bridge. So Sir Launcelot rode over that bridge that was old
  • and feeble; and when he came in midst of a great hall, there he saw lie
  • a dead knight that was a seemly man, and that brachet licked his
  • wounds. And therewithal came out a lady weeping and wringing her hands;
  • and then she said, O knight, too much sorrow hast thou brought me. Why
  • say ye so? said Sir Launcelot, I did never this knight no harm, for
  • hither by feute of blood this brachet brought me; and therefore, fair
  • lady, be not displeased with me, for I am full sore aggrieved of your
  • grievance. Truly, sir, she said, I trow it be not ye that hath slain my
  • husband, for he that did that deed is sore wounded, and he is never
  • likely to recover, that shall I ensure him. What was your husband’s
  • name? said Sir Launcelot. Sir, said she, his name was called Sir
  • Gilbert the Bastard, one of the best knights of the world, and he that
  • hath slain him I know not his name. Now God send you better comfort,
  • said Sir Launcelot; and so he departed and went into the forest again,
  • and there he met with a damosel, the which knew him well, and she said
  • aloud, Well be ye found, my lord; and now I require thee, on thy
  • knighthood, help my brother that is sore wounded, and never stinteth
  • bleeding; for this day he fought with Sir Gilbert the Bastard and slew
  • him in plain battle, and there was my brother sore wounded, and there
  • is a lady a sorceress that dwelleth in a castle here beside, and this
  • day she told me my brother’s wounds should never be whole till I could
  • find a knight that would go into the Chapel Perilous, and there he
  • should find a sword and a bloody cloth that the wounded knight was
  • lapped in, and a piece of that cloth and sword should heal my brother’s
  • wounds, so that his wounds were searched with the sword and the cloth.
  • This is a marvellous thing, said Sir Launcelot, but what is your
  • brother’s name? Sir, she said, his name was Sir Meliot de Logres. That
  • me repenteth, said Sir Launcelot, for he is a fellow of the Table
  • Round, and to his help I will do my power. Then, sir, said she, follow
  • even this highway, and it will bring you unto the Chapel Perilous; and
  • here I shall abide till God send you here again, and, but you speed, I
  • know no knight living that may achieve that adventure.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Sir Launcelot came into the Chapel Perilous and gat
  • there of a dead corpse a piece of the cloth and a sword.
  • Right so Sir Launcelot departed, and when he came unto the Chapel
  • Perilous he alighted down, and tied his horse unto a little gate. And
  • as soon as he was within the churchyard he saw on the front of the
  • chapel many fair rich shields turned up-so-down, and many of the
  • shields Sir Launcelot had seen knights bear beforehand. With that he
  • saw by him there stand a thirty great knights, more by a yard than any
  • man that ever he had seen, and all those grinned and gnashed at Sir
  • Launcelot. And when he saw their countenance he dreaded him sore, and
  • so put his shield afore him, and took his sword ready in his hand ready
  • unto battle, and they were all armed in black harness ready with their
  • shields and their swords drawn. And when Sir Launcelot would have gone
  • throughout them, they scattered on every side of him, and gave him the
  • way, and therewith he waxed all bold, and entered into the chapel, and
  • then he saw no light but a dim lamp burning, and then was he ware of a
  • corpse hilled with a cloth of silk. Then Sir Launcelot stooped down,
  • and cut a piece away of that cloth, and then it fared under him as the
  • earth had quaked a little; therewithal he feared. And then he saw a
  • fair sword lie by the dead knight, and that he gat in his hand and hied
  • him out of the chapel.
  • Anon as ever he was in the chapel yard all the knights spake to him
  • with a grimly voice, and said, Knight, Sir Launcelot, lay that sword
  • from thee or else thou shalt die. Whether that I live or die, said Sir
  • Launcelot, with no great word get ye it again, therefore fight for it
  • an ye list. Then right so he passed throughout them, and beyond the
  • chapel yard there met him a fair damosel, and said, Sir Launcelot,
  • leave that sword behind thee, or thou wilt die for it. I leave it not,
  • said Sir Launcelot, for no treaties. No, said she, an thou didst leave
  • that sword, Queen Guenever should thou never see. Then were I a fool an
  • I would leave this sword, said Launcelot. Now, gentle knight, said the
  • damosel, I require thee to kiss me but once. Nay, said Sir Launcelot,
  • that God me forbid. Well, sir, said she, an thou hadst kissed me thy
  • life days had been done, but now, alas, she said, I have lost all my
  • labour, for I ordained this chapel for thy sake, and for Sir Gawaine.
  • And once I had Sir Gawaine within me, and at that time he fought with
  • that knight that lieth there dead in yonder chapel, Sir Gilbert the
  • Bastard; and at that time he smote the left hand off of Sir Gilbert the
  • Bastard. And, Sir Launcelot, now I tell thee, I have loved thee this
  • seven year, but there may no woman have thy love but Queen Guenever.
  • But sithen I may not rejoice thee to have thy body alive, I had kept no
  • more joy in this world but to have thy body dead. Then would I have
  • balmed it and served it, and so have kept it my life days, and daily I
  • should have clipped thee, and kissed thee, in despite of Queen
  • Guenever. Ye say well, said Sir Launcelot, Jesu preserve me from your
  • subtle crafts. And therewithal he took his horse and so departed from
  • her. And as the book saith, when Sir Launcelot was departed she took
  • such sorrow that she died within a fourteen night, and her name was
  • Hellawes the sorceress, Lady of the Castle Nigramous.
  • Anon Sir Launcelot met with the damosel, Sir Meliot’s sister. And when
  • she saw him she clapped her hands, and wept for joy. And then they rode
  • unto a castle thereby where lay Sir Meliot. And anon as Sir Launcelot
  • saw him he knew him, but he was passing pale, as the earth, for
  • bleeding. When Sir Meliot saw Sir Launcelot he kneeled upon his knees
  • and cried on high: O lord Sir Launcelot, help me! Anon Sir Launcelot
  • leapt unto him and touched his wounds with Sir Gilbert’s sword. And
  • then he wiped his wounds with a part of the bloody cloth that Sir
  • Gilbert was wrapped in, and anon an wholer man in his life was he
  • never. And then there was great joy between them, and they made Sir
  • Launcelot all the cheer that they might, and so on the morn Sir
  • Launcelot took his leave, and bade Sir Meliot hie him to the court of
  • my lord Arthur, for it draweth nigh to the Feast of Pentecost, and
  • there by the grace of God ye shall find me. And therewith they
  • departed.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Sir Launcelot at the request of a lady recovered a
  • falcon, by which he was deceived.
  • And so Sir Launcelot rode through many strange countries, over marshes
  • and valleys, till by fortune he came to a fair castle, and as he passed
  • beyond the castle him thought he heard two bells ring. And then was he
  • ware of a falcon came flying over his head toward an high elm, and long
  • lunes about her feet, and as she flew unto the elm to take her perch
  • the lunes over-cast about a bough. And when she would have taken her
  • flight she hung by the legs fast; and Sir Launcelot saw how she hung,
  • and beheld the fair falcon perigot, and he was sorry for her.
  • The meanwhile came a lady out of the castle and cried on high: O
  • Launcelot, Launcelot, as thou art flower of all knights, help me to get
  • my hawk, for an my hawk be lost my lord will destroy me; for I kept the
  • hawk and she slipped from me, and if my lord my husband wit it he is so
  • hasty that he will slay me. What is your lord’s name? said Sir
  • Launcelot. Sir, she said, his name is Sir Phelot, a knight that longeth
  • unto the King of Northgalis. Well, fair lady, since that ye know my
  • name, and require me of knighthood to help you, I will do what I may to
  • get your hawk, and yet God knoweth I am an ill climber, and the tree is
  • passing high, and few boughs to help me withal. And therewith Sir
  • Launcelot alighted, and tied his horse to the same tree, and prayed the
  • lady to unarm him. And so when he was unarmed, he put off all his
  • clothes unto his shirt and breech, and with might and force he clomb up
  • to the falcon, and tied the lines to a great rotten boyshe, and threw
  • the hawk down and it withal.
  • Anon the lady gat the hawk in her hand; and therewithal came out Sir
  • Phelot out of the groves suddenly, that was her husband, all armed and
  • with his naked sword in his hand, and said: O knight Launcelot, now
  • have I found thee as I would, and stood at the bole of the tree to slay
  • him. Ah, lady, said Sir Launcelot, why have ye betrayed me? She hath
  • done, said Sir Phelot, but as I commanded her, and therefore there nis
  • none other boot but thine hour is come that thou must die. That were
  • shame unto thee, said Sir Launcelot, thou an armed knight to slay a
  • naked man by treason. Thou gettest none other grace, said Sir Phelot,
  • and therefore help thyself an thou canst. Truly, said Sir Launcelot,
  • that shall be thy shame, but since thou wilt do none other, take mine
  • harness with thee, and hang my sword upon a bough that I may get it,
  • and then do thy best to slay me an thou canst. Nay, nay, said Sir
  • Phelot, for I know thee better than thou weenest, therefore thou
  • gettest no weapon, an I may keep you therefrom. Alas, said Sir
  • Launcelot, that ever a knight should die weaponless. And therewith he
  • waited above him and under him, and over his head he saw a rownsepyk, a
  • big bough leafless, and therewith he brake it off by the body. And then
  • he came lower and awaited how his own horse stood, and suddenly he
  • leapt on the further side of the horse, fro-ward the knight. And then
  • Sir Phelot lashed at him eagerly, weening to have slain him. But Sir
  • Launcelot put away the stroke with the rownsepyk, and therewith he
  • smote him on the one side of the head, that he fell down in a swoon to
  • the ground. So then Sir Launcelot took his sword out of his hand, and
  • struck his neck from the body. Then cried the lady, Alas! why hast thou
  • slain my husband? I am not causer, said Sir Launcelot, for with
  • falsehood ye would have had slain me with treason, and now it is fallen
  • on you both. And then she swooned as though she would die. And
  • therewithal Sir Launcelot gat all his armour as well as he might, and
  • put it upon him for dread of more resort, for he dreaded that the
  • knight’s castle was so nigh. And so, as soon as he might, he took his
  • horse and departed, and thanked God that he had escaped that adventure.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Launcelot overtook a knight which chased his wife
  • to have slain her, and how he said to him.
  • So Sir Launcelot rode many wild ways, throughout marches and many wild
  • ways. And as he rode in a valley he saw a knight chasing a lady, with a
  • naked sword, to have slain her. And by fortune as this knight should
  • have slain this lady, she cried on Sir Launcelot and prayed him to
  • rescue her. When Sir Launcelot saw that mischief, he took his horse and
  • rode between them, saying, Knight, fie for shame, why wilt thou slay
  • this lady? thou dost shame unto thee and all knights. What hast thou to
  • do betwixt me and my wife? said the knight. I will slay her maugre thy
  • head. That shall ye not, said Sir Launcelot, for rather we two will
  • have ado together. Sir Launcelot, said the knight, thou dost not thy
  • part, for this lady hath betrayed me. It is not so, said the lady,
  • truly he saith wrong on me. And for because I love and cherish my
  • cousin germain, he is jealous betwixt him and me; and as I shall answer
  • to God there was never sin betwixt us. But, sir, said the lady, as thou
  • art called the worshipfullest knight of the world, I require thee of
  • true knighthood, keep me and save me. For whatsomever ye say he will
  • slay me, for he is without mercy. Have ye no doubt, said Launcelot, it
  • shall not lie in his power. Sir, said the knight, in your sight I will
  • be ruled as ye will have me. And so Sir Launcelot rode on the one side
  • and she on the other: he had not ridden but a while, but the knight
  • bade Sir Launcelot turn him and look behind him, and said, Sir, yonder
  • come men of arms after us riding. And so Sir Launcelot turned him and
  • thought no treason, and therewith was the knight and the lady on one
  • side, and suddenly he swapped off his lady’s head.
  • And when Sir Launcelot had espied him what he had done, he said, and
  • called him, Traitor, thou hast shamed me for ever. And suddenly Sir
  • Launcelot alighted off his horse, and pulled out his sword to slay him,
  • and therewithal he fell flat to the earth, and gripped Sir Launcelot by
  • the thighs, and cried mercy. Fie on thee, said Sir Launcelot, thou
  • shameful knight, thou mayest have no mercy, and therefore arise and
  • fight with me. Nay, said the knight, I will never arise till ye grant
  • me mercy. Now will I proffer thee fair, said Launcelot, I will unarm me
  • unto my shirt, and I will have nothing upon me but my shirt, and my
  • sword and my hand. And if thou canst slay me, quit be thou for ever.
  • Nay, sir, said Pedivere, that will I never. Well, said Sir Launcelot,
  • take this lady and the head, and bear it upon thee, and here shalt thou
  • swear upon my sword, to bear it always upon thy back, and never to rest
  • till thou come to Queen Guenever. Sir, said he, that will I do, by the
  • faith of my body. Now, said Launcelot, tell me what is your name? Sir,
  • my name is Pedivere. In a shameful hour wert thou born, said Launcelot.
  • So Pedivere departed with the dead lady and the head, and found the
  • queen with King Arthur at Winchester, and there he told all the truth.
  • Sir knight, said the queen, this is an horrible deed and a shameful,
  • and a great rebuke unto Sir Launcelot; but notwithstanding his worship
  • is not known in many divers countries; but this shall I give you in
  • penance, make ye as good shift as ye can, ye shall bear this lady with
  • you on horseback unto the Pope of Rome, and of him receive your penance
  • for your foul deeds; and ye shall never rest one night whereas ye do
  • another; an ye go to any bed the dead body shall lie with you. This
  • oath there he made, and so departed. And as it telleth in the French
  • book, when he came to Rome, the Pope bade him go again unto Queen
  • Guenever, and in Rome was his lady buried by the Pope’s commandment.
  • And after this Sir Pedivere fell to great goodness, and was an holy man
  • and an hermit.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Sir Launcelot came to King Arthur’s Court, and how
  • there were recounted all his noble feats and acts.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Launcelot du Lake, that came home two days afore
  • the Feast of Pentecost; and the king and all the court were passing
  • fain of his coming. And when Sir Gawaine, Sir Uwaine, Sir Sagramore,
  • Sir Ector de Maris, saw Sir Launcelot in Kay’s armour, then they wist
  • well it was he that smote them down all with one spear. Then there was
  • laughing and smiling among them. And ever now and now came all the
  • knights home that Sir Turquine had prisoners, and they all honoured and
  • worshipped Sir Launcelot.
  • When Sir Gaheris heard them speak, he said, I saw all the battle from
  • the beginning to the ending, and there he told King Arthur all how it
  • was, and how Sir Turquine was the strongest knight that ever he saw
  • except Sir Launcelot: there were many knights bare him record, nigh
  • three score. Then Sir Kay told the king how Sir Launcelot had rescued
  • him when he should have been slain, and how he made the knights yield
  • them to me, and not to him. And there they were all three, and bare
  • record. And by Jesu, said Sir Kay, because Sir Launcelot took my
  • harness and left me his I rode in good peace, and no man would have ado
  • with me.
  • Anon therewithal there came the three knights that fought with Sir
  • Launcelot at the long bridge. And there they yielded them unto Sir Kay,
  • and Sir Kay forsook them and said he fought never with them. But I
  • shall ease your heart, said Sir Kay, yonder is Sir Launcelot that
  • overcame you. When they wist that they were glad. And then Sir Meliot
  • de Logres came home, and told the king how Sir Launcelot had saved him
  • from the death. And all his deeds were known, how four queens,
  • sorceresses, had him in prison, and how he was delivered by King
  • Bagdemagus’ daughter. Also there were told all the great deeds of arms
  • that Sir Launcelot did betwixt the two kings, that is for to say the
  • King of Northgalis and King Bagdemagus. All the truth Sir Gahalantine
  • did tell, and Sir Mador de la Porte and Sir Mordred, for they were at
  • that same tournament. Then came in the lady that knew Sir Launcelot
  • when that he wounded Sir Belleus at the pavilion. And there, at request
  • of Sir Launcelot, Sir Belleus was made knight of the Round Table. And
  • so at that time Sir Launcelot had the greatest name of any knight of
  • the world, and most he was honoured of high and low.
  • Explicit the noble tale of Sir Launcelot du Lake, which is the vi.
  • book. Here followeth the tale of Sir Gareth of Orkney that was called
  • Beaumains by Sir Kay, and is the seventh book.
  • BOOK VII.
  • CHAPTER I. How Beaumains came to King Arthur’s Court and demanded three
  • petitions of King Arthur.
  • When Arthur held his Round Table most plenour, it fortuned that he
  • commanded that the high feast of Pentecost should be holden at a city
  • and a castle, the which in those days was called Kynke Kenadonne, upon
  • the sands that marched nigh Wales. So ever the king had a custom that
  • at the feast of Pentecost in especial, afore other feasts in the year,
  • he would not go that day to meat until he had heard or seen of a great
  • marvel. And for that custom all manner of strange adventures came
  • before Arthur as at that feast before all other feasts. And so Sir
  • Gawaine, a little to-fore noon of the day of Pentecost, espied at a
  • window three men upon horseback, and a dwarf on foot, and so the three
  • men alighted, and the dwarf kept their horses, and one of the three men
  • was higher than the other twain by a foot and an half. Then Sir Gawaine
  • went unto the king and said, Sir, go to your meat, for here at the hand
  • come strange adventures. So Arthur went unto his meat with many other
  • kings. And there were all the knights of the Round Table, [save] only
  • those that were prisoners or slain at a recounter. Then at the high
  • feast evermore they should be fulfilled the whole number of an hundred
  • and fifty, for then was the Round Table fully complished.
  • Right so came into the hall two men well beseen and richly, and upon
  • their shoulders there leaned the goodliest young man and the fairest
  • that ever they all saw, and he was large and long, and broad in the
  • shoulders, and well visaged, and the fairest and the largest handed
  • that ever man saw, but he fared as though he might not go nor bear
  • himself but if he leaned upon their shoulders. Anon as Arthur saw him
  • there was made peace and room, and right so they yede with him unto the
  • high dais, without saying of any words. Then this much young man pulled
  • him aback, and easily stretched up straight, saying, King Arthur, God
  • you bless and all your fair fellowship, and in especial the fellowship
  • of the Table Round. And for this cause I am come hither, to pray you
  • and require you to give me three gifts, and they shall not be
  • unreasonably asked, but that ye may worshipfully and honourably grant
  • them me, and to you no great hurt nor loss. And the first don and gift
  • I will ask now, and the other two gifts I will ask this day
  • twelvemonth, wheresomever ye hold your high feast. Now ask, said
  • Arthur, and ye shall have your asking.
  • Now, sir, this is my petition for this feast, that ye will give me meat
  • and drink sufficiently for this twelvemonth, and at that day I will ask
  • mine other two gifts.
  • My fair son, said Arthur, ask better, I counsel thee, for this is but a
  • simple asking; for my heart giveth me to thee greatly, that thou art
  • come of men of worship, and greatly my conceit faileth me but thou
  • shalt prove a man of right great worship. Sir, he said, thereof be as
  • it be may, I have asked that I will ask. Well, said the king, ye shall
  • have meat and drink enough; I never defended that none, neither my
  • friend nor my foe. But what is thy name I would wit? I cannot tell you,
  • said he. That is marvel, said the king, that thou knowest not thy name,
  • and thou art the goodliest young man that ever I saw. Then the king
  • betook him to Sir Kay the steward, and charged him that he should give
  • him of all manner of meats and drinks of the best, and also that he had
  • all manner of finding as though he were a lord’s son. That shall little
  • need, said Sir Kay, to do such cost upon him; for I dare undertake he
  • is a villain born, and never will make man, for an he had come of
  • gentlemen he would have asked of you horse and armour, but such as he
  • is, so he asketh. And sithen he hath no name, I shall give him a name
  • that shall be Beaumains, that is Fair-hands, and into the kitchen I
  • shall bring him, and there he shall have fat brose every day, that he
  • shall be as fat by the twelvemonths’ end as a pork hog. Right so the
  • two men departed and beleft him to Sir Kay, that scorned him and mocked
  • him.
  • CHAPTER II. How Sir Launcelot and Sir Gawaine were wroth because Sir
  • Kay mocked Beaumains, and of a damosel which desired a knight to fight
  • for a lady.
  • Thereat was Sir Gawaine wroth, and in especial Sir Launcelot bade Sir
  • Kay leave his mocking, for I dare lay my head he shall prove a man of
  • great worship. Let be said Sir Kay, it may not be by no reason, for as
  • he is, so he hath asked. Beware, said Sir Launcelot, so ye gave the
  • good knight Brewnor, Sir Dinadan’s brother, a name, and ye called him
  • La Cote Male Taile, and that turned you to anger afterward. As for
  • that, said Sir Kay, this shall never prove none such. For Sir Brewnor
  • desired ever worship, and this desireth bread and drink and broth; upon
  • pain of my life he was fostered up in some abbey, and, howsomever it
  • was, they failed meat and drink, and so hither he is come for his
  • sustenance.
  • And so Sir Kay bade get him a place, and sit down to meat; so Beaumains
  • went to the hall door, and set him down among boys and lads, and there
  • he ate sadly. And then Sir Launcelot after meat bade him come to his
  • chamber, and there he should have meat and drink enough. And so did Sir
  • Gawaine: but he refused them all; he would do none other but as Sir Kay
  • commanded him, for no proffer. But as touching Sir Gawaine, he had
  • reason to proffer him lodging, meat, and drink, for that proffer came
  • of his blood, for he was nearer kin to him than he wist. But that as
  • Sir Launcelot did was of his great gentleness and courtesy.
  • So thus he was put into the kitchen, and lay nightly as the boys of the
  • kitchen did. And so he endured all that twelvemonth, and never
  • displeased man nor child, but always he was meek and mild. But ever
  • when that he saw any jousting of knights, that would he see an he
  • might. And ever Sir Launcelot would give him gold to spend, and
  • clothes, and so did Sir Gawaine, and where there were any masteries
  • done, thereat would he be, and there might none cast bar nor stone to
  • him by two yards. Then would Sir Kay say, How liketh you my boy of the
  • kitchen? So it passed on till the feast of Whitsuntide. And at that
  • time the king held it at Carlion in the most royallest wise that might
  • be, like as he did yearly. But the king would no meat eat upon the
  • Whitsunday, until he heard some adventures. Then came there a squire to
  • the king and said, Sir, ye may go to your meat, for here cometh a
  • damosel with some strange adventures. Then was the king glad and sat
  • him down.
  • Right so there came a damosel into the hall and saluted the king, and
  • prayed him of succour. For whom? said the king, what is the adventure?
  • Sir, she said, I have a lady of great worship and renown, and she is
  • besieged with a tyrant, so that she may not out of her castle; and
  • because here are called the noblest knights of the world, I come to you
  • to pray you of succour. What hight your lady, and where dwelleth she,
  • and who is she, and what is his name that hath besieged her? Sir king,
  • she said, as for my lady’s name that shall not ye know for me as at
  • this time, but I let you wit she is a lady of great worship and of
  • great lands; and as for the tyrant that besiegeth her and destroyeth
  • her lands, he is called the Red Knight of the Red Launds. I know him
  • not, said the king. Sir, said Sir Gawaine, I know him well, for he is
  • one of the perilloust knights of the world; men say that he hath seven
  • men’s strength, and from him I escaped once full hard with my life.
  • Fair damosel, said the king, there be knights here would do their power
  • for to rescue your lady, but because you will not tell her name, nor
  • where she dwelleth, therefore none of my knights that here be now shall
  • go with you by my will. Then must I speak further, said the damosel.
  • CHAPTER III. How Beaumains desired the battle, and how it was granted
  • to him, and how he desired to be made knight of Sir Launcelot.
  • With these words came before the king Beaumains, while the damosel was
  • there, and thus he said, Sir king, God thank you, I have been this
  • twelvemonth in your kitchen, and have had my full sustenance, and now I
  • will ask my two gifts that be behind. Ask, upon my peril, said the
  • king. Sir, this shall be my two gifts, first that ye will grant me to
  • have this adventure of the damosel, for it belongeth unto me. Thou
  • shalt have it, said the king, I grant it thee. Then, sir, this is the
  • other gift, that ye shall bid Launcelot du Lake to make me knight, for
  • of him I will be made knight and else of none. And when I am passed I
  • pray you let him ride after me, and make me knight when I require him.
  • All this shall be done, said the king. Fie on thee, said the damosel,
  • shall I have none but one that is your kitchen page? Then was she wroth
  • and took her horse and departed. And with that there came one to
  • Beaumains and told him his horse and armour was come for him; and there
  • was the dwarf come with all thing that him needed, in the richest
  • manner; thereat all the court had much marvel from whence came all that
  • gear. So when he was armed there was none but few so goodly a man as he
  • was; and right so as he came into the hall and took his leave of King
  • Arthur, and Sir Gawaine, and Sir Launcelot, and prayed that he would
  • hie after him, and so departed and rode after the damosel.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Beaumains departed, and how he gat of Sir Kay a spear
  • and a shield, and how he jousted with Sir Launcelot.
  • But there went many after to behold how well he was horsed and trapped
  • in cloth of gold, but he had neither shield nor spear. Then Sir Kay
  • said all open in the hall, I will ride after my boy in the kitchen, to
  • wit whether he will know me for his better. Said Sir Launcelot and Sir
  • Gawaine, Yet abide at home. So Sir Kay made him ready and took his
  • horse and his spear, and rode after him. And right as Beaumains
  • overtook the damosel, right so came Sir Kay and said, Beaumains, what,
  • sir, know ye not me? Then he turned his horse, and knew it was Sir Kay,
  • that had done him all the despite as ye have heard afore. Yea, said
  • Beaumains, I know you for an ungentle knight of the court, and
  • therefore beware of me. Therewith Sir Kay put his spear in the rest,
  • and ran straight upon him; and Beaumains came as fast upon him with his
  • sword in his hand, and so he put away his spear with his sword, and
  • with a foin thrust him through the side, that Sir Kay fell down as he
  • had been dead; and he alighted down and took Sir Kay’s shield and his
  • spear, and stert upon his own horse and rode his way.
  • All that saw Sir Launcelot, and so did the damosel. And then he bade
  • his dwarf stert upon Sir Kay’s horse, and so he did. By that Sir
  • Launcelot was come, then he proffered Sir Launcelot to joust; and
  • either made them ready, and they came together so fiercely that either
  • bare down other to the earth, and sore were they bruised. Then Sir
  • Launcelot arose and helped him from his horse. And then Beaumains threw
  • his shield from him, and proffered to fight with Sir Launcelot on foot;
  • and so they rushed together like boars, tracing, rasing, and foining to
  • the mountenance of an hour; and Sir Launcelot felt him so big that he
  • marvelled of his strength, for he fought more liker a giant than a
  • knight, and that his fighting was durable and passing perilous. For Sir
  • Launcelot had so much ado with him that he dreaded himself to be
  • shamed, and said, Beaumains, fight not so sore, your quarrel and mine
  • is not so great but we may leave off. Truly that is truth, said
  • Beaumains, but it doth me good to feel your might, and yet, my lord, I
  • showed not the utterance.
  • CHAPTER V. How Beaumains told to Sir Launcelot his name, and how he was
  • dubbed knight of Sir Launcelot, and after overtook the damosel.
  • In God’s name, said Sir Launcelot, for I promise you, by the faith of
  • my body, I had as much to do as I might to save myself from you
  • unshamed, and therefore have ye no doubt of none earthly knight. Hope
  • ye so that I may any while stand a proved knight? said Beaumains. Yea,
  • said Launcelot, do as ye have done, and I shall be your warrant. Then,
  • I pray you, said Beaumains, give me the order of knighthood. Then must
  • ye tell me your name, said Launcelot, and of what kin ye be born. Sir,
  • so that ye will not discover me I shall, said Beaumains. Nay, said Sir
  • Launcelot, and that I promise you by the faith of my body, until it be
  • openly known. Then, sir, he said, my name is Gareth, and brother unto
  • Sir Gawaine of father and mother. Ah, sir, said Sir Launcelot, I am
  • more gladder of you than I was; for ever me thought ye should be of
  • great blood, and that ye came not to the court neither for meat nor for
  • drink. And then Sir Launcelot gave him the order of knighthood, and
  • then Sir Gareth prayed him for to depart and let him go.
  • So Sir Launcelot departed from him and came to Sir Kay, and made him to
  • be borne home upon his shield, and so he was healed hard with the life;
  • and all men scorned Sir Kay, and in especial Sir Gawaine and Sir
  • Launcelot said it was not his part to rebuke no young man, for full
  • little knew he of what birth he is come, and for what cause he came to
  • this court; and so we leave Sir Kay and turn we unto Beaumains.
  • When he had overtaken the damosel, anon she said, What dost thou here?
  • thou stinkest all of the kitchen, thy clothes be bawdy of the grease
  • and tallow that thou gainest in King Arthur’s kitchen; weenest thou,
  • said she, that I allow thee, for yonder knight that thou killest. Nay
  • truly, for thou slewest him unhappily and cowardly; therefore turn
  • again, bawdy kitchen page, I know thee well, for Sir Kay named thee
  • Beaumains. What art thou but a lusk and a turner of broaches and a
  • ladle-washer? Damosel, said Beaumains, say to me what ye will, I will
  • not go from you whatsomever ye say, for I have undertaken to King
  • Arthur for to achieve your adventure, and so shall I finish it to the
  • end, either I shall die therefore. Fie on thee, kitchen knave, wilt
  • thou finish mine adventure? thou shalt anon be met withal, that thou
  • wouldest not for all the broth that ever thou suppest once look him in
  • the face. I shall assay, said Beaumains.
  • So thus as they rode in the wood, there came a man flying all that ever
  • he might. Whither wilt thou? said Beaumains. O lord, he said, help me,
  • for here by in a slade are six thieves that have taken my lord and
  • bound him, so I am afeard lest they will slay him. Bring me thither,
  • said Beaumains. And so they rode together until they came thereas was
  • the knight bounden; and then he rode unto them, and struck one unto the
  • death, and then another, and at the third stroke he slew the third
  • thief, and then the other three fled. And he rode after them, and he
  • overtook them; and then those three thieves turned again and assailed
  • Beaumains hard, but at the last he slew them, and returned and unbound
  • the knight. And the knight thanked him, and prayed him to ride with him
  • to his castle there a little beside, and he should worshipfully reward
  • him for his good deeds. Sir, said Beaumains, I will no reward have: I
  • was this day made knight of noble Sir Launcelot, and therefore I will
  • no reward have, but God reward me. And also I must follow this damosel.
  • And when he came nigh her she bade him ride from her, For thou smellest
  • all of the kitchen: weenest thou that I have joy of thee, for all this
  • deed that thou hast done is but mishapped thee: but thou shalt see a
  • sight shall make thee turn again, and that lightly. Then the same
  • knight which was rescued of the thieves rode after that damosel, and
  • prayed her to lodge with him all that night. And because it was near
  • night the damosel rode with him to his castle, and there they had great
  • cheer, and at supper the knight sat Sir Beaumains afore the damosel.
  • Fie, fie, said she, Sir knight, ye are uncourteous to set a kitchen
  • page afore me; him beseemeth better to stick a swine than to sit afore
  • a damosel of high parage. Then the knight was ashamed at her words, and
  • took him up, and set him at a sideboard, and set himself afore him, and
  • so all that night they had good cheer and merry rest.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Beaumains fought and slew two knights at a passage.
  • And on the morn the damosel and he took their leave and thanked the
  • knight, and so departed, and rode on their way until they came to a
  • great forest. And there was a great river and but one passage, and
  • there were ready two knights on the farther side to let them the
  • passage. What sayest thou, said the damosel, wilt thou match yonder
  • knights or turn again? Nay, said Sir Beaumains, I will not turn again
  • an they were six more. And therewithal he rushed into the water, and in
  • midst of the water either brake their spears upon other to their hands,
  • and then they drew their swords, and smote eagerly at other. And at the
  • last Sir Beaumains smote the other upon the helm that his head stonied,
  • and therewithal he fell down in the water, and there was he drowned.
  • And then he spurred his horse upon the land, where the other knight
  • fell upon him, and brake his spear, and so they drew their swords and
  • fought long together. At the last Sir Beaumains clave his helm and his
  • head down to the shoulders; and so he rode unto the damosel and bade
  • her ride forth on her way.
  • Alas, she said, that ever a kitchen page should have that fortune to
  • destroy such two doughty knights: thou weenest thou hast done
  • doughtily, that is not so; for the first knight his horse stumbled, and
  • there he was drowned in the water, and never it was by thy force, nor
  • by thy might. And the last knight by mishap thou camest behind him and
  • mishappily thou slew him.
  • Damosel, said Beaumains, ye may say what ye will, but with whomsomever
  • I have ado withal, I trust to God to serve him or he depart. And
  • therefore I reck not what ye say, so that I may win your lady. Fie,
  • fie, foul kitchen knave, thou shalt see knights that shall abate thy
  • boast. Fair damosel, give me goodly language, and then my care is past,
  • for what knights somever they be, I care not, nor I doubt them not.
  • Also, said she, I say it for thine avail, yet mayest thou turn again
  • with thy worship; for an thou follow me, thou art but slain, for I see
  • all that ever thou dost is but by misadventure, and not by prowess of
  • thy hands. Well, damosel, ye may say what ye will, but wheresomever ye
  • go I will follow you. So this Beaumains rode with that lady till
  • evensong time, and ever she chid him, and would not rest. And they came
  • to a black laund; and there was a black hawthorn, and thereon hung a
  • black banner, and on the other side there hung a black shield, and by
  • it stood a black spear great and long, and a great black horse covered
  • with silk, and a black stone fast by.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Beaumains fought with the Knight of the Black Launds,
  • and fought with him till he fell down and died.
  • There sat a knight all armed in black harness, and his name was the
  • Knight of the Black Laund. Then the damosel, when she saw that knight,
  • she bade him flee down that valley, for his horse was not saddled.
  • Gramercy, said Beaumains, for always ye would have me a coward. With
  • that the Black Knight, when she came nigh him, spake and said, Damosel,
  • have ye brought this knight of King Arthur to be your champion? Nay,
  • fair knight, said she, this is but a kitchen knave that was fed in King
  • Arthur’s kitchen for alms. Why cometh he, said the knight, in such
  • array? it is shame that he beareth you company. Sir, I cannot be
  • delivered of him, said she, for with me he rideth maugre mine head: God
  • would that ye should put him from me, other to slay him an ye may, for
  • he is an unhappy knave, and unhappily he hath done this day: through
  • mishap I saw him slay two knights at the passage of the water; and
  • other deeds he did before right marvellous and through unhappiness.
  • That marvelleth me, said the Black Knight, that any man that is of
  • worship will have ado with him. They know him not, said the damosel,
  • and for because he rideth with me, they ween that he be some man of
  • worship born. That may be, said the Black Knight; howbeit as ye say
  • that he be no man of worship, he is a full likely person, and full like
  • to be a strong man: but thus much shall I grant you, said the Black
  • Knight; I shall put him down upon one foot, and his horse and his
  • harness he shall leave with me, for it were shame to me to do him any
  • more harm.
  • When Sir Beaumains heard him say thus, he said, Sir knight, thou art
  • full large of my horse and my harness; I let thee wit it cost thee
  • nought, and whether it liketh thee or not, this laund will I pass
  • maugre thine head. And horse nor harness gettest thou none of mine, but
  • if thou win them with thy hands; and therefore let see what thou canst
  • do. Sayest thou that? said the Black Knight, now yield thy lady from
  • thee, for it beseemeth never a kitchen page to ride with such a lady.
  • Thou liest, said Beaumains, I am a gentleman born, and of more high
  • lineage than thou, and that will I prove on thy body.
  • Then in great wrath they departed with their horses, and came together
  • as it had been the thunder, and the Black Knight’s spear brake, and
  • Beaumains thrust him through both his sides, and therewith his spear
  • brake, and the truncheon left still in his side. But nevertheless the
  • Black Knight drew his sword, and smote many eager strokes, and of great
  • might, and hurt Beaumains full sore. But at the last the Black Knight,
  • within an hour and an half, he fell down off his horse in swoon, and
  • there he died. And when Beaumains saw him so well horsed and armed,
  • then he alighted down and armed him in his armour, and so took his
  • horse and rode after the damosel.
  • When she saw him come nigh, she said, Away, kitchen knave, out of the
  • wind, for the smell of thy bawdy clothes grieveth me. Alas, she said,
  • that ever such a knave should by mishap slay so good a knight as thou
  • hast done, but all this is thine unhappiness. But here by is one shall
  • pay thee all thy payment, and therefore yet I counsel thee, flee. It
  • may happen me, said Beaumains, to be beaten or slain, but I warn you,
  • fair damosel, I will not flee away, a nor leave your company, for all
  • that ye can say; for ever ye say that they will kill me or beat me, but
  • howsomever it happeneth I escape, and they lie on the ground. And
  • therefore it were as good for you to hold you still thus all day
  • rebuking me, for away will I not till I see the uttermost of this
  • journey, or else I will be slain, other truly beaten; therefore ride on
  • your way, for follow you I will whatsomever happen.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How the brother of the knight that was slain met with
  • Beaumains, and fought with Beaumains till he was yielden.
  • Thus as they rode together, they saw a knight come driving by them all
  • in green, both his horse and his harness; and when he came nigh the
  • damosel, he asked her, Is that my brother the Black Knight that ye have
  • brought with you? Nay, nay, she said, this unhappy kitchen knave hath
  • slain your brother through unhappiness. Alas, said the Green Knight,
  • that is great pity, that so noble a knight as he was should so
  • unhappily be slain, and namely of a knave’s hand, as ye say that he is.
  • Ah! traitor, said the Green Knight, thou shalt die for slaying of my
  • brother; he was a full noble knight, and his name was Sir Perard. I
  • defy thee, said Beaumains, for I let thee wit I slew him knightly and
  • not shamefully.
  • Therewithal the Green Knight rode unto an horn that was green, and it
  • hung upon a thorn, and there he blew three deadly motes, and there came
  • two damosels and armed him lightly. And then he took a great horse, and
  • a green shield and a green spear. And then they ran together with all
  • their mights, and brake their spears unto their hands. And then they
  • drew their swords, and gave many sad strokes, and either of them
  • wounded other full ill. And at the last, at an overthwart, Beaumains
  • with his horse struck the Green Knight’s horse upon the side, that he
  • fell to the earth. And then the Green Knight avoided his horse lightly,
  • and dressed him upon foot. That saw Beaumains, and therewithal he
  • alighted, and they rushed together like two mighty kemps a long while,
  • and sore they bled both. With that came the damosel, and said, My lord
  • the Green Knight, why for shame stand ye so long fighting with the
  • kitchen knave? Alas, it is shame that ever ye were made knight, to see
  • such a lad to match such a knight, as the weed overgrew the corn.
  • Therewith the Green Knight was ashamed, and therewithal he gave a great
  • stroke of might, and clave his shield through. When Beaumains saw his
  • shield cloven asunder he was a little ashamed of that stroke and of her
  • language; and then he gave him such a buffet upon the helm that he fell
  • on his knees. And so suddenly Beaumains pulled him upon the ground
  • grovelling. And then the Green Knight cried him mercy, and yielded him
  • unto Sir Beaumains, and prayed him to slay him not. All is in vain,
  • said Beaumains, for thou shalt die but if this damosel that came with
  • me pray me to save thy life. And therewithal he unlaced his helm like
  • as he would slay him. Fie upon thee, false kitchen page, I will never
  • pray thee to save his life, for I will never be so much in thy danger.
  • Then shall he die, said Beaumains. Not so hardy, thou bawdy knave, said
  • the damosel, that thou slay him. Alas, said the Green Knight, suffer me
  • not to die for a fair word may save me. Fair knight, said the Green
  • Knight, save my life, and I will forgive thee the death of my brother,
  • and for ever to become thy man, and thirty knights that hold of me for
  • ever shall do you service. In the devil’s name, said the damosel, that
  • such a bawdy kitchen knave should have thee and thirty knights’
  • service.
  • Sir knight, said Beaumains, all this availeth thee not, but if my
  • damosel speak with me for thy life. And therewithal he made a semblant
  • to slay him. Let be, said the damosel, thou bawdy knave; slay him not,
  • for an thou do thou shalt repent it. Damosel, said Beaumains, your
  • charge is to me a pleasure, and at your commandment his life shall be
  • saved, and else not. Then he said, Sir knight with the green arms, I
  • release thee quit at this damosel’s request, for I will not make her
  • wroth, I will fulfil all that she chargeth me. And then the Green
  • Knight kneeled down, and did him homage with his sword. Then said the
  • damosel, Me repenteth, Green Knight, of your damage, and of your
  • brother’s death, the Black Knight, for of your help I had great mister,
  • for I dread me sore to pass this forest. Nay, dread you not, said the
  • Green Knight, for ye shall lodge with me this night, and to-morn I
  • shall help you through this forest. So they took their horses and rode
  • to his manor, which was fast there beside.
  • CHAPTER IX. How the damosel again rebuked Beaumains, and would not
  • suffer him to sit at her table, but called him kitchen boy.
  • And ever she rebuked Beaumains, and would not suffer him to sit at her
  • table, but as the Green Knight took him and sat him at a side table.
  • Marvel methinketh, said the Green Knight to the damosel, why ye rebuke
  • this noble knight as ye do, for I warn you, damosel, he is a full noble
  • knight, and I know no knight is able to match him; therefore ye do
  • great wrong to rebuke him, for he shall do you right good service, for
  • whatsomever he maketh himself, ye shall prove at the end that he is
  • come of a noble blood and of king’s lineage. Fie, fie, said the
  • damosel, it is shame for you to say of him such worship. Truly, said
  • the Green Knight, it were shame for me to say of him any disworship,
  • for he hath proved himself a better knight than I am, yet have I met
  • with many knights in my days, and never or this time have I found no
  • knight his match. And so that night they yede unto rest, and all that
  • night the Green Knight commanded thirty knights privily to watch
  • Beaumains, for to keep him from all treason.
  • And so on the morn they all arose, and heard their mass and brake their
  • fast; and then they took their horses and rode on their way, and the
  • Green Knight conveyed them through the forest; and there the Green
  • Knight said, My lord Beaumains, I and these thirty knights shall be
  • always at your summons, both early and late, at your calling and
  • whither that ever ye will send us. It is well said, said Beaumains;
  • when that I call upon you ye must yield you unto King Arthur, and all
  • your knights. If that ye so command us, we shall be ready at all times,
  • said the Green Knight. Fie, fie upon thee, in the devil’s name, said
  • the damosel, that any good knights should be obedient unto a kitchen
  • knave. So then departed the Green Knight and the damosel. And then she
  • said unto Beaumains, Why followest thou me, thou kitchen boy? Cast away
  • thy shield and thy spear, and flee away; yet I counsel thee betimes or
  • thou shalt say right soon, alas; for wert thou as wight as ever was
  • Wade or Launcelot, Tristram, or the good knight Sir Lamorak, thou shalt
  • not pass a pass here that is called the Pass Perilous. Damosel, said
  • Beaumains, who is afeard let him flee, for it were shame to turn again
  • sithen I have ridden so long with you. Well, said the damosel, ye shall
  • soon, whether ye will or not.
  • CHAPTER X. How the third brother, called the Red Knight, jousted and
  • fought against Beaumains, and how Beaumains overcame him.
  • So within a while they saw a tower as white as any snow, well
  • matchecold all about, and double dyked. And over the tower gate there
  • hung a fifty shields of divers colours, and under that tower there was
  • a fair meadow. And therein were many knights and squires to behold,
  • scaffolds and pavilions; for there upon the morn should be a great
  • tournament: and the lord of the tower was in his castle and looked out
  • at a window, and saw a damosel, a dwarf, and a knight armed at all
  • points. So God me help, said the lord, with that knight will I joust,
  • for I see that he is a knight-errant. And so he armed him and horsed
  • him hastily. And when he was on horseback with his shield and his
  • spear, it was all red, both his horse and his harness, and all that to
  • him longeth. And when that he came nigh him he weened it had been his
  • brother the Black Knight; and then he cried aloud, Brother, what do ye
  • in these marches? Nay, nay, said the damosel, it is not he; this is but
  • a kitchen knave that was brought up for alms in King Arthur’s court.
  • Nevertheless, said the Red Knight, I will speak with him or he depart.
  • Ah, said the damosel, this knave hath killed thy brother, and Sir Kay
  • named him Beaumains, and this horse and this harness was thy brother’s,
  • the Black Knight. Also I saw thy brother the Green Knight overcome of
  • his hands. Now may ye be revenged upon him, for I may never be quit of
  • him.
  • With this either knights departed in sunder, and they came together
  • with all their might, and either of their horses fell to the earth, and
  • they avoided their horses, and put their shields afore them and drew
  • their swords, and either gave other sad strokes, now here, now there,
  • rasing, tracing, foining, and hurling like two boars, the space of two
  • hours. And then she cried on high to the Red Knight, Alas, thou noble
  • Red Knight, think what worship hath followed thee, let never a kitchen
  • knave endure thee so long as he doth. Then the Red Knight waxed wroth
  • and doubled his strokes, and hurt Beaumains wonderly sore, that the
  • blood ran down to the ground, that it was wonder to see that strong
  • battle. Yet at the last Sir Beaumains struck him to the earth, and as
  • he would have slain the Red Knight, he cried mercy, saying, Noble
  • knight, slay me not, and I shall yield me to thee with fifty knights
  • with me that be at my commandment. And I forgive thee all the despite
  • that thou hast done to me, and the death of my brother the Black
  • Knight. All this availeth not, said Beaumains, but if my damosel pray
  • me to save thy life. And therewith he made semblant to strike off his
  • head. Let be, thou Beaumains, slay him not, for he is a noble knight,
  • and not so hardy, upon thine head, but thou save him.
  • Then Beaumains bade the Red Knight, Stand up, and thank the damosel now
  • of thy life. Then the Red Knight prayed him to see his castle, and to
  • be there all night. So the damosel then granted him, and there they had
  • merry cheer. But always the damosel spake many foul words unto
  • Beaumains, whereof the Red Knight had great marvel; and all that night
  • the Red Knight made three score knights to watch Beaumains, that he
  • should have no shame nor villainy. And upon the morn they heard mass
  • and dined, and the Red Knight came before Beaumains with his three
  • score knights, and there he proffered him his homage and fealty at all
  • times, he and his knights to do him service. I thank you, said
  • Beaumains, but this ye shall grant me: when I call upon you, to come
  • afore my lord King Arthur, and yield you unto him to be his knights.
  • Sir, said the Red Knight, I will be ready, and my fellowship, at your
  • summons. So Sir Beaumains departed and the damosel, and ever she rode
  • chiding him in the foulest manner.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Beaumains suffered great rebukes of the damosel,
  • and he suffered it patiently.
  • Damosel, said Beaumains, ye are uncourteous so to rebuke me as ye do,
  • for meseemeth I have done you good service, and ever ye threaten me I
  • shall be beaten with knights that we meet, but ever for all your boast
  • they lie in the dust or in the mire, and therefore I pray you rebuke me
  • no more; and when ye see me beaten or yielden as recreant, then may ye
  • bid me go from you shamefully; but first I let you wit I will not
  • depart from you, for I were worse than a fool an I would depart from
  • you all the while that I win worship. Well, said she, right soon there
  • shall meet a knight shall pay thee all thy wages, for he is the most
  • man of worship of the world, except King Arthur. I will well, said
  • Beaumains, the more he is of worship, the more shall be my worship to
  • have ado with him.
  • Then anon they were ware where was afore them a city rich and fair. And
  • betwixt them and the city a mile and an half there was a fair meadow
  • that seemed new mown, and therein were many pavilions fair to behold.
  • Lo, said the damosel, yonder is a lord that owneth yonder city, and his
  • custom is, when the weather is fair, to lie in this meadow to joust and
  • tourney. And ever there be about him five hundred knights and gentlemen
  • of arms, and there be all manner of games that any gentleman can
  • devise. That goodly lord, said Beaumains, would I fain see. Thou shalt
  • see him time enough, said the damosel, and so as she rode near she
  • espied the pavilion where he was. Lo, said she, seest thou yonder
  • pavilion that is all of the colour of Inde, and all manner of thing
  • that there is about, men and women, and horses trapped, shields and
  • spears were all of the colour of Inde, and his name is Sir Persant of
  • Inde, the most lordliest knight that ever thou lookedst on. It may well
  • be, said Beaumains, but be he never so stout a knight, in this field I
  • shall abide till that I see him under his shield. Ah, fool, said she,
  • thou wert better flee betimes. Why, said Beaumains, an he be such a
  • knight as ye make him, he will not set upon me with all his men, or
  • with his five hundred knights. For an there come no more but one at
  • once, I shall him not fail whilst my life lasteth. Fie, fie, said the
  • damosel, that ever such a stinking knave should blow such a boast.
  • Damosel, he said, ye are to blame so to rebuke me, for I had liefer do
  • five battles than so to be rebuked, let him come and then let him do
  • his worst.
  • Sir, she said, I marvel what thou art and of what kin thou art come;
  • boldly thou speakest, and boldly thou hast done, that have I seen;
  • therefore I pray thee save thyself an thou mayest, for thy horse and
  • thou have had great travail, and I dread we dwell over long from the
  • siege, for it is but hence seven mile, and all perilous passages we are
  • passed save all only this passage; and here I dread me sore lest ye
  • shall catch some hurt, therefore I would ye were hence, that ye were
  • not bruised nor hurt with this strong knight. But I let you wit that
  • Sir Persant of Inde is nothing of might nor strength unto the knight
  • that laid the siege about my lady. As for that, said Sir Beaumains, be
  • it as it be may. For sithen I am come so nigh this knight I will prove
  • his might or I depart from him, and else I shall be shamed an I now
  • withdraw me from him. And therefore, damosel, have ye no doubt by the
  • grace of God I shall so deal with this knight that within two hours
  • after noon I shall deliver him. And then shall we come to the siege by
  • daylight. O Jesu, marvel have I, said the damosel, what manner a man ye
  • be, for it may never be otherwise but that ye be come of a noble blood,
  • for so foul nor shamefully did never woman rule a knight as I have done
  • you, and ever courteously ye have suffered me, and that came never but
  • of a gentle blood.
  • Damosel, said Beaumains, a knight may little do that may not suffer a
  • damosel, for whatsomever ye said unto me I took none heed to your
  • words, for the more ye said the more ye angered me, and my wrath I
  • wreaked upon them that I had ado withal. And therefore all the
  • missaying that ye missaid me furthered me in my battle, and caused me
  • to think to show and prove myself at the end what I was; for
  • peradventure though I had meat in King Arthur’s kitchen, yet I might
  • have had meat enough in other places, but all that I did it for to
  • prove and assay my friends, and that shall be known another day; and
  • whether that I be a gentleman born or none, I let you wit, fair
  • damosel, I have done you gentleman’s service, and peradventure better
  • service yet will I do or I depart from you. Alas, she said, fair
  • Beaumains, forgive me all that I have missaid or done against thee.
  • With all my heart, said he, I forgive it you, for ye did nothing but as
  • ye should do, for all your evil words pleased me; and damosel, said
  • Beaumains, since it liketh you to say thus fair unto me, wit ye well it
  • gladdeth my heart greatly, and now meseemeth there is no knight living
  • but I am able enough for him.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Beaumains fought with Sir Persant of Inde, and made
  • him to be yielden.
  • With this Sir Persant of Inde had espied them as they hoved in the
  • field, and knightly he sent to them whether he came in war or in peace.
  • Say to thy lord, said Beaumains, I take no force, but whether as him
  • list himself. So the messenger went again unto Sir Persant and told him
  • all his answer. Well then will I have ado with him to the utterance,
  • and so he purveyed him and rode against him. And Beaumains saw him and
  • made him ready, and there they met with all that ever their horses
  • might run, and brast their spears either in three pieces, and their
  • horses rushed so together that both their horses fell dead to the
  • earth; and lightly they avoided their horses and put their shields
  • afore them, and drew their swords, and gave many great strokes that
  • sometime they hurtled together that they fell grovelling on the ground.
  • Thus they fought two hours and more, that their shields and their
  • hauberks were all forhewen, and in many steads they were wounded. So at
  • the last Sir Beaumains smote him through the cost of the body, and then
  • he retrayed him here and there, and knightly maintained his battle long
  • time. And at the last, though him loath were, Beaumains smote Sir
  • Persant above upon the helm, that he fell grovelling to the earth; and
  • then he leapt upon him overthwart and unlaced his helm to have slain
  • him.
  • Then Sir Persant yielded him and asked him mercy. With that came the
  • damosel and prayed to save his life. I will well, for it were pity this
  • noble knight should die. Gramercy, said Persant, gentle knight and
  • damosel. For certainly now I wot well it was ye that slew my brother
  • the Black Knight at the black thorn; he was a full noble knight, his
  • name was Sir Percard. Also I am sure that ye are he that won mine other
  • brother the Green Knight, his name was Sir Pertolepe. Also ye won my
  • brother the Red Knight, Sir Perimones. And now since ye have won these,
  • this shall I do for to please you: ye shall have homage and fealty of
  • me, and an hundred knights to be always at your commandment, to go and
  • ride where ye will command us. And so they went unto Sir Persant’s
  • pavilion and drank the wine, and ate spices, and afterward Sir Persant
  • made him to rest upon a bed until supper time, and after supper to bed
  • again. When Beaumains was abed, Sir Persant had a lady, a fair daughter
  • of eighteen year of age, and there he called her unto him, and charged
  • her and commanded her upon his blessing to go unto the knight’s bed,
  • and lie down by his side, and make him no strange cheer, but good
  • cheer, and take him in thine arms and kiss him, and look that this be
  • done, I charge you, as ye will have my love and my good will. So Sir
  • Persant’s daughter did as her father bade her, and so she went unto Sir
  • Beaumains’ bed, and privily she dispoiled her, and laid her down by
  • him, and then he awoke and saw her, and asked her what she was. Sir,
  • she said, I am Sir Persant’s daughter, that by the commandment of my
  • father am come hither. Be ye a maid or a wife? said he. Sir, she said,
  • I am a clean maiden. God defend, said he, that I should defoil you to
  • do Sir Persant such a shame; therefore, fair damosel, arise out of this
  • bed or else I will. Sir, she said, I came not to you by mine own will,
  • but as I was commanded. Alas, said Sir Beaumains, I were a shameful
  • knight an I would do your father any disworship; and so he kissed her,
  • and so she departed and came unto Sir Persant her father, and told him
  • all how she had sped. Truly, said Sir Persant, whatsomever he be, he is
  • come of a noble blood. And so we leave them there till on the morn.
  • CHAPTER XIII. Of the goodly communication between Sir Persant and
  • Beaumains, and how he told him that his name was Sir Gareth.
  • And so on the morn the damosel and Sir Beaumains heard mass and brake
  • their fast, and so took their leave. Fair damosel, said Persant,
  • whitherward are ye way-leading this knight? Sir, she said, this knight
  • is going to the siege that besiegeth my sister in the Castle Dangerous.
  • Ah, ah, said Persant, that is the Knight of the Red Laund, the which is
  • the most perilous knight that I know now living, and a man that is
  • without mercy, and men say that he hath seven men’s strength. God save
  • you, said he to Beaumains, from that knight, for he doth great wrong to
  • that lady, and that is great pity, for she is one of the fairest ladies
  • of the world, and meseemeth that your damosel is her sister: is not
  • your name Linet? said he. Yea, sir, said she, and my lady my sister’s
  • name is Dame Lionesse. Now shall I tell you, said Sir Persant, this Red
  • Knight of the Red Laund hath lain long at the siege, well-nigh this two
  • years, and many times he might have had her an he had would, but he
  • prolongeth the time to this intent, for to have Sir Launcelot du Lake
  • to do battle with him, or Sir Tristram, or Sir Lamorak de Galis, or Sir
  • Gawaine, and this is his tarrying so long at the siege.
  • Now my lord Sir Persant of Inde, said the damosel Linet, I require you
  • that ye will make this gentleman knight or ever he fight with the Red
  • Knight. I will with all my heart, said Sir Persant, an it please him to
  • take the order of knighthood of so simple a man as I am. Sir, said
  • Beaumains, I thank you for your good will, for I am better sped, for
  • certainly the noble knight Sir Launcelot made me knight. Ah, said Sir
  • Persant, of a more renowned knight might ye not be made knight; for of
  • all knights he may be called chief of knighthood; and so all the world
  • saith, that betwixt three knights is departed clearly knighthood, that
  • is Launcelot du Lake, Sir Tristram de Liones, and Sir Lamorak de Galis:
  • these bear now the renown. There be many other knights, as Sir
  • Palamides the Saracen and Sir Safere his brother; also Sir Bleoberis
  • and Sir Blamore de Ganis his brother; also Sir Bors de Ganis and Sir
  • Ector de Maris and Sir Percivale de Galis; these and many more be noble
  • knights, but there be none that pass the three above said; therefore
  • God speed you well, said Sir Persant, for an ye may match the Red
  • Knight ye shall be called the fourth of the world.
  • Sir, said Beaumains, I would fain be of good fame and of knighthood.
  • And I let you wit I came of good men, for I dare say my father was a
  • noble man, and so that ye will keep it in close, and this damosel, I
  • will tell you of what kin I am. We will not discover you, said they
  • both, till ye command us, by the faith we owe unto God. Truly then,
  • said he, my name is Gareth of Orkney, and King Lot was my father, and
  • my mother is King Arthur’s sister, her name is Dame Morgawse, and Sir
  • Gawaine is my brother, and Sir Agravaine and Sir Gaheris, and I am the
  • youngest of them all. And yet wot not King Arthur nor Sir Gawaine what
  • I am.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How the lady that was besieged had word from her sister
  • how she had brought a knight to fight for her, and what battles he had
  • achieved.
  • So the book saith that the lady that was besieged had word of her
  • sister’s coming by the dwarf, and a knight with her, and how he had
  • passed all the perilous passages. What manner a man is he? said the
  • lady. He is a noble knight, truly, madam, said the dwarf, and but a
  • young man, but he is as likely a man as ever ye saw any. What is he?
  • said the damosel, and of what kin is he come, and of whom was he made
  • knight? Madam, said the dwarf, he is the king’s son of Orkney, but his
  • name I will not tell you as at this time; but wit ye well, of Sir
  • Launcelot was he made knight, for of none other would he be made
  • knight, and Sir Kay named him Beaumains. How escaped he, said the lady,
  • from the brethren of Persant? Madam, he said, as a noble knight should.
  • First, he slew two brethren at a passage of a water. Ah! said she, they
  • were good knights, but they were murderers, the one hight Gherard le
  • Breuse, and the other knight hight Sir Arnold le Breuse. Then, madam,
  • he recountered with the Black Knight, and slew him in plain battle, and
  • so he took his horse and his armour and fought with the Green Knight
  • and won him in plain battle, and in like wise he served the Red Knight,
  • and after in the same wise he served the Blue Knight and won him in
  • plain battle. Then, said the lady, he hath overcome Sir Persant of
  • Inde, one of the noblest knights of the world, and the dwarf said, He
  • hath won all the four brethren and slain the Black Knight, and yet he
  • did more to-fore: he overthrew Sir Kay and left him nigh dead upon the
  • ground; also he did a great battle with Sir Launcelot, and there they
  • departed on even hands: and then Sir Launcelot made him knight.
  • Dwarf, said the lady, I am glad of these tidings, therefore go thou in
  • an hermitage of mine hereby, and there shalt thou bear with thee of my
  • wine in two flagons of silver, they are of two gallons, and also two
  • cast of bread with fat venison baked, and dainty fowls; and a cup of
  • gold here I deliver thee, that is rich and precious; and bear all this
  • to mine hermitage, and put it in the hermit’s hands. And sithen go thou
  • unto my sister and greet her well, and commend me unto that gentle
  • knight, and pray him to eat and to drink and make him strong, and say
  • ye him I thank him of his courtesy and goodness, that he would take
  • upon him such labour for me that never did him bounty nor courtesy.
  • Also pray him that he be of good heart and courage, for he shall meet
  • with a full noble knight, but he is neither of bounty, courtesy, nor
  • gentleness; for he attendeth unto nothing but to murder, and that is
  • the cause I cannot praise him nor love him.
  • So this dwarf departed, and came to Sir Persant, where he found the
  • damosel Linet and Sir Beaumains, and there he told them all as ye have
  • heard; and then they took their leave, but Sir Persant took an ambling
  • hackney and conveyed them on their ways, and then beleft them to God;
  • and so within a little while they came to that hermitage, and there
  • they drank the wine, and ate the venison and the fowls baken. And so
  • when they had repasted them well, the dwarf returned again with his
  • vessel unto the castle again; and there met with him the Red Knight of
  • the Red Launds, and asked him from whence that he came, and where he
  • had been. Sir, said the dwarf, I have been with my lady’s sister of
  • this castle, and she hath been at King Arthur’s court, and brought a
  • knight with her. Then I account her travail but lost; for though she
  • had brought with her Sir Launcelot, Sir Tristram, Sir Lamorak, or Sir
  • Gawaine, I would think myself good enough for them all.
  • It may well be, said the dwarf, but this knight hath passed all the
  • perilous passages, and slain the Black Knight and other two more, and
  • won the Green Knight, the Red Knight, and the Blue Knight. Then is he
  • one of these four that I have afore rehearsed. He is none of those,
  • said the dwarf, but he is a king’s son. What is his name? said the Red
  • Knight of the Red Launds. That will I not tell you, said the dwarf, but
  • Sir Kay upon scorn named him Beaumains. I care not, said the knight,
  • what knight so ever he be, for I shall soon deliver him. And if I ever
  • match him he shall have a shameful death as many other have had. That
  • were pity, said the dwarf, and it is marvel that ye make such shameful
  • war upon noble knights.
  • CHAPTER XV. How the damosel and Beaumains came to the siege; and came
  • to a sycamore tree, and there Beaumains blew a horn, and then the
  • Knight of the Red Launds came to fight with him.
  • Now leave we the knight and the dwarf, and speak we of Beaumains, that
  • all night lay in the hermitage; and upon the morn he and the damosel
  • Linet heard their mass and brake their fast. And then they took their
  • horses and rode throughout a fair forest; and then they came to a
  • plain, and saw where were many pavilions and tents, and a fair castle,
  • and there was much smoke and great noise; and when they came near the
  • siege Sir Beaumains espied upon great trees, as he rode, how there hung
  • full goodly armed knights by the neck, and their shields about their
  • necks with their swords, and gilt spurs upon their heels, and so there
  • hung nigh a forty knights shamefully with full rich arms.
  • Then Sir Beaumains abated his countenance and said, What meaneth this?
  • Fair sir, said the damosel, abate not your cheer for all this sight,
  • for ye must courage yourself, or else ye be all shent, for all these
  • knights came hither to this siege to rescue my sister Dame Lionesse,
  • and when the Red Knight of the Red Launds had overcome them, he put
  • them to this shameful death without mercy and pity. And in the same
  • wise he will serve you but if you quit you the better.
  • Now Jesu defend me, said Beaumains, from such a villainous death and
  • shenship of arms. For rather than I should so be faren withal, I would
  • rather be slain manly in plain battle. So were ye better, said the
  • damosel; for trust not, in him is no courtesy, but all goeth to the
  • death or shameful murder, and that is pity, for he is a full likely
  • man, well made of body, and a full noble knight of prowess, and a lord
  • of great lands and possessions. Truly, said Beaumains, he may well be a
  • good knight, but he useth shameful customs, and it is marvel that he
  • endureth so long that none of the noble knights of my lord Arthur’s
  • have not dealt with him.
  • And then they rode to the dykes, and saw them double dyked with full
  • warlike walls; and there were lodged many great lords nigh the walls;
  • and there was great noise of minstrelsy; and the sea beat upon the one
  • side of the walls, where were many ships and mariners’ noise with “hale
  • and how.” And also there was fast by a sycamore tree, and there hung an
  • horn, the greatest that ever they saw, of an elephant’s bone; and this
  • Knight of the Red Launds had hanged it up there, that if there came any
  • errant-knight, he must blow that horn, and then will he make him ready
  • and come to him to do battle. But, sir, I pray you, said the damosel
  • Linet, blow ye not the horn till it be high noon, for now it is about
  • prime, and now increaseth his might, that as men say he hath seven
  • men’s strength. Ah, fie for shame, fair damosel, say ye never so more
  • to me; for, an he were as good a knight as ever was, I shall never fail
  • him in his most might, for either I will win worship worshipfully, or
  • die knightly in the field. And therewith he spurred his horse straight
  • to the sycamore tree, and blew so the horn eagerly that all the siege
  • and the castle rang thereof. And then there leapt out knights out of
  • their tents and pavilions, and they within the castle looked over the
  • walls and out at windows.
  • Then the Red Knight of the Red Launds armed him hastily, and two barons
  • set on his spurs upon his heels, and all was blood red, his armour,
  • spear and shield. And an earl buckled his helm upon his head, and then
  • they brought him a red spear and a red steed, and so he rode into a
  • little vale under the castle, that all that were in the castle and at
  • the siege might behold the battle.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How the two knights met together, and of their talking,
  • and how they began their battle.
  • Sir, said the damosel Linet unto Sir Beaumains, look ye be glad and
  • light, for yonder is your deadly enemy, and at yonder window is my
  • lady, my sister, Dame Lionesse. Where? said Beaumains. Yonder, said the
  • damosel, and pointed with her finger. That is truth, said Beaumains.
  • She beseemeth afar the fairest lady that ever I looked upon; and truly,
  • he said, I ask no better quarrel than now for to do battle, for truly
  • she shall be my lady, and for her I will fight. And ever he looked up
  • to the window with glad countenance, and the Lady Lionesse made curtsey
  • to him down to the earth, with holding up both their hands.
  • With that the Red Knight of the Red Launds called to Sir Beaumains,
  • Leave, sir knight, thy looking, and behold me, I counsel thee; for I
  • warn thee well she is my lady, and for her I have done many strong
  • battles. If thou have so done, said Beaumains, meseemeth it was but
  • waste labour, for she loveth none of thy fellowship, and thou to love
  • that loveth not thee is but great folly. For an I understood that she
  • were not glad of my coming, I would be advised or I did battle for her.
  • But I understand by the besieging of this castle she may forbear thy
  • fellowship. And therefore wit thou well, thou Red Knight of the Red
  • Launds, I love her, and will rescue her, or else to die. Sayst thou
  • that? said the Red Knight, meseemeth thou ought of reason to be ware by
  • yonder knights that thou sawest hang upon yonder trees. Fie for shame,
  • said Beaumains, that ever thou shouldest say or do so evil, for in that
  • thou shamest thyself and knighthood, and thou mayst be sure there will
  • no lady love thee that knoweth thy wicked customs. And now thou weenest
  • that the sight of these hanged knights should fear me. Nay truly, not
  • so; that shameful sight causeth me to have courage and hardiness
  • against thee, more than I would have had against thee an thou wert a
  • well-ruled knight. Make thee ready, said the Red Knight of the Red
  • Launds, and talk no longer with me.
  • Then Sir Beaumains bade the damosel go from him; and then they put
  • their spears in their rests, and came together with all their might
  • that they had both, and either smote other in midst of their shields
  • that the paitrelles, surcingles, and cruppers brast, and fell to the
  • earth both, and the reins of their bridles in their hands; and so they
  • lay a great while sore astonied, that all that were in the castle and
  • in the siege weened their necks had been broken; and then many a
  • stranger and other said the strange knight was a big man, and a noble
  • jouster, for or now we saw never no knight match the Red Knight of the
  • Red Launds: thus they said, both within the castle and without. Then
  • lightly they avoided their horses and put their shields afore them, and
  • drew their swords and ran together like two fierce lions, and either
  • gave other such buffets upon their helms that they reeled backward both
  • two strides; and then they recovered both, and hewed great pieces off
  • their harness and their shields that a great part fell into the fields.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How after long fighting Beaumains overcame the knight and
  • would have slain him, but at the request of the lords he saved his
  • life, and made him to yield him to the lady.
  • And then thus they fought till it was past noon, and never would stint,
  • till at the last they lacked wind both; and then they stood wagging and
  • scattering, panting, blowing and bleeding, that all that beheld them
  • for the most part wept for pity. So when they had rested them a while
  • they yede to battle again, tracing, racing, foining as two boars. And
  • at some time they took their run as it had been two rams, and hurtled
  • together that sometime they fell grovelling to the earth: and at some
  • time they were so amazed that either took other’s sword instead of his
  • own.
  • Thus they endured till evensong time, that there was none that beheld
  • them might know whether was like to win the battle; and their armour
  • was so forhewn that men might see their naked sides; and in other
  • places they were naked, but ever the naked places they did defend. And
  • the Red Knight was a wily knight of war, and his wily fighting taught
  • Sir Beaumains to be wise; but he abought it full sore or he did espy
  • his fighting.
  • And thus by assent of them both they granted either other to rest; and
  • so they set them down upon two mole-hills there beside the fighting
  • place, and either of them unlaced his helm, and took the cold wind; for
  • either of their pages was fast by them, to come when they called to
  • unlace their harness and to set them on again at their commandment. And
  • then when Sir Beaumains’ helm was off, he looked up to the window, and
  • there he saw the fair lady Dame Lionesse, and she made him such
  • countenance that his heart waxed light and jolly; and therewith he bade
  • the Red Knight of the Red Launds make him ready, and let us do the
  • battle to the utterance. I will well, said the knight, and then they
  • laced up their helms, and their pages avoided, and they stepped
  • together and fought freshly; but the Red Knight of the Red Launds
  • awaited him, and at an overthwart smote him within the hand, that his
  • sword fell out of his hand; and yet he gave him another buffet upon the
  • helm that he fell grovelling to the earth, and the Red Knight fell over
  • him, for to hold him down.
  • Then cried the maiden Linet on high: O Sir Beaumains, where is thy
  • courage become? Alas, my lady my sister beholdeth thee, and she sobbeth
  • and weepeth, that maketh mine heart heavy. When Sir Beaumains heard her
  • say so, he abraid up with a great might and gat him upon his feet, and
  • lightly he leapt to his sword and gripped it in his hand, and doubled
  • his pace unto the Red Knight, and there they fought a new battle
  • together. But Sir Beaumains then doubled his strokes, and smote so
  • thick that he smote the sword out of his hand, and then he smote him
  • upon the helm that he fell to the earth, and Sir Beaumains fell upon
  • him, and unlaced his helm to have slain him; and then he yielded him
  • and asked mercy, and said with a loud voice: O noble knight, I yield me
  • to thy mercy.
  • Then Sir Beaumains bethought him upon the knights that he had made to
  • be hanged shamefully, and then he said: I may not with my worship save
  • thy life, for the shameful deaths that thou hast caused many full good
  • knights to die. Sir, said the Red Knight of the Red Launds, hold your
  • hand and ye shall know the causes why I put them to so shameful a
  • death. Say on, said Sir Beaumains. Sir, I loved once a lady, a fair
  • damosel, and she had her brother slain; and she said it was Sir
  • Launcelot du Lake, or else Sir Gawaine; and she prayed me as that I
  • loved her heartily, that I would make her a promise by the faith of my
  • knighthood, for to labour daily in arms unto I met with one of them;
  • and all that I might overcome I should put them unto a villainous
  • death; and this is the cause that I have put all these knights to
  • death, and so I ensured her to do all the villainy unto King Arthur’s
  • knights, and that I should take vengeance upon all these knights. And,
  • sir, now I will thee tell that every day my strength increaseth till
  • noon, and all this time have I seven men’s strength.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How the knight yielded him, and how Beaumains made him
  • to go unto King Arthur’s court, and to cry Sir Launcelot mercy.
  • Then came there many earls, and barons, and noble knights, and prayed
  • that knight to save his life, and take him to your prisoner. And all
  • they fell upon their knees, and prayed him of mercy, and that he would
  • save his life; and, Sir, they all said, it were fairer of him to take
  • homage and fealty, and let him hold his lands of you than for to slay
  • him; by his death ye shall have none advantage, and his misdeeds that
  • be done may not be undone; and therefore he shall make amends to all
  • parties, and we all will become your men and do you homage and fealty.
  • Fair lords, said Beaumains, wit you well I am full loath to slay this
  • knight, nevertheless he hath done passing ill and shamefully; but
  • insomuch all that he did was at a lady’s request I blame him the less;
  • and so for your sake I will release him that he shall have his life
  • upon this covenant, that he go within the castle, and yield him there
  • to the lady, and if she will forgive and quit him, I will well; with
  • this he make her amends of all the trespass he hath done against her
  • and her lands. And also, when that is done, that ye go unto the court
  • of King Arthur, and there that ye ask Sir Launcelot mercy, and Sir
  • Gawaine, for the evil will ye have had against them. Sir, said the Red
  • Knight of the Red Launds, all this will I do as ye command, and siker
  • assurance and borrows ye shall have. And so then when the assurance was
  • made, he made his homage and fealty, and all those earls and barons
  • with him.
  • And then the maiden Linet came to Sir Beaumains, and unarmed him and
  • searched his wounds, and stinted his blood, and in likewise she did to
  • the Red Knight of the Red Launds. And there they sojourned ten days in
  • their tents; and the Red Knight made his lords and servants to do all
  • the pleasure that they might unto Sir Beaumains. And so within a while
  • the Red Knight of the Red Launds yede unto the castle, and put him in
  • her grace. And so she received him upon sufficient surety, so all her
  • hurts were well restored of all that she could complain. And then he
  • departed unto the court of King Arthur, and there openly the Red Knight
  • of the Red Launds put him in the mercy of Sir Launcelot and Sir
  • Gawaine, and there he told openly how he was overcome and by whom, and
  • also he told all the battles from the beginning unto the ending. Jesu
  • mercy, said King Arthur and Sir Gawaine, we marvel much of what blood
  • he is come, for he is a noble knight. Have ye no marvel, said Sir
  • Launcelot, for ye shall right well wit that he is come of a full noble
  • blood; and as for his might and hardiness, there be but few now living
  • that is so mighty as he is, and so noble of prowess. It seemeth by you,
  • said King Arthur, that ye know his name, and from whence he is come,
  • and of what blood he is. I suppose I do so, said Launcelot, or else I
  • would not have given him the order of knighthood; but he gave me such
  • charge at that time that I should never discover him until he required
  • me, or else it be known openly by some other.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How Beaumains came to the lady, and when he came to the
  • castle the gates were closed against him, and of the words that the
  • lady said to him.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Beaumains that desired of Linet that he might see
  • her sister, his lady. Sir, she said, I would fain ye saw her. Then Sir
  • Beaumains all armed him, and took his horse and his spear, and rode
  • straight unto the castle. And when he came to the gate he found there
  • many men armed, and pulled up the drawbridge and drew the port close.
  • Then marvelled he why they would not suffer him to enter. And then he
  • looked up to the window; and there he saw the fair Lionesse that said
  • on high: Go thy way, Sir Beaumains, for as yet thou shalt not have
  • wholly my love, unto the time that thou be called one of the number of
  • the worthy knights. And therefore go labour in worship this
  • twelvemonth, and then thou shalt hear new tidings. Alas, fair lady,
  • said Beaumains, I have not deserved that ye should show me this
  • strangeness, and I had weened that I should have right good cheer with
  • you, and unto my power I have deserved thank, and well I am sure I have
  • bought your love with part of the best blood within my body. Fair
  • courteous knight, said Dame Lionesse, be not displeased nor over-hasty;
  • for wit you well your great travail nor good love shall not be lost,
  • for I consider your great travail and labour, your bounty and your
  • goodness as me ought to do. And therefore go on your way, and look that
  • ye be of good comfort, for all shall be for your worship and for the
  • best, and perdy a twelvemonth will soon be done, and trust me, fair
  • knight, I shall be true to you, and never to betray you, but to my
  • death I shall love you and none other. And therewithal she turned her
  • from the window, and Sir Beaumains rode awayward from the castle,
  • making great dole, and so he rode here and there and wist not where he
  • rode, till it was dark night. And then it happened him to come to a
  • poor man’s house, and there he was harboured all that night.
  • But Sir Beaumains had no rest, but wallowed and writhed for the love of
  • the lady of the castle. And so upon the morrow he took his horse and
  • rode until underne, and then he came to a broad water, and thereby was
  • a great lodge, and there he alighted to sleep and laid his head upon
  • the shield, and betook his horse to the dwarf, and commanded him to
  • watch all night.
  • Now turn we to the lady of the same castle, that thought much upon
  • Beaumains, and then she called unto her Sir Gringamore her brother, and
  • prayed him in all manner, as he loved her heartily, that he would ride
  • after Sir Beaumains: And ever have ye wait upon him till ye may find
  • him sleeping, for I am sure in his heaviness he will alight down in
  • some place, and lie him down to sleep; and therefore have ye your wait
  • upon him, and in the priviest manner ye can, take his dwarf, and go ye
  • your way with him as fast as ever ye may or Sir Beaumains awake. For my
  • sister Linet telleth me that he can tell of what kindred he is come,
  • and what is his right name. And the meanwhile I and my sister will ride
  • unto your castle to await when ye bring with you the dwarf. And then
  • when ye have brought him unto your castle, I will have him in
  • examination myself. Unto the time that I know what is his right name,
  • and of what kindred he is come, shall I never be merry at my heart.
  • Sister, said Sir Gringamore, all this shall be done after your intent.
  • And so he rode all the other day and the night till that he found Sir
  • Beaumains lying by a water, and his head upon his shield, for to sleep.
  • And then when he saw Sir Beaumains fast asleep, he came stilly stalking
  • behind the dwarf, and plucked him fast under his arm, and so he rode
  • away with him as fast as ever he might unto his own castle. And this
  • Sir Gringamore’s arms were all black, and that to him longeth. But ever
  • as he rode with the dwarf toward his castle, he cried unto his lord and
  • prayed him of help. And therewith awoke Sir Beaumains, and up he leapt
  • lightly, and saw where Sir Gringamore rode his way with the dwarf, and
  • so Sir Gringamore rode out of his sight.
  • CHAPTER XX. How Sir Beaumains rode after to rescue his dwarf, and came
  • into the castle where he was.
  • Then Sir Beaumains put on his helm anon, and buckled his shield, and
  • took his horse, and rode after him all that ever he might ride through
  • marshes, and fields, and great dales, that many times his horse and he
  • plunged over the head in deep mires, for he knew not the way, but took
  • the gainest way in that woodness, that many times he was like to
  • perish. And at the last him happened to come to a fair green way, and
  • there he met with a poor man of the country, whom he saluted and asked
  • him whether he met not with a knight upon a black horse and all black
  • harness, a little dwarf sitting behind him with heavy cheer. Sir, said
  • the poor man, here by me came Sir Gringamore the knight, with such a
  • dwarf mourning as ye say; and therefore I rede you not follow him, for
  • he is one of the periloust knights of the world, and his castle is here
  • nigh hand but two mile; therefore we advise you ride not after Sir
  • Gringamore, but if ye owe him good will.
  • So leave we Sir Beaumains riding toward the castle, and speak we of Sir
  • Gringamore and the dwarf. Anon as the dwarf was come to the castle,
  • Dame Lionesse and Dame Linet her sister, asked the dwarf where was his
  • master born, and of what lineage he was come. And but if thou tell me,
  • said Dame Lionesse, thou shalt never escape this castle, but ever here
  • to be prisoner. As for that, said the dwarf, I fear not greatly to tell
  • his name and of what kin he is come. Wit you well he is a king’s son,
  • and his mother is sister to King Arthur, and he is brother to the good
  • knight Sir Gawaine, and his name is Sir Gareth of Orkney. And now I
  • have told you his right name, I pray you, fair lady, let me go to my
  • lord again, for he will never out of this country until that he have me
  • again. And if he be angry he will do much harm or that he be stint, and
  • work you wrack in this country. As for that threatening, said Sir
  • Gringamore, be it as it be may, we will go to dinner. And so they
  • washed and went to meat, and made them merry and well at ease, and
  • because the Lady Lionesse of the castle was there, they made great joy.
  • Truly, madam, said Linet unto her sister, well may he be a king’s son,
  • for he hath many good tatches on him, for he is courteous and mild, and
  • the most suffering man that ever I met withal. For I dare say there was
  • never gentlewoman reviled man in so foul a manner as I have rebuked
  • him; and at all times he gave me goodly and meek answers again.
  • And as they sat thus talking, there came Sir Gareth in at the gate with
  • an angry countenance, and his sword drawn in his hand, and cried aloud
  • that all the castle might hear it, saying: Thou traitor, Sir
  • Gringamore, deliver me my dwarf again, or by the faith that I owe to
  • the order of knighthood, I shall do thee all the harm that I can. Then
  • Sir Gringamore looked out at a window and said, Sir Gareth of Orkney,
  • leave thy boasting words, for thou gettest not thy dwarf again. Thou
  • coward knight, said Sir Gareth, bring him with thee, and come and do
  • battle with me, and win him and take him. So will I do, said Sir
  • Gringamore, an me list, but for all thy great words thou gettest him
  • not. Ah! fair brother, said Dame Lionesse, I would he had his dwarf
  • again, for I would he were not wroth, for now he hath told me all my
  • desire I keep no more of the dwarf. And also, brother, he hath done
  • much for me, and delivered me from the Red Knight of the Red Launds,
  • and therefore, brother, I owe him my service afore all knights living.
  • And wit ye well that I love him before all other, and full fain I would
  • speak with him. But in nowise I would that he wist what I were, but
  • that I were another strange lady.
  • Well, said Sir Gringamore, sithen I know now your will, I will obey now
  • unto him. And right therewithal he went down unto Sir Gareth, and said:
  • Sir, I cry you mercy, and all that I have misdone I will amend it at
  • your will. And therefore I pray you that ye would alight, and take such
  • cheer as I can make you in this castle. Shall I have my dwarf? said Sir
  • Gareth. Yea, sir, and all the pleasaunce that I can make you, for as
  • soon as your dwarf told me what ye were and of what blood ye are come,
  • and what noble deeds ye have done in these marches, then I repented of
  • my deeds. And then Sir Gareth alighted, and there came his dwarf and
  • took his horse. O my fellow, said Sir Gareth, I have had many
  • adventures for thy sake. And so Sir Gringamore took him by the hand and
  • led him into the hall where his own wife was.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How Sir Gareth, otherwise called Beaumains, came to the
  • presence of his lady, and how they took acquaintance, and of their
  • love.
  • And then came forth Dame Lionesse arrayed like a princess, and there
  • she made him passing good cheer, and he her again; and they had goodly
  • language and lovely countenance together. And Sir Gareth thought many
  • times, Jesu, would that the lady of the Castle Perilous were so fair as
  • she was. There were all manner of games and plays, of dancing and
  • singing. And ever the more Sir Gareth beheld that lady, the more he
  • loved her; and so he burned in love that he was past himself in his
  • reason; and forth toward night they yede unto supper, and Sir Gareth
  • might not eat, for his love was so hot that he wist not where he was.
  • All these looks espied Sir Gringamore, and then at-after supper he
  • called his sister Dame Lionesse into a chamber, and said: Fair sister,
  • I have well espied your countenance betwixt you and this knight, and I
  • will, sister, that ye wit he is a full noble knight, and if ye can make
  • him to abide here I will do him all the pleasure that I can, for an ye
  • were better than ye are, ye were well bywaryd upon him. Fair brother,
  • said Dame Lionesse, I understand well that the knight is good, and come
  • he is of a noble house. Notwithstanding, I will assay him better,
  • howbeit I am most beholden to him of any earthly man; for he hath had
  • great labour for my love, and passed many a dangerous passage.
  • Right so Sir Gringamore went unto Sir Gareth, and said, Sir, make ye
  • good cheer, for ye shall have none other cause, for this lady, my
  • sister, is yours at all times, her worship saved, for wit ye well she
  • loveth you as well as ye do her, and better if better may be. An I wist
  • that, said Sir Gareth, there lived not a gladder man than I would be.
  • Upon my worship, said Sir Gringamore, trust unto my promise; and as
  • long as it liketh you ye shall sojourn with me, and this lady shall be
  • with us daily and nightly to make you all the cheer that she can. I
  • will well, said Sir Gareth, for I have promised to be nigh this country
  • this twelvemonth. And well I am sure King Arthur and other noble
  • knights will find me where that I am within this twelvemonth. For I
  • shall be sought and found, if that I be alive. And then the noble
  • knight Sir Gareth went unto the Dame Lionesse, which he then much
  • loved, and kissed her many times, and either made great joy of other.
  • And there she promised him her love certainly, to love him and none
  • other the days of her life. Then this lady, Dame Lionesse, by the
  • assent of her brother, told Sir Gareth all the truth what she was, and
  • how she was the same lady that he did battle for, and how she was lady
  • of the Castle Perilous, and there she told him how she caused her
  • brother to take away his dwarf.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How at night came an armed knight, and fought with Sir
  • Gareth, and he, sore hurt in the thigh, smote off the knight’s head.
  • For this cause, to know the certainty what was your name, and of what
  • kin ye were come.
  • And then she let fetch to-fore him Linet, the damosel that had ridden
  • with him many wildsome ways. Then was Sir Gareth more gladder than he
  • was to-fore. And then they troth-plight each other to love, and never
  • to fail whiles their life lasteth. And so they burnt both in love, that
  • they were accorded to abate their lusts secretly. And there Dame
  • Lionesse counselled Sir Gareth to sleep in none other place but in the
  • hall. And there she promised him to come to his bed a little afore
  • midnight.
  • This counsel was not so privily kept but it was understood; for they
  • were but young both, and tender of age, and had not used none such
  • crafts to-fore. Wherefore the damosel Linet was a little displeased,
  • and she thought her sister Dame Lionesse was a little over-hasty, that
  • she might not abide the time of her marriage; and for saving their
  • worship, she thought to abate their hot lusts. And so she let ordain by
  • her subtle crafts that they had not their intents neither with other,
  • as in their delights, until they were married. And so it passed on.
  • At-after supper was made clean avoidance, that every lord and lady
  • should go unto his rest. But Sir Gareth said plainly he would go no
  • farther than the hall, for in such places, he said, was convenient for
  • an errant-knight to take his rest in; and so there were ordained great
  • couches, and thereon feather beds, and there laid him down to sleep;
  • and within a while came Dame Lionesse, wrapped in a mantle furred with
  • ermine, and laid her down beside Sir Gareth. And therewithal he began
  • to kiss her. And then he looked afore him, and there he apperceived and
  • saw come an armed knight, with many lights about him; and this knight
  • had a long gisarm in his hand, and made grim countenance to smite him.
  • When Sir Gareth saw him come in that wise, he leapt out of his bed, and
  • gat in his hand his sword, and leapt straight toward that knight. And
  • when the knight saw Sir Gareth come so fiercely upon him, he smote him
  • with a foin through the thick of the thigh that the wound was a
  • shaftmon broad and had cut a-two many veins and sinews. And therewithal
  • Sir Gareth smote him upon the helm such a buffet that he fell
  • grovelling; and then he leapt over him and unlaced his helm, and smote
  • off his head from the body. And then he bled so fast that he might not
  • stand, but so he laid him down upon his bed, and there he swooned and
  • lay as he had been dead.
  • Then Dame Lionesse cried aloud, that her brother Sir Gringamore heard,
  • and came down. And when he saw Sir Gareth so shamefully wounded he was
  • sore displeased, and said: I am shamed that this noble knight is thus
  • honoured. Sir, said Sir Gringamore, how may this be, that ye be here,
  • and this noble knight wounded? Brother, she said, I can not tell you,
  • for it was not done by me, nor by mine assent. For he is my lord and I
  • am his, and he must be mine husband; therefore, my brother, I will that
  • ye wit I shame me not to be with him, nor to do him all the pleasure
  • that I can. Sister, said Sir Gringamore, and I will that ye wit it, and
  • Sir Gareth both, that it was never done by me, nor by my assent that
  • this unhappy deed was done. And there they staunched his bleeding as
  • well as they might, and great sorrow made Sir Gringamore and Dame
  • Lionesse.
  • And forthwithal came Dame Linet, and took up the head in the sight of
  • them all, and anointed it with an ointment thereas it was smitten off;
  • and in the same wise she did to the other part thereas the head stuck,
  • and then she set it together, and it stuck as fast as ever it did. And
  • the knight arose lightly up, and the damosel Linet put him in her
  • chamber. All this saw Sir Gringamore and Dame Lionesse, and so did Sir
  • Gareth; and well he espied that it was the damosel Linet, that rode
  • with him through the perilous passages. Ah well, damosel, said Sir
  • Gareth, I weened ye would not have done as ye have done. My lord
  • Gareth, said Linet, all that I have done I will avow, and all that I
  • have done shall be for your honour and worship, and to us all. And so
  • within a while Sir Gareth was nigh whole, and waxed light and jocund,
  • and sang, danced, and gamed; and he and Dame Lionesse were so hot in
  • burning love that they made their covenant at the tenth night after,
  • that she should come to his bed. And because he was wounded afore, he
  • laid his armour and his sword nigh his bed’s side.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How the said knight came again the next night and was
  • beheaded again, and how at the feast of Pentecost all the knights that
  • Sir Gareth had overcome came and yielded them to King Arthur.
  • Right as she promised she came; and she was not so soon in his bed but
  • she espied an armed knight coming toward the bed: therewithal she
  • warned Sir Gareth, and lightly through the good help of Dame Lionesse
  • he was armed; and they hurtled together with great ire and malice all
  • about the hall; and there was great light as it had been the number of
  • twenty torches both before and behind, so that Sir Gareth strained him,
  • so that his old wound brast again a-bleeding; but he was hot and
  • courageous and took no keep, but with his great force he struck down
  • that knight, and voided his helm, and struck off his head. Then he
  • hewed the head in an hundred pieces. And when he had done so he took up
  • all those pieces, and threw them out at a window into the ditches of
  • the castle; and by this done he was so faint that unnethes he might
  • stand for bleeding. And by when he was almost unarmed he fell in a
  • deadly swoon on the floor; and then Dame Lionesse cried so that Sir
  • Gringamore heard; and when he came and found Sir Gareth in that plight
  • he made great sorrow; and there he awaked Sir Gareth, and gave him a
  • drink that relieved him wonderly well; but the sorrow that Dame
  • Lionesse made there may no tongue tell, for she so fared with herself
  • as she would have died.
  • Right so came this damosel Linet before them all, and she had fetched
  • all the gobbets of the head that Sir Gareth had thrown out at a window,
  • and there she anointed them as she had done to-fore, and set them
  • together again. Well, damosel Linet, said Sir Gareth, I have not
  • deserved all this despite that ye do unto me. Sir knight, she said, I
  • have nothing done but I will avow, and all that I have done shall be to
  • your worship, and to us all. And then was Sir Gareth staunched of his
  • bleeding. But the leeches said that there was no man that bare the life
  • should heal him throughout of his wound but if they healed him that
  • caused that stroke by enchantment.
  • So leave we Sir Gareth there with Sir Gringamore and his sisters, and
  • turn we unto King Arthur, that at the next feast of Pentecost held his
  • feast; and there came the Green Knight with fifty knights, and yielded
  • them all unto King Arthur. And so there came the Red Knight his
  • brother, and yielded him to King Arthur, and three score knights with
  • him. Also there came the Blue Knight, brother to them, with an hundred
  • knights, and yielded them unto King Arthur; and the Green Knight’s name
  • was Pertolepe, and the Red Knight’s name was Perimones, and the Blue
  • Knight’s name was Sir Persant of Inde. These three brethren told King
  • Arthur how they were overcome by a knight that a damosel had with her,
  • and called him Beaumains. Jesu, said the king, I marvel what knight he
  • is, and of what lineage he is come. He was with me a twelvemonth, and
  • poorly and shamefully he was fostered, and Sir Kay in scorn named him
  • Beaumains. So right as the king stood so talking with these three
  • brethren, there came Sir Launcelot du Lake, and told the king that
  • there was come a goodly lord with six hundred knights with him.
  • Then the king went out of Carlion, for there was the feast, and there
  • came to him this lord, and saluted the king in a goodly manner. What
  • will ye, said King Arthur, and what is your errand? Sir, he said, my
  • name is the Red Knight of the Red Launds, but my name is Sir Ironside;
  • and sir, wit ye well, here I am sent to you of a knight that is called
  • Beaumains, for he won me in plain battle hand for hand, and so did
  • never no knight but he, that ever had the better of me this thirty
  • winter; the which commanded to yield me to you at your will. Ye are
  • welcome, said the king, for ye have been long a great foe to me and my
  • court, and now I trust to God I shall so entreat you that ye shall be
  • my friend. Sir, both I and these five hundred knights shall always be
  • at your summons to do you service as may lie in our powers. Jesu mercy,
  • said King Arthur, I am much beholden unto that knight that hath put so
  • his body in devoir to worship me and my court. And as to thee,
  • Ironside, that art called the Red Knight of the Red Launds, thou art
  • called a perilous knight; and if thou wilt hold of me I shall worship
  • thee and make thee knight of the Table Round; but then thou must be no
  • more a murderer. Sir, as to that, I have promised unto Sir Beaumains
  • never more to use such customs, for all the shameful customs that I
  • used I did at the request of a lady that I loved; and therefore I must
  • go unto Sir Launcelot, and unto Sir Gawaine, and ask them forgiveness
  • of the evil will I had unto them; for all that I put to death was all
  • only for the love of Sir Launcelot and of Sir Gawaine. They be here
  • now, said the king, afore thee, now may ye say to them what ye will.
  • And then he kneeled down unto Sir Launcelot, and to Sir Gawaine, and
  • prayed them of forgiveness of his enmity that ever he had against them.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How King Arthur pardoned them, and demanded of them where
  • Sir Gareth was.
  • Then goodly they said all at once, God forgive you, and we do, and pray
  • you that ye will tell us where we may find Sir Beaumains. Fair lords,
  • said Sir Ironside, I cannot tell you, for it is full hard to find him;
  • for such young knights as he is one, when they be in their adventures
  • be never abiding in no place. But to say the worship that the Red
  • Knight of the Red Launds, and Sir Persant and his brother said of
  • Beaumains, it was marvel to hear. Well, my fair lords, said King
  • Arthur, wit you well I shall do you honour for the love of Sir
  • Beaumains, and as soon as ever I meet with him I shall make you all
  • upon one day knights of the Table Round. And as to thee, Sir Persant of
  • Inde, thou hast been ever called a full noble knight, and so have ever
  • been thy three brethren called. But I marvel, said the king, that I
  • hear not of the Black Knight your brother, he was a full noble knight.
  • Sir, said Pertolepe, the Green Knight, Sir Beaumains slew him in a
  • recounter with his spear, his name was Sir Percard. That was great
  • pity, said the king, and so said many knights. For these four brethren
  • were full well known in the court of King Arthur for noble knights, for
  • long time they had holden war against the knights of the Round Table.
  • Then said Pertolepe, the Green Knight, to the king: At a passage of the
  • water of Mortaise there encountered Sir Beaumains with two brethren
  • that ever for the most part kept that passage, and they were two deadly
  • knights, and there he slew the eldest brother in the water, and smote
  • him upon the head such a buffet that he fell down in the water, and
  • there he was drowned, and his name was Sir Gherard le Breusse; and
  • after he slew the other brother upon the land, his name was Sir Arnold
  • le Breusse.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How the Queen of Orkney came to this feast of Pentecost,
  • and Sir Gawaine and his brethren came to ask her blessing.
  • So then the king and they went to meat, and were served in the best
  • manner. And as they sat at the meat, there came in the Queen of Orkney,
  • with ladies and knights a great number. And then Sir Gawaine, Sir
  • Agravaine, and Gaheris arose, and went to her and saluted her upon
  • their knees, and asked her blessing; for in fifteen year they had not
  • seen her. Then she spake on high to her brother King Arthur: Where have
  • ye done my young son Sir Gareth? He was here amongst you a twelvemonth,
  • and ye made a kitchen knave of him, the which is shame to you all.
  • Alas, where have ye done my dear son that was my joy and bliss? O dear
  • mother, said Sir Gawaine, I knew him not. Nor I, said the king, that
  • now me repenteth, but thanked be God he is proved a worshipful knight
  • as any is now living of his years, and I shall never be glad till I may
  • find him.
  • Ah, brother, said the Queen unto King Arthur, and unto Sir Gawaine, and
  • to all her sons, ye did yourself great shame when ye amongst you kept
  • my son in the kitchen and fed him like a poor hog. Fair sister, said
  • King Arthur, ye shall right well wit I knew him not, nor no more did
  • Sir Gawaine, nor his brethren; but sithen it is so, said the king, that
  • he is thus gone from us all, we must shape a remedy to find him. Also,
  • sister, meseemeth ye might have done me to wit of his coming, and then
  • an I had not done well to him ye might have blamed me. For when he came
  • to this court he came leaning upon two men’s shoulders, as though he
  • might not have gone. And then he asked me three gifts; and one he asked
  • the same day, that was that I would give him meat enough that
  • twelvemonth; and the other two gifts he asked that day a twelvemonth,
  • and that was that he might have the adventure of the damosel Linet, and
  • the third was that Sir Launcelot should make him knight when he desired
  • him. And so I granted him all his desire, and many in this court
  • marvelled that he desired his sustenance for a twelvemonth. And
  • thereby, we deemed, many of us, that he was not come of a noble house.
  • Sir, said the Queen of Orkney unto King Arthur her brother, wit ye well
  • that I sent him unto you right well armed and horsed, and worshipfully
  • beseen of his body, and gold and silver plenty to spend. It may be,
  • said the King, but thereof saw we none, save that same day as he
  • departed from us, knights told me that there came a dwarf hither
  • suddenly, and brought him armour and a good horse full well and richly
  • beseen; and thereat we all had marvel from whence that riches came,
  • that we deemed all that he was come of men of worship. Brother, said
  • the queen, all that ye say I believe, for ever sithen he was grown he
  • was marvellously witted, and ever he was faithful and true of his
  • promise. But I marvel, said she, that Sir Kay did mock him and scorn
  • him, and gave him that name Beaumains; yet, Sir Kay, said the queen,
  • named him more righteously than he weened; for I dare say an he be
  • alive, he is as fair an handed man and well disposed as any is living.
  • Sir, said Arthur, let this language be still, and by the grace of God
  • he shall be found an he be within this seven realms, and let all this
  • pass and be merry, for he is proved to be a man of worship, and that is
  • my joy.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How King Arthur sent for the Lady Lionesse, and how she
  • let cry a tourney at her castle, whereas came many knights.
  • Then said Sir Gawaine and his brethren unto Arthur, Sir, an ye will
  • give us leave, we will go and seek our brother. Nay, said Sir
  • Launcelot, that shall ye not need; and so said Sir Baudwin of Britain:
  • for as by our advice the king shall send unto Dame Lionesse a
  • messenger, and pray her that she will come to the court in all the
  • haste that she may, and doubt ye not she will come; and then she may
  • give you best counsel where ye shall find him. This is well said of
  • you, said the king. So then goodly letters were made, and the messenger
  • sent forth, that night and day he went till he came unto the Castle
  • Perilous. And then the lady Dame Lionesse was sent for, thereas she was
  • with Sir Gringamore her brother and Sir Gareth. And when she understood
  • this message, she bade him ride on his way unto King Arthur, and she
  • would come after in all goodly haste. Then when she came to Sir
  • Gringamore and to Sir Gareth, she told them all how King Arthur had
  • sent for her. That is because of me, said Sir Gareth. Now advise me,
  • said Dame Lionesse, what shall I say, and in what manner I shall rule
  • me. My lady and my love, said Sir Gareth, I pray you in no wise be ye
  • aknowen where I am; but well I wot my mother is there and all my
  • brethren, and they will take upon them to seek me, I wot well that they
  • do. But this, madam, I would ye said and advised the king when he
  • questioned with you of me. Then may ye say, this is your advice that,
  • an it like his good grace, ye will do make a cry against the feast of
  • the Assumption of our Lady, that what knight there proveth him best he
  • shall wield you and all your land. And if so be that he be a wedded
  • man, that his wife shall have the degree, and a coronal of gold beset
  • with stones of virtue to the value of a thousand pound, and a white
  • gerfalcon.
  • So Dame Lionesse departed and came to King Arthur, where she was nobly
  • received, and there she was sore questioned of the king and of the
  • Queen of Orkney. And she answered, where Sir Gareth was she could not
  • tell. But thus much she said unto Arthur: Sir, I will let cry a
  • tournament that shall be done before my castle at the Assumption of our
  • Lady, and the cry shall be this: that you, my lord Arthur, shall be
  • there, and your knights, and I will purvey that my knights shall be
  • against yours; and then I am sure ye shall hear of Sir Gareth. This is
  • well advised, said King Arthur; and so she departed. And the king and
  • she made great provision to that tournament.
  • When Dame Lionesse was come to the Isle of Avilion, that was the same
  • isle thereas her brother Sir Gringamore dwelt, then she told them all
  • how she had done, and what promise she had made to King Arthur. Alas,
  • said Sir Gareth, I have been so wounded with unhappiness sithen I came
  • into this castle that I shall not be able to do at that tournament like
  • a knight; for I was never thoroughly whole since I was hurt. Be ye of
  • good cheer, said the damosel Linet, for I undertake within these
  • fifteen days to make ye whole, and as lusty as ever ye were. And then
  • she laid an ointment and a salve to him as it pleased to her, that he
  • was never so fresh nor so lusty. Then said the damosel Linet: Send you
  • unto Sir Persant of Inde, and assummon him and his knights to be here
  • with you as they have promised. Also, that ye send unto Sir Ironside,
  • that is the Red Knight of the Red Launds, and charge him that he be
  • ready with you with his whole sum of knights, and then shall ye be able
  • to match with King Arthur and his knights. So this was done, and all
  • knights were sent for unto the Castle Perilous; and then the Red Knight
  • answered and said unto Dame Lionesse, and to Sir Gareth, Madam, and my
  • lord Sir Gareth, ye shall understand that I have been at the court of
  • King Arthur, and Sir Persant of Inde and his brethren, and there we
  • have done our homage as ye commanded us. Also Sir Ironside said, I have
  • taken upon me with Sir Persant of Inde and his brethren to hold part
  • against my lord Sir Launcelot and the knights of that court. And this
  • have I done for the love of my lady Dame Lionesse, and you my lord Sir
  • Gareth. Ye have well done, said Sir Gareth; but wit you well ye shall
  • be full sore matched with the most noble knights of the world;
  • therefore we must purvey us of good knights, where we may get them.
  • That is well said, said Sir Persant, and worshipfully.
  • And so the cry was made in England, Wales, and Scotland, Ireland,
  • Cornwall, and in all the Out Isles, and in Brittany and in many
  • countries; that at the feast of our Lady the Assumption next coming,
  • men should come to the Castle Perilous beside the Isle of Avilion; and
  • there all the knights that there came should have the choice whether
  • them list to be on the one party with the knights of the castle, or on
  • the other party with King Arthur. And two months was to the day that
  • the tournament should be. And so there came many good knights that were
  • at their large, and held them for the most part against King Arthur and
  • his knights of the Round Table and came in the side of them of the
  • castle. For Sir Epinogrus was the first, and he was the king’s son of
  • Northumberland, and Sir Palamides the Saracen was another, and Sir
  • Safere his brother, and Sir Segwarides his brother, but they were
  • christened, and Sir Malegrine another, and Sir Brian de les Isles, a
  • noble knight, and Sir Grummore Grummursum, a good knight of Scotland,
  • and Sir Carados of the dolorous tower, a noble knight, and Sir Turquine
  • his brother, and Sir Arnold and Sir Gauter, two brethren, good knights
  • of Cornwall. There came Sir Tristram de Liones, and with him Sir Dinas,
  • the Seneschal, and Sir Sadok; but this Sir Tristram was not at that
  • time knight of the Table Round, but he was one of the best knights of
  • the world. And so all these noble knights accompanied them with the
  • lady of the castle, and with the Red Knight of the Red Launds; but as
  • for Sir Gareth, he would not take upon him more but as other mean
  • knights.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How King Arthur went to the tournament with his knights,
  • and how the lady received him worshipfully, and how the knights
  • encountered.
  • And then there came with King Arthur Sir Gawaine, Agravaine, Gaheris,
  • his brethren. And then his nephews Sir Uwaine le Blanchemains, and Sir
  • Aglovale, Sir Tor, Sir Percivale de Galis, and Sir Lamorak de Galis.
  • Then came Sir Launcelot du Lake with his brethren, nephews, and
  • cousins, as Sir Lionel, Sir Ector de Maris, Sir Bors de Ganis, and Sir
  • Galihodin, Sir Galihud, and many more of Sir Launcelot’s blood, and Sir
  • Dinadan, Sir La Cote Male Taile, his brother, a good knight, and Sir
  • Sagramore, a good knight; and all the most part of the Round Table.
  • Also there came with King Arthur these knights, the King of Ireland,
  • King Agwisance, and the King of Scotland, King Carados and King Uriens
  • of the land of Gore, and King Bagdemagus and his son Sir Meliaganus,
  • and Sir Galahault the noble prince. All these kings, princes, and
  • earls, barons, and other noble knights, as Sir Brandiles, Sir Uwaine
  • les Avoutres, and Sir Kay, Sir Bedivere, Sir Meliot de Logres, Sir
  • Petipase of Winchelsea, Sir Godelake: all these came with King Arthur,
  • and more that cannot be rehearsed.
  • Now leave we of these kings and knights, and let us speak of the great
  • array that was made within the castle and about the castle for both
  • parties. The Lady Dame Lionesse ordained great array upon her part for
  • her noble knights, for all manner of lodging and victual that came by
  • land and by water, that there lacked nothing for her party, nor for the
  • other, but there was plenty to be had for gold and silver for King
  • Arthur and his knights. And then there came the harbingers from King
  • Arthur for to harbour him, and his kings, dukes, earls, barons, and
  • knights. And then Sir Gareth prayed Dame Lionesse and the Red Knight of
  • the Red Launds, and Sir Persant and his brother, and Sir Gringamore,
  • that in no wise there should none of them tell not his name, and make
  • no more of him than of the least knight that there was, For, he said, I
  • will not be known of neither more nor less, neither at the beginning
  • neither at the ending. Then Dame Lionesse said unto Sir Gareth: Sir, I
  • will lend you a ring, but I would pray you as you love me heartily let
  • me have it again when the tournament is done, for that ring increaseth
  • my beauty much more than it is of himself. And the virtue of my ring is
  • that, that is green it will turn to red, and that is red it will turn
  • in likeness to green, and that is blue it will turn to likeness of
  • white, and that is white it will turn in likeness to blue, and so it
  • will do of all manner of colours. Also who that beareth my ring shall
  • lose no blood, and for great love I will give you this ring. Gramercy,
  • said Sir Gareth, mine own lady, for this ring is passing meet for me,
  • for it will turn all manner of likeness that I am in, and that shall
  • cause me that I shall not be known. Then Sir Gringamore gave Sir Gareth
  • a bay courser that was a passing good horse; also he gave him good
  • armour and sure, and a noble sword that sometime Sir Gringamore’s
  • father won upon an heathen tyrant. And so thus every knight made him
  • ready to that tournament. And King Arthur was come two days to-fore the
  • Assumption of our Lady. And there was all manner of royalty of all
  • minstrelsy that might be found. Also there came Queen Guenever and the
  • Queen of Orkney, Sir Gareth’s mother.
  • And upon the Assumption Day, when mass and matins were done, there were
  • heralds with trumpets commanded to blow to the field. And so there came
  • out Sir Epinogrus, the king’s son of Northumberland, from the castle,
  • and there encountered with him Sir Sagramore le Desirous, and either of
  • them brake their spears to their hands. And then came in Sir Palamides
  • out of the castle, and there encountered with him Gawaine, and either
  • of them smote other so hard that both the good knights and their horses
  • fell to the earth. And then knights of either party rescued their
  • knights. And then came in Sir Safere and Sir Segwarides, brethren to
  • Sir Palamides; and there encountered Sir Agravaine with Sir Safere and
  • Sir Gaheris encountered with Sir Segwarides. So Sir Safere smote down
  • Agravaine, Sir Gawaine’s brother; and Sir Segwarides, Sir Safere’s
  • brother. And Sir Malegrine, a knight of the castle, encountered with
  • Sir Uwaine le Blanchemains, and there Sir Uwaine gave Sir Malegrine a
  • fall, that he had almost broke his neck.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How the knights bare them in the battle.
  • Then Sir Brian de les Isles and Grummore Grummursum, knights of the
  • castle, encountered with Sir Aglovale, and Sir Tor smote down Sir
  • Grummore Grummursum to the earth. Then came in Sir Carados of the
  • dolorous tower, and Sir Turquine, knights of the castle; and there
  • encountered with them Sir Percivale de Galis and Sir Lamorak de Galis,
  • that were two brethren. And there encountered Sir Percivale with Sir
  • Carados, and either brake their spears unto their hands, and then Sir
  • Turquine with Sir Lamorak, and either of them smote down other’s horse
  • and all to the earth, and either parties rescued other, and horsed them
  • again. And Sir Arnold and Sir Gauter, knights of the castle,
  • encountered with Sir Brandiles and Sir Kay, and these four knights
  • encountered mightily, and brake their spears to their hands. Then came
  • in Sir Tristram, Sir Sadok, and Sir Dinas, knights of the castle, and
  • there encountered Sir Tristram with Sir Bedivere, and there Sir
  • Bedivere was smitten to the earth both horse and man. And Sir Sadok
  • encountered with Sir Petipase, and there Sir Sadok was overthrown. And
  • there Uwaine les Avoutres smote down Sir Dinas, the Seneschal. Then
  • came in Sir Persant of Inde, a knight of the castle, and there
  • encountered with him Sir Launcelot du Lake, and there he smote Sir
  • Persant, horse and man, to the earth. Then came Sir Pertolepe from the
  • castle, and there encountered with him Sir Lionel, and there Sir
  • Pertolepe, the Green Knight, smote down Sir Lionel, brother to Sir
  • Launcelot. All this was marked by noble heralds, who bare him best, and
  • their names.
  • And then came into the field Sir Perimones, the Red Knight, Sir
  • Persant’s brother, that was a knight of the castle, and he encountered
  • with Sir Ector de Maris, and either smote other so hard that both their
  • horses and they fell to the earth. And then came in the Red Knight of
  • the Red Launds, and Sir Gareth, from the castle, and there encountered
  • with them Sir Bors de Ganis and Sir Bleoberis, and there the Red Knight
  • and Sir Bors [either] smote other so hard that their spears brast, and
  • their horses fell grovelling to the earth. Then Sir Bleoberis brake his
  • spear upon Sir Gareth, but of that stroke Sir Bleoberis fell to the
  • earth. When Sir Galihodin saw that he bade Sir Gareth keep him, and Sir
  • Gareth smote him to the earth. Then Sir Galihud gat a spear to avenge
  • his brother, and in the same wise Sir Gareth served him, and Sir
  • Dinadan and his brother, La Cote Male Taile, and Sir Sagramore le
  • Desirous, and Sir Dodinas le Savage. All these he bare down with one
  • spear.
  • When King Agwisance of Ireland saw Sir Gareth fare so, he marvelled
  • what he might be that one time seemed green, and another time, at his
  • again coming, he seemed blue. And thus at every course that he rode to
  • and fro he changed his colour, so that there might neither king nor
  • knight have ready cognisance of him. Then Sir Agwisance, the King of
  • Ireland, encountered with Sir Gareth, and there Sir Gareth smote him
  • from his horse, saddle and all. And then came King Carados of Scotland,
  • and Sir Gareth smote him down horse and man. And in the same wise he
  • served King Uriens of the land of Gore. And then came in Sir
  • Bagdemagus, and Sir Gareth smote him down, horse and man, to the earth.
  • And Bagdemagus’ son, Meliganus, brake a spear upon Sir Gareth mightily
  • and knightly. And then Sir Galahault, the noble prince, cried on high:
  • Knight with the many colours, well hast thou jousted; now make thee
  • ready that I may joust with thee. Sir Gareth heard him, and he gat a
  • great spear, and so they encountered together, and there the prince
  • brake his spear; but Sir Gareth smote him upon the left side of the
  • helm that he reeled here and there, and he had fallen down had not his
  • men recovered him.
  • So God me help, said King Arthur, that same knight with the many
  • colours is a good knight. Wherefore the king called unto him Sir
  • Launcelot, and prayed him to encounter with that knight. Sir, said
  • Launcelot, I may well find in my heart for to forbear him as at this
  • time, for he hath had travail enough this day; and when a good knight
  • doth so well upon some day, it is no good knight’s part to let him of
  • his worship, and namely, when he seeth a knight hath done so great
  • labour; for peradventure, said Sir Launcelot, his quarrel is here this
  • day, and peradventure he is best beloved with this lady of all that be
  • here; for I see well he paineth him and enforceth him to do great
  • deeds, and therefore, said Sir Launcelot, as for me, this day he shall
  • have the honour; though it lay in my power to put him from it I would
  • not.
  • CHAPTER XXIX. Yet of the said tournament.
  • Then when this was done there was drawing of swords, and then there
  • began a sore tournament. And there did Sir Lamorak marvellous deeds of
  • arms; and betwixt Sir Lamorak and Sir Ironside, that was the Red Knight
  • of the Red Launds, there was strong battle; and betwixt Sir Palamides
  • and Bleoberis there was a strong battle; and Sir Gawaine and Sir
  • Tristram met, and there Sir Gawaine had the worse, for he pulled Sir
  • Gawaine from his horse, and there he was long upon foot, and defouled.
  • Then came in Sir Launcelot, and he smote Sir Turquine, and he him; and
  • then came Sir Carados his brother, and both at once they assailed him,
  • and he as the most noblest knight of the world worshipfully fought with
  • them both, that all men wondered of the noblesse of Sir Launcelot. And
  • then came in Sir Gareth, and knew that it was Sir Launcelot that fought
  • with the two perilous knights. And then Sir Gareth came with his good
  • horse and hurtled them in-sunder, and no stroke would he smite to Sir
  • Launcelot. That espied Sir Launcelot, and deemed it should be the good
  • knight Sir Gareth: and then Sir Gareth rode here and there, and smote
  • on the right hand and on the left hand, and all the folk might well
  • espy where that he rode. And by fortune he met with his brother Sir
  • Gawaine, and there he put Sir Gawaine to the worse, for he put off his
  • helm, and so he served five or six knights of the Round Table, that all
  • men said he put him in the most pain, and best he did his devoir. For
  • when Sir Tristram beheld him how he first jousted and after fought so
  • well with a sword, then he rode unto Sir Ironside and to Sir Persant of
  • Inde, and asked them, by their faith, What manner a knight is yonder
  • knight that seemeth in so many divers colours? Truly, meseemeth, said
  • Tristram, that he putteth himself in great pain, for he never ceaseth.
  • Wot ye not what he is? said Sir Ironside. No, said Sir Tristram. Then
  • shall ye know that this is he that loveth the lady of the castle, and
  • she him again; and this is he that won me when I besieged the lady of
  • this castle, and this is he that won Sir Persant of Inde, and his three
  • brethren. What is his name, said Sir Tristram, and of what blood is he
  • come? He was called in the court of King Arthur, Beaumains, but his
  • right name is Sir Gareth of Orkney, brother to Sir Gawaine. By my head,
  • said Sir Tristram, he is a good knight, and a big man of arms, and if
  • he be young he shall prove a full noble knight. He is but a child, they
  • all said, and of Sir Launcelot he was made knight. Therefore he is
  • mickle the better, said Tristram. And then Sir Tristram, Sir Ironside,
  • Sir Persant, and his brother, rode together for to help Sir Gareth; and
  • then there were given many strong strokes.
  • And then Sir Gareth rode out on the one side to amend his helm; and
  • then said his dwarf: Take me your ring, that ye lose it not while that
  • ye drink. And so when he had drunk he gat on his helm, and eagerly took
  • his horse and rode into the field, and left his ring with his dwarf;
  • and the dwarf was glad the ring was from him, for then he wist well he
  • should be known. And then when Sir Gareth was in the field all folks
  • saw him well and plainly that he was in yellow colours; and there he
  • rased off helms and pulled down knights, that King Arthur had marvel
  • what knight he was, for the king saw by his hair that it was the same
  • knight.
  • CHAPTER XXX. How Sir Gareth was espied by the heralds, and how he
  • escaped out of the field.
  • But before he was in so many colours, and now he is but in one colour;
  • that is yellow. Now go, said King Arthur unto divers heralds, and ride
  • about him, and espy what manner knight he is, for I have spered of many
  • knights this day that be upon his party, and all say they know him not.
  • And so an herald rode nigh Gareth as he could; and there he saw written
  • about his helm in gold, This helm is Sir Gareth of Orkney.
  • Then the herald cried as he were wood, and many heralds with him:—This
  • is Sir Gareth of Orkney in the yellow arms; that by all kings and
  • knights of Arthur’s beheld him and awaited; and then they pressed all
  • to behold him, and ever the heralds cried: This is Sir Gareth of
  • Orkney, King Lot’s son.
  • And when Sir Gareth espied that he was discovered, then he doubled his
  • strokes, and smote down Sir Sagramore, and his brother Sir Gawaine.
  • O brother, said Sir Gawaine, I weened ye would not have stricken me.
  • So when he heard him say so he thrang here and there, and so with great
  • pain he gat out of the press, and there he met with his dwarf. O boy,
  • said Sir Gareth, thou hast beguiled me foul this day that thou kept my
  • ring; give it me anon again, that I may hide my body withal; and so he
  • took it him. And then they all wist not where he was become; and Sir
  • Gawaine had in manner espied where Sir Gareth rode, and then he rode
  • after with all his might. That espied Sir Gareth, and rode lightly into
  • the forest, that Sir Gawaine wist not where he was become. And when Sir
  • Gareth wist that Sir Gawaine was passed, he asked the dwarf of best
  • counsel. Sir, said the dwarf, meseemeth it were best, now that ye are
  • escaped from spying, that ye send my lady Dame Lionesse her ring. It is
  • well advised, said Sir Gareth; now have it here and bear it to her, and
  • say that I recommend me unto her good grace, and say her I will come
  • when I may, and I pray her to be true and faithful to me as I will be
  • to her. Sir, said the dwarf, it shall be done as ye command: and so he
  • rode his way, and did his errand unto the lady. Then she said, Where is
  • my knight, Sir Gareth? Madam, said the dwarf, he bade me say that he
  • would not be long from you. And so lightly the dwarf came again unto
  • Sir Gareth, that would full fain have had a lodging, for he had need to
  • be reposed. And then fell there a thunder and a rain, as heaven and
  • earth should go together. And Sir Gareth was not a little weary, for of
  • all that day he had but little rest, neither his horse nor he. So this
  • Sir Gareth rode so long in that forest until the night came. And ever
  • it lightened and thundered, as it had been wood. At the last by fortune
  • he came to a castle, and there he heard the waits upon the walls.
  • CHAPTER XXXI. How Sir Gareth came to a castle where he was well lodged,
  • and he jousted with a knight and slew him.
  • Then Sir Gareth rode unto the barbican of the castle, and prayed the
  • porter fair to let him into the castle. The porter answered ungoodly
  • again, and said, Thou gettest no lodging here. Fair sir, say not so,
  • for I am a knight of King Arthur’s, and pray the lord or the lady of
  • this castle to give me harbour for the love of King Arthur. Then the
  • porter went unto the duchess, and told her how there was a knight of
  • King Arthur’s would have harbour. Let him in, said the duchess, for I
  • will see that knight, and for King Arthur’s sake he shall not be
  • harbourless. Then she yode up into a tower over the gate, with great
  • torchlight.
  • When Sir Gareth saw that torch-light he cried on high: Whether thou be
  • lord or lady, giant or champion, I take no force so that I may have
  • harbour this night; and if it so be that I must needs fight, spare me
  • not to-morn when I have rested me, for both I and mine horse be weary.
  • Sir knight, said the lady, thou speakest knightly and boldly; but wit
  • thou well the lord of this castle loveth not King Arthur, nor none of
  • his court, for my lord hath ever been against him; and therefore thou
  • were better not to come within this castle; for an thou come in this
  • night, thou must come in under such form, that wheresomever thou meet
  • my lord, by stigh or by street, thou must yield thee to him as
  • prisoner. Madam, said Sir Gareth, what is your lord, and what is his
  • name? Sir, my lord’s name is the Duke de la Rowse. Well madam, said Sir
  • Gareth, I shall promise you in what place I meet your lord I shall
  • yield me unto him and to his good grace; with that I understand he will
  • do me no harm: and if I understand that he will, I will release myself
  • an I can with my spear and my sword. Ye say well, said the duchess; and
  • then she let the drawbridge down, and so he rode into the hall, and
  • there he alighted, and his horse was led into a stable; and in the hall
  • he unarmed him and said, Madam, I will not out of this hall this night;
  • and when it is daylight, let see who will have ado with me, he shall
  • find me ready. Then was he set unto supper, and had many good dishes.
  • Then Sir Gareth list well to eat, and knightly he ate his meat, and
  • eagerly; there was many a fair lady by him, and some said they never
  • saw a goodlier man nor so well of eating. Then they made him passing
  • good cheer, and shortly when he had supped his bed was made there; so
  • he rested him all night.
  • And on the morn he heard mass, and brake his fast and took his leave at
  • the duchess, and at them all; and thanked her goodly of her lodging,
  • and of his good cheer; and then she asked him his name. Madam, he said,
  • truly my name is Gareth of Orkney, and some men call me Beaumains. Then
  • knew she well it was the same knight that fought for Dame Lionesse. So
  • Sir Gareth departed and rode up into a mountain, and there met him a
  • knight, his name was Sir Bendelaine, and said to Sir Gareth: Thou shalt
  • not pass this way, for either thou shalt joust with me, or else be my
  • prisoner. Then will I joust, said Sir Gareth. And so they let their
  • horses run, and there Sir Gareth smote him throughout the body; and Sir
  • Bendelaine rode forth to his castle there beside, and there died. So
  • Sir Gareth would have rested him, and he came riding to Bendelaine’s
  • castle. Then his knights and servants espied that it was he that had
  • slain their lord. Then they armed twenty good men, and came out and
  • assailed Sir Gareth; and so he had no spear, but his sword, and put his
  • shield afore him; and there they brake their spears upon him, and they
  • assailed him passingly sore. But ever Sir Gareth defended him as a
  • knight.
  • CHAPTER XXXII. How Sir Gareth fought with a knight that held within his
  • castle thirty ladies, and how he slew him.
  • So when they saw that they might not overcome him, they rode from him,
  • and took their counsel to slay his horse; and so they came in upon Sir
  • Gareth, and with spears they slew his horse, and then they assailed him
  • hard. But when he was on foot, there was none that he fought but he
  • gave him such a buffet that he did never recover. So he slew them by
  • one and one till they were but four, and there they fled; and Sir
  • Gareth took a good horse that was one of theirs, and rode his way.
  • Then he rode a great pace till that he came to a castle, and there he
  • heard much mourning of ladies and gentlewomen. So there came by him a
  • page. What noise is this, said Sir Gareth, that I hear within this
  • castle? Sir knight, said the page, here be within this castle thirty
  • ladies, and all they be widows; for here is a knight that waiteth daily
  • upon this castle, and his name is the Brown Knight without Pity, and he
  • is the periloust knight that now liveth; and therefore sir, said the
  • page, I rede you flee. Nay, said Sir Gareth, I will not flee though
  • thou be afeard of him. And then the page saw where came the Brown
  • Knight: Lo, said the page, yonder he cometh. Let me deal with him, said
  • Sir Gareth. And when either of other had a sight they let their horses
  • run, and the Brown Knight brake his spear, and Sir Gareth smote him
  • throughout the body, that he overthrew him to the ground stark dead. So
  • Sir Gareth rode into the castle, and prayed the ladies that he might
  • repose him. Alas, said the ladies, ye may not be lodged here. Make him
  • good cheer, said the page, for this knight hath slain your enemy. Then
  • they all made him good cheer as lay in their power. But wit ye well
  • they made him good cheer, for they might none otherwise do, for they
  • were but poor.
  • And so on the morn he went to mass, and there he saw the thirty ladies
  • kneel, and lay grovelling upon divers tombs, making great dole and
  • sorrow. Then Sir Gareth wist well that in the tombs lay their lords.
  • Fair ladies, said Sir Gareth, ye must at the next feast of Pentecost be
  • at the court of King Arthur, and say that I, Sir Gareth, sent you
  • thither. We shall do this, said the ladies. So he departed, and by
  • fortune he came to a mountain, and there he found a goodly knight that
  • bade him, Abide sir knight, and joust with me. What are ye? said Sir
  • Gareth. My name is, said he, the Duke de la Rowse. Ah sir, ye are the
  • same knight that I lodged once in your castle; and there I made promise
  • unto your lady that I should yield me unto you. Ah, said the duke, art
  • thou that proud knight that profferest to fight with my knights;
  • therefore make thee ready, for I will have ado with you. So they let
  • their horses run, and there Sir Gareth smote the duke down from his
  • horse. But the duke lightly avoided his horse, and dressed his shield
  • and drew his sword, and bade Sir Gareth alight and fight with him. So
  • he did alight, and they did great battle together more than an hour,
  • and either hurt other full sore. At the last Sir Gareth gat the duke to
  • the earth, and would have slain him, and then he yield him to him. Then
  • must ye go, said Sir Gareth, unto Sir Arthur my lord at the next feast,
  • and say that I, Sir Gareth of Orkney, sent you unto him. It shall be
  • done, said the duke, and I will do to you homage and fealty with an
  • hundred knights with me; and all the days of my life to do you service
  • where ye will command me.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII. How Sir Gareth and Sir Gawaine fought each against
  • other, and how they knew each other by the damosel Linet.
  • So the duke departed, and Sir Gareth stood there alone; and there he
  • saw an armed knight coming toward him. Then Sir Gareth took the duke’s
  • shield, and mounted upon horseback, and so without biding they ran
  • together as it had been the thunder. And there that knight hurt Sir
  • Gareth under the side with his spear. And then they alighted and drew
  • their swords, and gave great strokes that the blood trailed to the
  • ground. And so they fought two hours.
  • At the last there came the damosel Linet, that some men called the
  • damosel Savage, and she came riding upon an ambling mule; and there she
  • cried all on high, Sir Gawaine, Sir Gawaine, leave thy fighting with
  • thy brother Sir Gareth.
  • And when he heard her say so he threw away his shield and his sword,
  • and ran to Sir Gareth, and took him in his arms, and sithen kneeled
  • down and asked him mercy.
  • What are ye, said Sir Gareth, that right now were so strong and so
  • mighty, and now so suddenly yield you to me? O Gareth, I am your
  • brother Sir Gawaine, that for your sake have had great sorrow and
  • labour.
  • Then Sir Gareth unlaced his helm, and kneeled down to him, and asked
  • him mercy. Then they rose both, and embraced either other in their
  • arms, and wept a great while or they might speak, and either of them
  • gave other the prize of the battle. And there were many kind words
  • between them.
  • Alas, my fair brother, said Sir Gawaine, perdy I owe of right to
  • worship you an ye were not my brother, for ye have worshipped King
  • Arthur and all his court, for ye have sent me more worshipful knights
  • this twelvemonth than six the best of the Round Table have done, except
  • Sir Launcelot.
  • Then came the damosel Savage that was the Lady Linet, that rode with
  • Sir Gareth so long, and there she did staunch Sir Gareth’s wounds and
  • Sir Gawaine’s. Now what will ye do? said the damosel Savage; meseemeth
  • that it were well done that Arthur had witting of you both, for your
  • horses are so bruised that they may not bear. Now, fair damosel, said
  • Sir Gawaine, I pray you ride unto my lord mine uncle, King Arthur, and
  • tell him what adventure is to me betid here, and I suppose he will not
  • tarry long. Then she took her mule, and lightly she came to King Arthur
  • that was but two mile thence. And when she had told him tidings the
  • king bade get him a palfrey. And when he was upon his back he bade the
  • lords and ladies come after, who that would; and there was saddling and
  • bridling of queens’ horses and princes’ horses, and well was him that
  • soonest might be ready.
  • So when the king came thereas they were, he saw Sir Gawaine and Sir
  • Gareth sit upon a little hill-side, and then the king avoided his
  • horse. And when he came nigh Sir Gareth he would have spoken but he
  • might not; and therewith he sank down in a swoon for gladness. And so
  • they stert unto their uncle, and required him of his good grace to be
  • of good comfort. Wit ye well the king made great joy, and many a
  • piteous complaint he made to Sir Gareth, and ever he wept as he had
  • been a child. With that came his mother, the Queen of Orkney, Dame
  • Morgawse, and when she saw Sir Gareth readily in the visage she might
  • not weep, but suddenly fell down in a swoon, and lay there a great
  • while like as she had been dead. And then Sir Gareth recomforted his
  • mother in such wise that she recovered and made good cheer. Then the
  • king commanded that all manner of knights that were under his
  • obeissance should make their lodging right there for the love of his
  • nephews. And so it was done, and all manner of purveyance purveyed,
  • that there lacked nothing that might be gotten of tame nor wild for
  • gold or silver. And then by the means of the damosel Savage Sir Gawaine
  • and Sir Gareth were healed of their wounds; and there they sojourned
  • eight days.
  • Then said King Arthur unto the damosel Savage: I marvel that your
  • sister, Dame Lionesse, cometh not here to me, and in especial that she
  • cometh not to visit her knight, my nephew Sir Gareth, that hath had so
  • much travail for her love. My lord, said the damosel Linet, ye must of
  • your good grace hold her excused, for she knoweth not that my lord, Sir
  • Gareth, is here. Go then for her, said King Arthur, that we may be
  • appointed what is best to be done, according to the pleasure of my
  • nephew. Sir, said the damosel, that shall be done, and so she rode unto
  • her sister. And as lightly as she might she made her ready; and she
  • came on the morn with her brother Sir Gringamore, and with her forty
  • knights. And so when she was come she had all the cheer that might be
  • done, both of the king, and of many other kings and queens.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV. How Sir Gareth acknowledged that they loved each other
  • to King Arthur, and of the appointment of their wedding.
  • And among all these ladies she was named the fairest, and peerless.
  • Then when Sir Gawaine saw her there was many a goodly look and goodly
  • words, that all men of worship had joy to behold them. Then came King
  • Arthur and many other kings, and Dame Guenever, and the Queen of
  • Orkney. And there the king asked his nephew, Sir Gareth, whether he
  • would have that lady as paramour, or to have her to his wife. My lord,
  • wit you well that I love her above all ladies living. Now, fair lady,
  • said King Arthur, what say ye? Most noble King, said Dame Lionesse, wit
  • you well that my lord, Sir Gareth, is to me more liefer to have and
  • wield as my husband, than any king or prince that is christened; and if
  • I may not have him I promise you I will never have none. For, my lord
  • Arthur, said Dame Lionesse, wit ye well he is my first love, and he
  • shall be the last; and if ye will suffer him to have his will and free
  • choice I dare say he will have me. That is truth, said Sir Gareth; an I
  • have not you and wield not you as my wife, there shall never lady nor
  • gentlewoman rejoice me. What, nephew, said the king, is the wind in
  • that door? for wit ye well I would not for the stint of my crown to be
  • causer to withdraw your hearts; and wit ye well ye cannot love so well
  • but I shall rather increase it than distress it. And also ye shall have
  • my love and my lordship in the uttermost wise that may lie in my power.
  • And in the same wise said Sir Gareth’s mother.
  • Then there was made a provision for the day of marriage; and by the
  • king’s advice it was provided that it should be at Michaelmas
  • following, at Kink Kenadon by the seaside, for there is a plentiful
  • country. And so it was cried in all the places through the realm. And
  • then Sir Gareth sent his summons to all these knights and ladies that
  • he had won in battle to-fore, that they should be at his day of
  • marriage at Kink Kenadon by the sands.
  • And then Dame Lionesse, and the damosel Linet with Sir Gringamore, rode
  • to their castle; and a goodly and a rich ring she gave to Sir Gareth,
  • and he gave her another. And King Arthur gave her a rich pair of bee of
  • gold; and so she departed.
  • And King Arthur and his fellowship rode toward Kink Kenadon, and Sir
  • Gareth brought his lady on the way, and so came to the king again and
  • rode with him.
  • Lord! the great cheer that Sir Launcelot made of Sir Gareth and he of
  • him, for there was never no knight that Sir Gareth loved so well as he
  • did Sir Launcelot; and ever for the most part he would be in Sir
  • Launcelot’s company; for after Sir Gareth had espied Sir Gawaine’s
  • conditions, he withdrew himself from his brother, Sir Gawaine’s,
  • fellowship, for he was vengeable, and where he hated he would be
  • avenged with murder, and that hated Sir Gareth.
  • CHAPTER XXXV. Of the Great Royalty, and what officers were made at the
  • feast of the wedding, and of the jousts at the feast.
  • So it drew fast to Michaelmas; and thither came Dame Lionesse, the lady
  • of the Castle Perilous, and her sister, Dame Linet, with Sir
  • Gringamore, her brother, with them for he had the conduct of these
  • ladies. And there they were lodged at the device of King Arthur. And
  • upon Michaelmas Day the Bishop of Canterbury made the wedding betwixt
  • Sir Gareth and the Lady Lionesse with great solemnity. And King Arthur
  • made Gaheris to wed the Damosel Savage, that was Dame Linet; and King
  • Arthur made Sir Agravaine to wed Dame Lionesse’s niece, a fair lady,
  • her name was Dame Laurel.
  • And so when this solemnization was done, then came in the Green Knight,
  • Sir Pertolepe, with thirty knights, and there he did homage and fealty
  • to Sir Gareth, and these knights to hold of him for evermore. Also Sir
  • Pertolepe said: I pray you that at this feast I may be your
  • chamberlain. With a good will, said Sir Gareth sith it liketh you to
  • take so simple an office. Then came in the Red Knight, with three score
  • knights with him, and did to Sir Gareth homage and fealty, and all
  • those knights to hold of him for evermore. And then this Sir Perimones
  • prayed Sir Gareth to grant him to be his chief butler at that high
  • feast. I will well, said Sir Gareth, that ye have this office, and it
  • were better. Then came in Sir Persant of Inde, with an hundred knights
  • with him, and there he did homage and fealty, and all his knights
  • should do him service, and hold their lands of him for ever; and there
  • he prayed Sir Gareth to make him his sewer-chief at the feast. I will
  • well, said Sir Gareth, that ye have it and it were better. Then came
  • the Duke de la Rowse with an hundred knights with him, and there he did
  • homage and fealty to Sir Gareth, and so to hold their lands of him for
  • ever. And he required Sir Gareth that he might serve him of the wine
  • that day of that feast. I will well, said Sir Gareth, and it were
  • better. Then came in the Red Knight of the Red Launds, that was Sir
  • Ironside, and he brought with him three hundred knights, and there he
  • did homage and fealty, and all these knights to hold their lands of him
  • for ever. And then he asked Sir Gareth to be his carver. I will well,
  • said Sir Gareth, an it please you.
  • Then came into the court thirty ladies, and all they seemed widows, and
  • those thirty ladies brought with them many fair gentlewomen. And all
  • they kneeled down at once unto King Arthur and unto Sir Gareth, and
  • there all those ladies told the king how Sir Gareth delivered them from
  • the dolorous tower, and slew the Brown Knight without Pity: And
  • therefore we, and our heirs for evermore, will do homage unto Sir
  • Gareth of Orkney. So then the kings and queens, princes and earls,
  • barons and many bold knights, went unto meat; and well may ye wit there
  • were all manner of meat plenteously, all manner revels and games, with
  • all manner of minstrelsy that was used in those days. Also there was
  • great jousts three days. But the king would not suffer Sir Gareth to
  • joust, because of his new bride; for, as the French book saith, that
  • Dame Lionesse desired of the king that none that were wedded should
  • joust at that feast.
  • So the first day there jousted Sir Lamorak de Galis, for he overthrew
  • thirty knights, and did passing marvellously deeds of arms; and then
  • King Arthur made Sir Persant and his two brethren Knights of the Round
  • Table to their lives’ end, and gave them great lands. Also the second
  • day there jousted Tristram best, and he overthrew forty knights, and
  • did there marvellous deeds of arms. And there King Arthur made
  • Ironside, that was the Red Knight of the Red Launds, a Knight of the
  • Table Round to his life’s end, and gave him great lands. The third day
  • there jousted Sir Launcelot du Lake, and he overthrew fifty knights,
  • and did many marvellous deeds of arms, that all men wondered on him.
  • And there King Arthur made the Duke de la Rowse a Knight of the Round
  • Table to his life’s end, and gave him great lands to spend. But when
  • these jousts were done, Sir Lamorak and Sir Tristram departed suddenly,
  • and would not be known, for the which King Arthur and all the court
  • were sore displeased. And so they held the court forty days with great
  • solemnity. And this Sir Gareth was a noble knight, and a well-ruled,
  • and fair-languaged.
  • Thus endeth this tale of Sir Gareth of Orkney that wedded Dame Lionesse
  • of the Castle Perilous. And also Sir Gaheris wedded her sister, Dame
  • Linet, that was called the Damosel Sabage. And Sir Agrabaine wedded
  • Dame Laurel, a fair lady and great, and mighty lands with great riches
  • gave with them King Arthur, that royally they might live till their
  • lives’ end.
  • Here followeth the viii. book, the which is the first book of Sir
  • Tristram de Liones, and who was his father and his mother, and how he
  • was born and fostered, and how he was made knight.
  • BOOK VIII.
  • CHAPTER I. How Sir Tristram de Liones was born, and how his mother died
  • at his birth, wherefore she named him Tristram.
  • It was a king that hight Meliodas, and he was lord and king of the
  • country of Liones, and this Meliodas was a likely knight as any was
  • that time living. And by fortune he wedded King Mark’s sister of
  • Cornwall, and she was called Elizabeth, that was called both good and
  • fair. And at that time King Arthur reigned, and he was whole king of
  • England, Wales, and Scotland, and of many other realms: howbeit there
  • were many kings that were lords of many countries, but all they held
  • their lands of King Arthur; for in Wales were two kings, and in the
  • north were many kings; and in Cornwall and in the west were two kings;
  • also in Ireland were two or three kings, and all were under the
  • obeissance of King Arthur. So was the King of France, and the King of
  • Brittany, and all the lordships unto Rome.
  • So when this King Meliodas had been with his wife, within a while she
  • waxed great with child, and she was a full meek lady, and well she
  • loved her lord, and he her again, so there was great joy betwixt them.
  • Then there was a lady in that country that had loved King Meliodas
  • long, and by no mean she never could get his love; therefore she let
  • ordain upon a day, as King Meliodas rode a-hunting, for he was a great
  • chaser, and there by an enchantment she made him chase an hart by
  • himself alone till that he came to an old castle, and there anon he was
  • taken prisoner by the lady that him loved. When Elizabeth, King
  • Meliodas’ wife, missed her lord, and she was nigh out of her wit, and
  • also as great with child as she was, she took a gentlewoman with her,
  • and ran into the forest to seek her lord. And when she was far in the
  • forest she might no farther, for she began to travail fast of her
  • child. And she had many grimly throes; her gentlewoman helped her all
  • that she might, and so by miracle of Our Lady of Heaven she was
  • delivered with great pains. But she had taken such cold for the default
  • of help that deep draughts of death took her, that needs she must die
  • and depart out of this world; there was none other bote.
  • And when this Queen Elizabeth saw that there was none other bote, then
  • she made great dole, and said unto her gentlewoman: When ye see my
  • lord, King Meliodas, recommend me unto him, and tell him what pains I
  • endure here for his love, and how I must die here for his sake for
  • default of good help; and let him wit that I am full sorry to depart
  • out of this world from him, therefore pray him to be friend to my soul.
  • Now let me see my little child, for whom I have had all this sorrow.
  • And when she saw him she said thus: Ah, my little son, thou hast
  • murdered thy mother, and therefore I suppose, thou that art a murderer
  • so young, thou art full likely to be a manly man in thine age. And
  • because I shall die of the birth of thee, I charge thee, gentlewoman,
  • that thou pray my lord, King Meliodas, that when he is christened let
  • call him Tristram, that is as much to say as a sorrowful birth. And
  • therewith this queen gave up the ghost and died. Then the gentlewoman
  • laid her under an umbre of a great tree, and then she lapped the child
  • as well as she might for cold. Right so there came the barons,
  • following after the queen, and when they saw that she was dead, and
  • understood none other but the king was destroyed.
  • CHAPTER II. How the stepmother of Sir Tristram had ordained poison for
  • to have poisoned Sir Tristram.
  • Then certain of them would have slain the child, because they would
  • have been lords of the country of Liones. But then through the fair
  • speech of the gentlewoman, and by the means that she made, the most
  • part of the barons would not assent thereto. And then they let carry
  • home the dead queen, and much dole was made for her.
  • Then this meanwhile Merlin delivered King Meliodas out of prison on the
  • morn after his queen was dead. And so when the king was come home the
  • most part of the barons made great joy. But the sorrow that the king
  • made for his queen that might no tongue tell. So then the king let
  • inter her richly, and after he let christen his child as his wife had
  • commanded afore her death. And then he let call him Tristram, the
  • sorrowful born child. Then the King Meliodas endured seven years
  • without a wife, and all this time Tristram was nourished well. Then it
  • befell that King Meliodas wedded King Howell’s daughter of Brittany,
  • and anon she had children of King Meliodas: then was she heavy and
  • wroth that her children should not rejoice the country of Liones,
  • wherefore this queen ordained for to poison young Tristram. So she let
  • poison be put in a piece of silver in the chamber whereas Tristram and
  • her children were together, unto that intent that when Tristram were
  • thirsty he should drink that drink. And so it fell upon a day, the
  • queen’s son, as he was in that chamber, espied the piece with poison,
  • and he weened it had been good drink, and because the child was thirsty
  • he took the piece with poison and drank freely; and therewithal
  • suddenly the child brast and was dead.
  • When the queen of Meliodas wist of the death of her son, wit ye well
  • that she was heavy. But yet the king understood nothing of her treason.
  • Notwithstanding the queen would not leave this, but eft she let ordain
  • more poison, and put it in a piece. And by fortune King Meliodas, her
  • husband, found the piece with wine where was the poison, and he that
  • was much thirsty took the piece for to drink thereout. And as he would
  • have drunken thereof the queen espied him, and then she ran unto him,
  • and pulled the piece from him suddenly. The king marvelled why she did
  • so, and remembered him how her son was suddenly slain with poison. And
  • then he took her by the hand, and said: Thou false traitress, thou
  • shalt tell me what manner of drink this is, or else I shall slay thee.
  • And therewith he pulled out his sword, and sware a great oath that he
  • should slay her but if she told him truth. Ah! mercy, my lord, said
  • she, and I shall tell you all. And then she told him why she would have
  • slain Tristram, because her children should rejoice his land. Well,
  • said King Meliodas, and therefore shall ye have the law. And so she was
  • condemned by the assent of the barons to be burnt; and then was there
  • made a great fire, and right as she was at the fire to take her
  • execution, young Tristram kneeled afore King Meliodas, and besought him
  • to give him a boon. I will well, said the king again. Then said young
  • Tristram, Give me the life of thy queen, my stepmother. That is
  • unrightfully asked, said King Meliodas, for thou ought of right to hate
  • her, for she would have slain thee with that poison an she might have
  • had her will; and for thy sake most is my cause that she should die.
  • Sir, said Tristram, as for that, I beseech you of your mercy that you
  • will forgive it her, and as for my part, God forgive it her, and I do;
  • and so much it liked your highness to grant me my boon, for God’s love
  • I require you hold your promise. Sithen it is so, said the king, I will
  • that ye have her life. Then, said the king, I give her to you, and go
  • ye to the fire and take her, and do with her what ye will. So Sir
  • Tristram went to the fire, and by the commandment of the king delivered
  • her from the death. But after that King Meliodas would never have ado
  • with her, as at bed and board. But by the good means of young Tristram
  • he made the king and her accorded. But then the king would not suffer
  • young Tristram to abide no longer in his court.
  • CHAPTER III. How Sir Tristram was sent into France, and had one to
  • govern him named Gouvernail, and how he learned to harp, hawk, and
  • hunt.
  • And then he let ordain a gentleman that was well learned and taught,
  • his name was Gouvernail; and then he sent young Tristram with
  • Gouvernail into France to learn the language, and nurture, and deeds of
  • arms. And there was Tristram more than seven years. And then when he
  • well could speak the language, and had learned all that he might learn
  • in that country, then he came home to his father, King Meliodas, again.
  • And so Tristram learned to be an harper passing all other, that there
  • was none such called in no country, and so on harping and on
  • instruments of music he applied him in his youth for to learn.
  • And after, as he grew in might and strength, he laboured ever in
  • hunting and in hawking, so that never gentleman more, that ever we
  • heard read of. And as the book saith, he began good measures of blowing
  • of beasts of venery, and beasts of chase, and all manner of vermin, and
  • all these terms we have yet of hawking and hunting. And therefore the
  • book of venery, of hawking, and hunting, is called the book of Sir
  • Tristram. Wherefore, as meseemeth, all gentlemen that bear old arms
  • ought of right to honour Sir Tristram for the goodly terms that
  • gentlemen have and use, and shall to the day of doom, that thereby in a
  • manner all men of worship may dissever a gentleman from a yeoman, and
  • from a yeoman a villain. For he that gentle is will draw him unto
  • gentle tatches, and to follow the customs of noble gentlemen.
  • Thus Sir Tristram endured in Cornwall until he was big and strong, of
  • the age of eighteen years. And then the King Meliodas had great joy of
  • Sir Tristram, and so had the queen, his wife. For ever after in her
  • life, because Sir Tristram saved her from the fire, she did never hate
  • him more after, but loved him ever after, and gave Tristram many great
  • gifts; for every estate loved him, where that he went.
  • CHAPTER IV. How Sir Marhaus came out of Ireland for to ask truage of
  • Cornwall, or else he would fight therefore.
  • Then it befell that King Anguish of Ireland sent unto King Mark of
  • Cornwall for his truage, that Cornwall had paid many winters. And all
  • that time King Mark was behind of the truage for seven years. And King
  • Mark and his barons gave unto the messenger of Ireland these words and
  • answer, that they would none pay; and bade the messenger go unto his
  • King Anguish, and tell him we will pay him no truage, but tell your
  • lord, an he will always have truage of us of Cornwall, bid him send a
  • trusty knight of his land, that will fight for his right, and we shall
  • find another for to defend our right. With this answer the messengers
  • departed into Ireland. And when King Anguish understood the answer of
  • the messengers he was wonderly wroth. And then he called unto him Sir
  • Marhaus, the good knight, that was nobly proved, and a Knight of the
  • Table Round. And this Marhaus was brother unto the queen of Ireland.
  • Then the king said thus: Fair brother, Sir Marhaus, I pray you go into
  • Cornwall for my sake, and do battle for our truage that of right we
  • ought to have; and whatsomever ye spend ye shall have sufficiently,
  • more than ye shall need. Sir, said Marhaus, wit ye well that I shall
  • not be loath to do battle in the right of you and your land with the
  • best knight of the Table Round; for I know them, for the most part,
  • what be their deeds; and for to advance my deeds and to increase my
  • worship I will right gladly go unto this journey for our right.
  • So in all haste there was made purveyance for Sir Marhaus, and he had
  • all things that to him needed; and so he departed out of Ireland, and
  • arrived up in Cornwall even fast by the Castle of Tintagil. And when
  • King Mark understood that he was there arrived to fight for Ireland,
  • then made King Mark great sorrow when he understood that the good and
  • noble knight Sir Marhaus was come. For they knew no knight that durst
  • have ado with him. For at that time Sir Marhaus was called one of the
  • famousest and renowned knights of the world. And thus Sir Marhaus abode
  • in the sea, and every day he sent unto King Mark for to pay the truage
  • that was behind of seven year, other else to find a knight to fight
  • with him for the truage. This manner of message Sir Marhaus sent daily
  • unto King Mark.
  • Then they of Cornwall let make cries in every place, that what knight
  • would fight for to save the truage of Cornwall, he should be rewarded
  • so that he should fare the better, term of his life. Then some of the
  • barons said to King Mark, and counselled him to send to the court of
  • King Arthur for to seek Sir Launcelot du Lake, that was that time named
  • for the marvelloust knight of all the world. Then there were some other
  • barons that counselled the king not to do so, and said that it was
  • labour in vain, because Sir Marhaus was a knight of the Round Table,
  • therefore any of them will be loath to have ado with other, but if it
  • were any knight at his own request would fight disguised and unknown.
  • So the king and all his barons assented that it was no bote to seek any
  • knight of the Round Table. This mean while came the language and the
  • noise unto King Meliodas, how that Sir Marhaus abode battle fast by
  • Tintagil, and how King Mark could find no manner knight to fight for
  • him. When young Tristram heard of this he was wroth, and sore ashamed
  • that there durst no knight in Cornwall have ado with Sir Marhaus of
  • Ireland.
  • CHAPTER V. How Tristram enterprized the battle to fight for the truage
  • of Cornwall, and how he was made knight.
  • Therewithal Tristram went unto his father, King Meliodas, and asked him
  • counsel what was best to do for to recover Cornwall from truage. For,
  • as meseemeth, said Sir Tristram, it were shame that Sir Marhaus, the
  • queen’s brother of Ireland, should go away unless that he were foughten
  • withal. As for that, said King Meliodas, wit you well, son Tristram,
  • that Sir Marhaus is called one of the best knights of the world, and
  • Knight of the Table Round; and therefore I know no knight in this
  • country that is able to match with him. Alas, said Sir Tristram, that I
  • am not made knight; and if Sir Marhaus should thus depart into Ireland,
  • God let me never have worship: an I were made knight I should match
  • him. And sir, said Tristram, I pray you give me leave to ride to King
  • Mark; and, so ye be not displeased, of King Mark will I be made knight.
  • I will well, said King Meliodas, that ye be ruled as your courage will
  • rule you. Then Sir Tristram thanked his father much. And then he made
  • him ready to ride into Cornwall.
  • In the meanwhile there came a messenger with letters of love from King
  • Faramon of France’s daughter unto Sir Tristram, that were full piteous
  • letters, and in them were written many complaints of love; but Sir
  • Tristram had no joy of her letters nor regard unto her. Also she sent
  • him a little brachet that was passing fair. But when the king’s
  • daughter understood that Sir Tristram would not love her, as the book
  • saith, she died for sorrow. And then the same squire that brought the
  • letter and the brachet came again unto Sir Tristram, as after ye shall
  • hear in the tale.
  • So this young Sir Tristram rode unto his eme, King Mark of Cornwall.
  • And when he came there he heard say that there would no knight fight
  • with Sir Marhaus. Then yede Sir Tristram unto his eme and said: Sir, if
  • ye will give me the order of knighthood, I will do battle with Sir
  • Marhaus. What are ye, said the king, and from whence be ye come? Sir,
  • said Tristram, I come from King Meliodas that wedded your sister, and a
  • gentleman wit ye well I am. King Mark beheld Sir Tristram and saw that
  • he was but a young man of age, but he was passingly well made and big.
  • Fair sir, said the king, what is your name, and where were ye born?
  • Sir, said he again, my name is Tristram, and in the country of Liones
  • was I born. Ye say well, said the king; and if ye will do this battle I
  • shall make you knight. Therefore I come to you, said Sir Tristram, and
  • for none other cause. But then King Mark made him knight. And
  • therewithal, anon as he had made him knight, he sent a messenger unto
  • Sir Marhaus with letters that said that he had found a young knight
  • ready for to take the battle to the uttermost. It may well be, said Sir
  • Marhaus; but tell King Mark I will not fight with no knight but he be
  • of blood royal, that is to say, other king’s son, other queen’s son,
  • born of a prince or princess.
  • When King Mark understood that, he sent for Sir Tristram de Liones and
  • told him what was the answer of Sir Marhaus. Then said Sir Tristram:
  • Sithen that he saith so, let him wit that I am come of father side and
  • mother side of as noble blood as he is: for, sir, now shall ye know
  • that I am King Meliodas’ son, born of your own sister, Dame Elizabeth,
  • that died in the forest in the birth of me. O Jesu, said King Mark, ye
  • are welcome fair nephew to me. Then in all the haste the king let horse
  • Sir Tristram, and armed him in the best manner that might be had or
  • gotten for gold or silver. And then King Mark sent unto Sir Marhaus,
  • and did him to wit that a better born man than he was himself should
  • fight with him, and his name is Sir Tristram de Liones, gotten of King
  • Meliodas, and born of King Mark’s sister. Then was Sir Marhaus glad and
  • blithe that he should fight with such a gentleman. And so by the assent
  • of King Mark and of Sir Marhaus they let ordain that they should fight
  • within an island nigh Sir Marhaus’ ships; and so was Sir Tristram put
  • into a vessel both his horse and he, and all that to him longed both
  • for his body and for his horse. Sir Tristram lacked nothing. And when
  • King Mark and his barons of Cornwall beheld how young Sir Tristram
  • departed with such a carriage to fight for the right of Cornwall, there
  • was neither man nor woman of worship but they wept to see and
  • understand so young a knight to jeopardy himself for their right.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Tristram arrived into the Island for to furnish the
  • battle with Sir Marhaus.
  • So to shorten this tale, when Sir Tristram was arrived within the
  • island he looked to the farther side, and there he saw at an anchor six
  • ships nigh to the land; and under the shadow of the ships upon the
  • land, there hoved the noble knight, Sir Marhaus of Ireland. Then Sir
  • Tristram commanded his servant Gouvernail to bring his horse to the
  • land, and dress his harness at all manner of rights. And then when he
  • had so done he mounted upon his horse; and when he was in his saddle
  • well apparelled, and his shield dressed upon his shoulder, Tristram
  • asked Gouvernail, Where is this knight that I shall have ado withal?
  • Sir, said Gouvernail, see ye him not? I weened ye had seen him; yonder
  • he hoveth under the umbre of his ships on horseback, with his spear in
  • his hand and his shield upon his shoulder. That is truth, said the
  • noble knight, Sir Tristram, now I see him well enough.
  • Then he commanded his servant Gouvernail to go to his vessel again: And
  • commend me unto mine eme King Mark, and pray him, if that I be slain in
  • this battle, for to inter my body as him seemed best; and as for me,
  • let him wit that I will never yield me for cowardice; and if I be slain
  • and flee not, then they have lost no truage for me; and if so be that I
  • flee or yield me as recreant, bid mine eme never bury me in Christian
  • burials. And upon thy life, said Sir Tristram to Gouvernail, come thou
  • not nigh this island till that thou see me overcome or slain, or else
  • that I win yonder knight. So either departed from other sore weeping.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Sir Tristram fought against Sir Marhaus and achieved
  • his battle, and how Sir Marhaus fled to his ship.
  • And then Sir Marhaus avised Sir Tristram, and said thus: Young knight,
  • Sir Tristram, what dost thou here? me sore repenteth of thy courage,
  • for wit thou well I have been assayed, and the best knights of this
  • land have been assayed of my hand; and also I have matched with the
  • best knights of the world, and therefore by my counsel return again
  • unto thy vessel. And fair knight, and well-proved knight, said Sir
  • Tristram, thou shalt well wit I may not forsake thee in this quarrel,
  • for I am for thy sake made knight. And thou shalt well wit that I am a
  • king’s son born, and gotten upon a queen; and such promise I have made
  • at my uncle’s request and mine own seeking, that I shall fight with
  • thee unto the uttermost, and deliver Cornwall from the old truage. And
  • also wit thou well, Sir Marhaus, that this is the greatest cause that
  • thou couragest me to have ado with thee, for thou art called one of the
  • most renowned knights of the world, and because of that noise and fame
  • that thou hast thou givest me courage to have ado with thee, for never
  • yet was I proved with good knight; and sithen I took the order of
  • knighthood this day, I am well pleased that I may have ado with so good
  • a knight as thou art. And now wit thou well, Sir Marhaus, that I cast
  • me to get worship on thy body; and if that I be not proved, I trust to
  • God that I shall be worshipfully proved upon thy body, and to deliver
  • the country of Cornwall for ever from all manner of truage from Ireland
  • for ever.
  • When Sir Marhaus had heard him say what he would, he said then thus
  • again: Fair knight, sithen it is so that thou castest to win worship of
  • me, I let thee wit worship may thou none lose by me if thou mayest
  • stand me three strokes; for I let thee wit for my noble deeds, proved
  • and seen, King Arthur made me Knight of the Table Round.
  • Then they began to feutre their spears, and they met so fiercely
  • together that they smote either other down, both horse and all. But Sir
  • Marhaus smote Sir Tristram a great wound in the side with his spear,
  • and then they avoided their horses, and pulled out their swords, and
  • threw their shields afore them. And then they lashed together as men
  • that were wild and courageous. And when they had stricken so together
  • long, then they left their strokes, and foined at their breaths and
  • visors; and when they saw that that might not prevail them, then they
  • hurtled together like rams to bear either other down. Thus they fought
  • still more than half a day, and either were wounded passing sore, that
  • the blood ran down freshly from them upon the ground. By then Sir
  • Tristram waxed more fresher than Sir Marhaus, and better winded and
  • bigger; and with a mighty stroke he smote Sir Marhaus upon the helm
  • such a buffet that it went through his helm, and through the coif of
  • steel, and through the brain-pan, and the sword stuck so fast in the
  • helm and in his brain-pan that Sir Tristram pulled thrice at his sword
  • or ever he might pull it out from his head; and there Marhaus fell down
  • on his knees, the edge of Tristram’s sword left in his brain-pan. And
  • suddenly Sir Marhaus rose grovelling, and threw his sword and his
  • shield from him, and so ran to his ships and fled his way, and Sir
  • Tristram had ever his shield and his sword.
  • And when Sir Tristram saw Sir Marhaus withdraw him, he said: Ah! Sir
  • Knight of the Round Table, why withdrawest thou thee? thou dost thyself
  • and thy kin great shame, for I am but a young knight, or now I was
  • never proved, and rather than I should withdraw me from thee, I had
  • rather be hewn in an hundred pieces. Sir Marhaus answered no word but
  • yede his way sore groaning. Well, Sir Knight, said Sir Tristram, I
  • promise thee thy sword and thy shield shall be mine; and thy shield
  • shall I wear in all places where I ride on mine adventures, and in the
  • sight of King Arthur and all the Round Table.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How Sir Marhaus after that he was arrived in Ireland died
  • of the stroke that Sir Tristram had given him, and how Tristram was
  • hurt.
  • Anon Sir Marhaus and his fellowship departed into Ireland. And as soon
  • as he came to the king, his brother, he let search his wounds. And when
  • his head was searched a piece of Sir Tristram’s sword was found
  • therein, and might never be had out of his head for no surgeons, and so
  • he died of Sir Tristram’s sword; and that piece of the sword the queen,
  • his sister, kept it for ever with her, for she thought to be revenged
  • an she might.
  • Now turn we again unto Sir Tristram, that was sore wounded, and full
  • sore bled that he might not within a little while, when he had taken
  • cold, unnethe stir him of his limbs. And then he set him down softly
  • upon a little hill, and bled fast. Then anon came Gouvernail, his man,
  • with his vessel; and the king and his barons came with procession
  • against him. And when he was come unto the land, King Mark took him in
  • his arms, and the king and Sir Dinas, the seneschal, led Sir Tristram
  • into the castle of Tintagil. And then was he searched in the best
  • manner, and laid in his bed. And when King Mark saw his wounds he wept
  • heartily, and so did all his lords. So God me help, said King Mark, I
  • would not for all my lands that my nephew died. So Sir Tristram lay
  • there a month and more, and ever he was like to die of that stroke that
  • Sir Marhaus smote him first with the spear. For, as the French book
  • saith, the spear’s head was envenomed, that Sir Tristram might not be
  • whole. Then was King Mark and all his barons passing heavy, for they
  • deemed none other but that Sir Tristram should not recover. Then the
  • king let send after all manner of leeches and surgeons, both unto men
  • and women, and there was none that would behote him the life. Then came
  • there a lady that was a right wise lady, and she said plainly unto King
  • Mark, and to Sir Tristram, and to all his barons, that he should never
  • be whole but if Sir Tristram went in the same country that the venom
  • came from, and in that country should he be holpen or else never. Thus
  • said the lady unto the king.
  • When King Mark understood that, he let purvey for Sir Tristram a fair
  • vessel, well victualled, and therein was put Sir Tristram, and
  • Gouvernail with him, and Sir Tristram took his harp with him, and so he
  • was put into the sea to sail into Ireland; and so by good fortune he
  • arrived up in Ireland, even fast by a castle where the king and the
  • queen was; and at his arrival he sat and harped in his bed a merry lay,
  • such one heard they never none in Ireland before that time.
  • And when it was told the king and the queen of such a knight that was
  • such an harper, anon the king sent for him, and let search his wounds,
  • and then asked him his name. Then he answered, I am of the country of
  • Liones, and my name is Tramtrist, that thus was wounded in a battle as
  • I fought for a lady’s right. So God me help, said King Anguish, ye
  • shall have all the help in this land that ye may have here; but I let
  • you wit, in Cornwall I had a great loss as ever had king, for there I
  • lost the best knight of the world; his name was Marhaus, a full noble
  • knight, and Knight of the Table Round; and there he told Sir Tristram
  • wherefore Sir Marhaus was slain. Sir Tristram made semblant as he had
  • been sorry, and better knew he how it was than the king.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Tristram was put to the keeping of La Beale Isoud
  • first for to be healed of his wound.
  • Then the king for great favour made Tramtrist to be put in his
  • daughter’s ward and keeping, because she was a noble surgeon. And when
  • she had searched him she found in the bottom of his wound that therein
  • was poison, and so she healed him within a while; and therefore
  • Tramtrist cast great love to La Beale Isoud, for she was at that time
  • the fairest maid and lady of the world. And there Tramtrist learned her
  • to harp, and she began to have a great fantasy unto him. And at that
  • time Sir Palamides, the Saracen, was in that country, and well
  • cherished with the king and the queen. And every day Sir Palamides drew
  • unto La Beale Isoud and proffered her many gifts, for he loved her
  • passingly well. All that espied Tramtrist, and full well knew he Sir
  • Palamides for a noble knight and a mighty man. And wit you well Sir
  • Tramtrist had great despite at Sir Palamides, for La Beale Isoud told
  • Tramtrist that Palamides was in will to be christened for her sake.
  • Thus was there great envy betwixt Tramtrist and Sir Palamides.
  • Then it befell that King Anguish let cry a great jousts and a great
  • tournament for a lady that was called the Lady of the Launds, and she
  • was nigh cousin unto the king. And what man won her, three days after
  • he should wed her and have all her lands. This cry was made in England,
  • Wales, Scotland, and also in France and in Brittany. It befell upon a
  • day La Beale Isoud came unto Sir Tramtrist, and told him of this
  • tournament. He answered and said: Fair lady, I am but a feeble knight,
  • and but late I had been dead had not your good ladyship been. Now, fair
  • lady, what would ye I should do in this matter? well ye wot, my lady,
  • that I may not joust. Ah, Tramtrist, said La Beale Isoud, why will ye
  • not have ado at that tournament? well I wot Sir Palamides shall be
  • there, and to do what he may; and therefore Tramtrist, I pray you for
  • to be there, for else Sir Palamides is like to win the degree. Madam,
  • said Tramtrist, as for that, it may be so, for he is a proved knight,
  • and I am but a young knight and late made; and the first battle that I
  • did it mishapped me to be sore wounded as ye see. But an I wist ye
  • would be my better lady, at that tournament I will be, so that ye will
  • keep my counsel and let no creature have knowledge that I shall joust
  • but yourself, and such as ye will to keep your counsel, my poor person
  • shall I jeopard there for your sake, that, peradventure, Sir Palamides
  • shall know when that I come. Thereto, said La Beale Isoud, do your
  • best, and as I can, said La Beale Isoud, I shall purvey horse and
  • armour for you at my device. As ye will so be it, said Sir Tramtrist, I
  • will be at your commandment.
  • So at the day of jousts there came Sir Palamides with a black shield,
  • and he overthrew many knights, that all the people had marvel of him.
  • For he put to the worse Sir Gawaine, Gaheris, Agravaine, Bagdemagus,
  • Kay, Dodinas le Savage, Sagramore le Desirous, Gumret le Petit, and
  • Griflet le Fise de Dieu. All these the first day Sir Palamides struck
  • down to the earth. And then all manner of knights were adread of Sir
  • Palamides, and many called him the Knight with the Black Shield. So
  • that day Sir Palamides had great worship.
  • Then came King Anguish unto Tramtrist, and asked him why he would not
  • joust. Sir, he said, I was but late hurt, and as yet I dare not
  • adventure me. Then came there the same squire that was sent from the
  • king’s daughter of France unto Sir Tristram. And when he had espied Sir
  • Tristram he fell flat to his feet. All that espied La Beale Isoud, what
  • courtesy the squire made unto Sir Tristram. And therewithal suddenly
  • Sir Tristram ran unto his squire, whose name was Hebes le Renoumes, and
  • prayed him heartily in no wise to tell his name. Sir, said Hebes, I
  • will not discover your name but if ye command me.
  • CHAPTER X. How Sir Tristram won the degree at a tournament in Ireland,
  • and there made Palamides to bear no more harness in a year.
  • Then Sir Tristram asked him what he did in those countries. Sir, he
  • said, I came hither with Sir Gawaine for to be made knight, and if it
  • please you, of your hands that I may be made knight. Await upon me as
  • to-morn secretly, and in the field I shall make you a knight.
  • Then had La Beale Isoud great suspicion unto Tramtrist, that he was
  • some man of worship proved, and therewith she comforted herself, and
  • cast more love unto him than she had done to-fore. And so on the morn
  • Sir Palamides made him ready to come into the field as he did the first
  • day. And there he smote down the King with the Hundred Knights, and the
  • King of Scots. Then had La Beale Isoud ordained and well arrayed Sir
  • Tristram in white horse and harness. And right so she let put him out
  • at a privy postern, and so he came into the field as it had been a
  • bright angel. And anon Sir Palamides espied him, and therewith he
  • feutred a spear unto Sir Tramtrist, and he again unto him. And there
  • Sir Tristram smote down Sir Palamides unto the earth. And then there
  • was a great noise of people: some said Sir Palamides had a fall, some
  • said the Knight with the Black Shield had a fall. And wit you well La
  • Beale Isoud was passing glad. And then Sir Gawaine and his fellows nine
  • had marvel what knight it might be that had smitten down Sir Palamides.
  • Then would there none joust with Tramtrist, but all that there were
  • forsook him, most and least. Then Sir Tristram made Hebes a knight, and
  • caused him to put himself forth, and did right well that day. So after
  • Sir Hebes held him with Sir Tristram.
  • And when Sir Palamides had received this fall, wit ye well that he was
  • sore ashamed, and as privily as he might he withdrew him out of the
  • field. All that espied Sir Tristram, and lightly he rode after Sir
  • Palamides and overtook him, and bade him turn, for better he would
  • assay him or ever he departed. Then Sir Palamides turned him, and
  • either lashed at other with their swords. But at the first stroke Sir
  • Tristram smote down Palamides, and gave him such a stroke upon the head
  • that he fell to the earth. So then Tristram bade yield him, and do his
  • commandment, or else he would slay him. When Sir Palamides beheld his
  • countenance, he dread his buffets so, that he granted all his askings.
  • Well said, said Sir Tristram, this shall be your charge. First, upon
  • pain of your life that ye forsake my lady La Beale Isoud, and in no
  • manner wise that ye draw not to her. Also this twelvemonth and a day
  • that ye bear none armour nor none harness of war. Now promise me this,
  • or here shalt thou die. Alas, said Palamides, for ever am I ashamed.
  • Then he sware as Sir Tristram had commanded him. Then for despite and
  • anger Sir Palamides cut off his harness, and threw them away.
  • And so Sir Tristram turned again to the castle where was La Beale
  • Isoud; and by the way he met with a damosel that asked after Sir
  • Launcelot, that won the Dolorous Guard worshipfully; and this damosel
  • asked Sir Tristram what he was. For it was told her that it was he that
  • smote down Sir Palamides, by whom the ten knights of King Arthur’s were
  • smitten down. Then the damosel prayed Sir Tristram to tell her what he
  • was, and whether that he were Sir Launcelot du Lake, for she deemed
  • that there was no knight in the world might do such deeds of arms but
  • if it were Launcelot. Fair damosel, said Sir Tristram, wit ye well that
  • I am not Sir Launcelot, for I was never of such prowess, but in God is
  • all that he may make me as good a knight as the good knight Sir
  • Launcelot. Now, gentle knight, said she, put up thy visor; and when she
  • beheld his visage she thought she saw never a better man’s visage, nor
  • a better faring knight. And then when the damosel knew certainly that
  • he was not Sir Launcelot, then she took her leave, and departed from
  • him. And then Sir Tristram rode privily unto the postern, where kept
  • him La Beale Isoud, and there she made him good cheer, and thanked God
  • of his good speed. So anon, within a while the king and the queen
  • understood that it was Tramtrist that smote down Sir Palamides; then
  • was he much made of, more than he was before.
  • CHAPTER XI. How the queen espied that Sir Tristram had slain her
  • brother Sir Marhaus by his sword, and in what jeopardy he was.
  • Thus was Sir Tramtrist long there well cherished with the king and the
  • queen, and namely with La Beale Isoud. So upon a day the queen and La
  • Beale Isoud made a bain for Sir Tramtrist. And when he was in his bain
  • the queen and Isoud, her daughter, roamed up and down in the chamber;
  • and therewhiles Gouvernail and Hebes attended upon Tramtrist, and the
  • queen beheld his sword thereas it lay upon his bed. And then by unhap
  • the queen drew out his sword and beheld it a long while, and both they
  • thought it a passing fair sword; but within a foot and an half of the
  • point there was a great piece thereof out-broken of the edge. And when
  • the queen espied that gap in the sword, she remembered her of a piece
  • of a sword that was found in the brain-pan of Sir Marhaus, the good
  • knight that was her brother. Alas then, said she unto her daughter, La
  • Beale Isoud, this is the same traitor knight that slew my brother,
  • thine eme. When Isoud heard her say so she was passing sore abashed,
  • for passing well she loved Tramtrist, and full well she knew the
  • cruelness of her mother the queen.
  • Anon therewithal the queen went unto her own chamber, and sought her
  • coffer, and there she took out the piece or the sword that was pulled
  • out of Sir Marhaus’ head after that he was dead. And then she ran with
  • that piece of iron to the sword that lay upon the bed. And when she put
  • that piece of steel and iron unto the sword, it was as meet as it might
  • be when it was new broken. And then the queen gripped that sword in her
  • hand fiercely, and with all her might she ran straight upon Tramtrist
  • where he sat in his bain, and there she had rived him through had not
  • Sir Hebes gotten her in his arms, and pulled the sword from her, and
  • else she had thrust him through.
  • Then when she was let of her evil will she ran to the King Anguish, her
  • husband, and said on her knees: O my lord, here have ye in your house
  • that traitor knight that slew my brother and your servant, that noble
  • knight, Sir Marhaus. Who is that, said King Anguish, and where is he?
  • Sir, she said, it is Sir Tramtrist, the same knight that my daughter
  • healed. Alas, said the king, therefore am I right heavy, for he is a
  • full noble knight as ever I saw in field. But I charge you, said the
  • king to the queen, that ye have not ado with that knight, but let me
  • deal with him.
  • Then the king went into the chamber unto Sir Tramtrist, and then was he
  • gone unto his chamber, and the king found him all ready armed to mount
  • upon his horse. When the king saw him all ready armed to go unto
  • horseback, the king said: Nay, Tramtrist, it will not avail to compare
  • thee against me; but thus much I shall do for my worship and for thy
  • love; in so much as thou art within my court it were no worship for me
  • to slay thee: therefore upon this condition I will give thee leave for
  • to depart from this court in safety, so thou wilt tell me who was thy
  • father, and what is thy name, and if thou slew Sir Marhaus, my brother.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Tristram departed from the king and La Beale Isoud
  • out of Ireland for to come into Cornwall.
  • Sir, said Tristram, now I shall tell you all the truth: my father’s
  • name is Sir Meliodas, King of Liones, and my mother hight Elizabeth,
  • that was sister unto King Mark of Cornwall; and my mother died of me in
  • the forest, and because thereof she commanded, or she died, that when I
  • were christened they should christen me Tristram; and because I would
  • not be known in this country I turned my name and let me call
  • Tramtrist; and for the truage of Cornwall I fought for my eme’s sake,
  • and for the right of Cornwall that ye had posseded many years. And wit
  • ye well, said Tristram unto the king, I did the battle for the love of
  • mine uncle, King Mark, and for the love of the country of Cornwall, and
  • for to increase mine honour; for that same day that I fought with Sir
  • Marhaus I was made knight, and never or then did I battle with no
  • knight, and from me he went alive, and left his shield and his sword
  • behind.
  • So God me help, said the king, I may not say but ye did as a knight
  • should, and it was your part to do for your quarrel, and to increase
  • your worship as a knight should; howbeit I may not maintain you in this
  • country with my worship, unless that I should displease my barons, and
  • my wife and her kin. Sir, said Tristram, I thank you of your good
  • lordship that I have had with you here, and the great goodness my lady,
  • your daughter, hath shewed me, and therefore, said Sir Tristram, it may
  • so happen that ye shall win more by my life than by my death, for in
  • the parts of England it may happen I may do you service at some season,
  • that ye shall be glad that ever ye shewed me your good lordship. With
  • more I promise you as I am true knight, that in all places I shall be
  • my lady your daughter’s servant and knight in right and in wrong, and I
  • shall never fail her, to do as much as a knight may do. Also I beseech
  • your good grace that I may take my leave at my lady, your daughter, and
  • at all the barons and knights. I will well, said the king.
  • Then Sir Tristram went unto La Beale Isoud and took his leave of her.
  • And then he told her all, what he was, and how he had changed his name
  • because he would not be known, and how a lady told him that he should
  • never be whole till he came into this country where the poison was
  • made, wherethrough I was near my death had not your ladyship been. O
  • gentle knight, said La Beale Isoud, full woe am I of thy departing, for
  • I saw never man that I owed so good will to. And therewithal she wept
  • heartily. Madam, said Sir Tristram, ye shall understand that my name is
  • Sir Tristram de Liones, gotten of King Meliodas, and born of his queen.
  • And I promise you faithfully that I shall be all the days of my life
  • your knight. Gramercy, said La Beale Isoud, and I promise you
  • there-against that I shall not be married this seven years but by your
  • assent; and to whom that ye will I shall be married to him will I have,
  • and he will have me if ye will consent.
  • And then Sir Tristram gave her a ring, and she gave him another; and
  • therewith he departed from her, leaving her making great dole and
  • lamentation; and he straight went unto the court among all the barons,
  • and there he took his leave at most and least, and openly he said among
  • them all: Fair lords, now it is so that I must depart: if there be any
  • man here that I have offended unto, or that any man be with me grieved,
  • let complain him here afore me or that ever I depart, and I shall amend
  • it unto my power. And if there be any that will proffer me wrong, or
  • say of me wrong or shame behind my back, say it now or never, and here
  • is my body to make it good, body against body. And all they stood
  • still, there was not one that would say one word; yet were there some
  • knights that were of the queen’s blood, and of Sir Marhaus’ blood, but
  • they would not meddle with him.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Sir Tristram and King Mark hurted each other for the
  • love of a knight’s wife.
  • So Sir Tristram departed, and took the sea, and with good wind he
  • arrived up at Tintagil in Cornwall; and when King Mark was whole in his
  • prosperity there came tidings that Sir Tristram was arrived, and whole
  • of his wounds: thereof was King Mark passing glad, and so were all the
  • barons; and when he saw his time he rode unto his father, King
  • Meliodas, and there he had all the cheer that the king and the queen
  • could make him. And then largely King Meliodas and his queen departed
  • of their lands and goods to Sir Tristram.
  • Then by the license of King Meliodas, his father, he returned again
  • unto the court of King Mark, and there he lived in great joy long time,
  • until at the last there befell a jealousy and an unkindness betwixt
  • King Mark and Sir Tristram, for they loved both one lady. And she was
  • an earl’s wife that hight Sir Segwarides. And this lady loved Sir
  • Tristram passingly well. And he loved her again, for she was a passing
  • fair lady, and that espied Sir Tristram well. Then King Mark understood
  • that and was jealous, for King Mark loved her passingly well.
  • So it fell upon a day this lady sent a dwarf unto Sir Tristram, and
  • bade him, as he loved her, that he would be with her the night next
  • following. Also she charged you that ye come not to her but if ye be
  • well armed, for her lover was called a good knight. Sir Tristram
  • answered to the dwarf: Recommend me unto my lady, and tell her I will
  • not fail but I will be with her the term that she hath set me. And with
  • this answer the dwarf departed. And King Mark espied that the dwarf was
  • with Sir Tristram upon message from Segwarides’ wife; then King Mark
  • sent for the dwarf, and when he was come he made the dwarf by force to
  • tell him all, why and wherefore that he came on message from Sir
  • Tristram. Now, said King Mark, go where thou wilt, and upon pain of
  • death that thou say no word that thou spakest with me; so the dwarf
  • departed from the king.
  • And that same night that the steven was set betwixt Segwarides’ wife
  • and Sir Tristram, King Mark armed him, and made him ready, and took two
  • knights of his counsel with him; and so he rode afore for to abide by
  • the way for to wait upon Sir Tristram. And as Sir Tristram came riding
  • upon his way with his spear in his hand, King Mark came hurtling upon
  • him with his two knights suddenly. And all three smote him with their
  • spears, and King Mark hurt Sir Tristram on the breast right sore. And
  • then Sir Tristram feutred his spear, and smote his uncle, King Mark, so
  • sore, that he rashed him to the earth, and bruised him that he lay
  • still in a swoon, and long it was or ever he might wield himself. And
  • then he ran to the one knight, and eft to the other, and smote them to
  • the cold earth, that they lay still. And therewithal Sir Tristram rode
  • forth sore wounded to the lady, and found her abiding him at a postern.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Sir Tristram lay with the lady, and how her husband
  • fought with Sir Tristram.
  • And there she welcomed him fair, and either halsed other in arms, and
  • so she let put up his horse in the best wise, and then she unarmed him.
  • And so they supped lightly, and went to bed with great joy and
  • pleasaunce; and so in his raging he took no keep of his green wound
  • that King Mark had given him. And so Sir Tristram be-bled both the over
  • sheet and the nether, and pillows, and head sheet. And within a while
  • there came one afore, that warned her that her lord was near-hand
  • within a bow-draught. So she made Sir Tristram to arise, and so he
  • armed him, and took his horse, and so departed. By then was come
  • Segwarides, her lord, and when he found her bed troubled and broken,
  • and went near and beheld it by candle light, then he saw that there had
  • lain a wounded knight. Ah, false traitress, then he said, why hast thou
  • betrayed me? And therewithal he swang out a sword, and said: But if
  • thou tell me who hath been here, here thou shalt die. Ah, my lord,
  • mercy, said the lady, and held up her hands, saying: Slay me not, and I
  • shall tell you all who hath been here. Tell anon, said Segwarides, to
  • me all the truth. Anon for dread she said: Here was Sir Tristram with
  • me, and by the way as he came to me ward, he was sore wounded. Ah,
  • false traitress, said Segwarides, where is he become? Sir, she said, he
  • is armed, and departed on horseback, not yet hence half a mile. Ye say
  • well, said Segwarides.
  • Then he armed him lightly, and gat his horse, and rode after Sir
  • Tristram that rode straightway unto Tintagil. And within a while he
  • overtook Sir Tristram, and then he bade him, Turn, false traitor
  • knight. And Sir Tristram anon turned him against him. And therewithal
  • Segwarides smote Sir Tristram with a spear that it all to-brast; and
  • then he swang out his sword and smote fast at Sir Tristram. Sir knight,
  • said Sir Tristram, I counsel you that ye smite no more, howbeit for the
  • wrongs that I have done you I will forbear you as long as I may. Nay,
  • said Segwarides, that shall not be, for either thou shalt die or I.
  • Then Sir Tristram drew out his sword, and hurtled his horse unto him
  • fiercely, and through the waist of the body he smote Sir Segwarides
  • that he fell to the earth in a swoon. And so Sir Tristram departed and
  • left him there. And so he rode unto Tintagil and took his lodging
  • secretly, for he would not be known that he was hurt. Also Sir
  • Segwarides’ men rode after their master, whom they found lying in the
  • field sore wounded, and brought him home on his shield, and there he
  • lay long or that he were whole, but at the last he recovered. Also King
  • Mark would not be aknown of that Sir Tristram and he had met that
  • night. And as for Sir Tristram, he knew not that King Mark had met with
  • him. And so the king askance came to Sir Tristram, to comfort him as he
  • lay sick in his bed. But as long as King Mark lived he loved never Sir
  • Tristram after that; though there was fair speech, love was there none.
  • And thus it passed many weeks and days, and all was forgiven and
  • forgotten; for Sir Segwarides durst not have ado with Sir Tristram,
  • because of his noble prowess, and also because he was nephew unto King
  • Mark; therefore he let it overslip: for he that hath a privy hurt is
  • loath to have a shame outward.
  • CHAPTER XV. How Sir Bleoberis demanded the fairest lady in King Mark’s
  • court, whom he took away, and how he was fought with.
  • Then it befell upon a day that the good knight Bleoberis de Ganis,
  • brother to Blamore de Ganis, and nigh cousin unto the good knight Sir
  • Launcelot du Lake, this Bleoberis came unto the court of King Mark, and
  • there he asked of King Mark a boon, to give him what gift that he would
  • ask in his court. When the king heard him ask so, he marvelled of his
  • asking, but because he was a knight of the Round Table, and of a great
  • renown, King Mark granted him his whole asking. Then, said Sir
  • Bleoberis, I will have the fairest lady in your court that me list to
  • choose. I may not say nay, said King Mark; now choose at your
  • adventure. And so Sir Bleoberis did choose Sir Segwarides’ wife, and
  • took her by the hand, and so went his way with her; and so he took his
  • horse and gart set her behind his squire, and rode upon his way.
  • When Sir Segwarides heard tell that his lady was gone with a knight of
  • King Arthur’s court, then he armed him and rode after that knight for
  • to rescue his lady. So when Bleoberis was gone with this lady, King
  • Mark and all the court was wroth that she was away. Then were there
  • certain ladies that knew that there were great love between Sir
  • Tristram and her, and also that lady loved Sir Tristram above all other
  • knights. Then there was one lady that rebuked Sir Tristram in the
  • horriblest wise, and called him coward knight, that he would for shame
  • of his knighthood see a lady so shamefully be taken away from his
  • uncle’s court. But she meant that either of them had loved other with
  • entire heart. But Sir Tristram answered her thus: Fair lady, it is not
  • my part to have ado in such matters while her lord and husband is
  • present here; and if it had been that her lord had not been here in
  • this court, then for the worship of this court peradventure I would
  • have been her champion, and if so be Sir Segwarides speed not well, it
  • may happen that I will speak with that good knight or ever he pass from
  • this country.
  • Then within a while came one of Sir Segwarides’ squires, and told in
  • the court that Sir Segwarides was beaten sore and wounded to the point
  • of death; as he would have rescued his lady Sir Bleoberis overthrew him
  • and sore hath wounded him. Then was King Mark heavy thereof, and all
  • the court. When Sir Tristram heard of this he was ashamed and sore
  • grieved; and then was he soon armed and on horseback, and Gouvernail,
  • his servant, bare his shield and spear. And so as Sir Tristram rode
  • fast he met with Sir Andred his cousin, that by the commandment of King
  • Mark was sent to bring forth, an ever it lay in his power, two knights
  • of Arthur’s court, that rode by the country to seek their adventures.
  • When Sir Tristram saw Sir Andred he asked him what tidings. So God me
  • help, said Sir Andred, there was never worse with me, for here by the
  • commandment of King Mark I was sent to fetch two knights of King
  • Arthur’s court, and that one beat me and wounded me, and set nought by
  • my message. Fair cousin, said Sir Tristram, ride on your way, and if I
  • may meet them it may happen I shall revenge you. So Sir Andred rode
  • into Cornwall, and Sir Tristram rode after the two knights, the which
  • one hight Sagramore le Desirous, and the other hight Dodinas le Savage.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Sir Tristram fought with two knights of the Round
  • Table.
  • Then within a while Sir Tristram saw them afore him, two likely
  • knights. Sir, said Gouvernail unto his master, Sir, I would counsel you
  • not to have ado with them, for they be two proved knights of Arthur’s
  • court. As for that, said Sir Tristram, have ye no doubt but I will have
  • ado with them to increase my worship, for it is many day sithen I did
  • any deeds of arms. Do as ye list, said Gouvernail. And therewithal anon
  • Sir Tristram asked them from whence they came, and whither they would,
  • and what they did in those marches. Sir Sagramore looked upon Sir
  • Tristram, and had scorn of his words, and asked him again, Fair knight,
  • be ye a knight of Cornwall? Whereby ask ye it? said Sir Tristram. For
  • it is seldom seen, said Sir Sagramore, that ye Cornish knights be
  • valiant men of arms; for within these two hours there met us one of
  • your Cornish knights, and great words he spake, and anon with little
  • might he was laid to the earth. And, as I trow, said Sir Sagramore, ye
  • shall have the same handsel that he had. Fair lords, said Sir Tristram,
  • it may so happen that I may better withstand than he did, and whether
  • ye will or nill I will have ado with you, because he was my cousin that
  • ye beat. And therefore here do your best, and wit ye well but if ye
  • quit you the better here upon this ground, one knight of Cornwall shall
  • beat you both.
  • When Sir Dodinas le Savage heard him say so he gat a spear in his hand,
  • and said, Sir knight, keep well thyself: And then they departed and
  • came together as it had been thunder. And Sir Dodinas’ spear brast
  • in-sunder, but Sir Tristram smote him with a more might, that he smote
  • him clean over the horse-croup, that nigh he had broken his neck. When
  • Sir Sagramore saw his fellow have such a fall he marvelled what knight
  • he might be. And he dressed his spear with all his might, and Sir
  • Tristram against him, and they came together as the thunder, and there
  • Sir Tristram smote Sir Sagramore a strong buffet, that he bare his
  • horse and him to the earth, and in the falling he brake his thigh.
  • When this was done Sir Tristram asked them: Fair knights, will ye any
  • more? Be there no bigger knights in the court of King Arthur? it is to
  • you shame to say of us knights of Cornwall dishonour, for it may happen
  • a Cornish knight may match you. That is truth, said Sir Sagramore, that
  • have we well proved; but I require thee, said Sir Sagramore, tell us
  • your right name, by the faith and troth that ye owe to the high order
  • of knighthood. Ye charge me with a great thing, said Sir Tristram, and
  • sithen ye list to wit it, ye shall know and understand that my name is
  • Sir Tristram de Liones, King Meliodas’ son, and nephew unto King Mark.
  • Then were they two knights fain that they had met with Tristram, and so
  • they prayed him to abide in their fellowship. Nay, said Sir Tristram,
  • for I must have ado with one of your fellows, his name is Sir Bleoberis
  • de Ganis. God speed you well, said Sir Sagramore and Dodinas. Sir
  • Tristram departed and rode onward on his way. And then was he ware
  • before him in a valley where rode Sir Bleoberis, with Sir Segwarides’
  • lady, that rode behind his squire upon a palfrey.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Tristram fought with Sir Bleoberis for a lady,
  • and how the lady was put to choice to whom she would go.
  • Then Sir Tristram rode more than a pace until that he had overtaken
  • him. Then spake Sir Tristram: Abide, he said, Knight of Arthur’s court,
  • bring again that lady, or deliver her to me. I will do neither, said
  • Bleoberis, for I dread no Cornish knight so sore that me list to
  • deliver her. Why, said Sir Tristram, may not a Cornish knight do as
  • well as another knight? this same day two knights of your court within
  • this three mile met with me, and or ever we departed they found a
  • Cornish knight good enough for them both. What were their names? said
  • Bleoberis. They told me, said Sir Tristram, that the one of them hight
  • Sir Sagramore le Desirous, and the other hight Dodinas le Savage. Ah,
  • said Sir Bleoberis, have ye met with them? so God me help, they were
  • two good knights and men of great worship, and if ye have beat them
  • both ye must needs be a good knight; but if it so be ye have beat them
  • both, yet shall ye not fear me, but ye shall beat me or ever ye have
  • this lady. Then defend you, said Sir Tristram. So they departed and
  • came together like thunder, and either bare other down, horse and all,
  • to the earth.
  • Then they avoided their horses, and lashed together eagerly with
  • swords, and mightily, now tracing and traversing on the right hand and
  • on the left hand more than two hours. And sometime they rushed together
  • with such a might that they lay both grovelling on the ground. Then Sir
  • Bleoberis de Ganis stert aback, and said thus: Now, gentle good knight,
  • a while hold your hands, and let us speak together. Say what ye will,
  • said Tristram, and I will answer you. Sir, said Bleoberis, I would wit
  • of whence ye be, and of whom ye be come, and what is your name? So God
  • me help, said Sir Tristram, I fear not to tell you my name. Wit ye well
  • I am King Meliodas’ son, and my mother is King Mark’s sister, and my
  • name is Sir Tristram de Liones, and King Mark is mine uncle. Truly,
  • said Bleoberis, I am right glad of you, for ye are he that slew Marhaus
  • the knight, hand for hand in an island, for the truage of Cornwall;
  • also ye overcame Sir Palamides the good knight, at a tournament in an
  • island, where ye beat Sir Gawaine and his nine fellows. So God me help,
  • said Sir Tristram, wit ye well that I am the same knight; now I have
  • told you my name, tell me yours with good will. Wit ye well that my
  • name is Sir Bleoberis de Ganis, and my brother hight Sir Blamore de
  • Ganis, that is called a good knight, and we be sister’s children unto
  • my lord Sir Launcelot du Lake, that we call one of the best knights of
  • the world. That is truth, said Sir Tristram, Sir Launcelot is called
  • peerless of courtesy and of knighthood; and for his sake, said Sir
  • Tristram, I will not with my good will fight no more with you, for the
  • great love I have to Sir Launcelot du Lake. In good faith, said
  • Bleoberis, as for me I will be loath to fight with you; but sithen ye
  • follow me here to have this lady, I shall proffer you kindness,
  • courtesy, and gentleness right here upon this ground. This lady shall
  • be betwixt us both, and to whom that she will go, let him have her in
  • peace. I will well, said Tristram, for, as I deem, she will leave you
  • and come to me. Ye shall prove it anon, said Bleoberis.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How the lady forsook Sir Tristram and abode with Sir
  • Bleoberis, and how she desired to go to her husband.
  • So when she was set betwixt them both she said these words unto Sir
  • Tristram: Wit ye well, Sir Tristram de Liones, that but late thou wast
  • the man in the world that I most loved and trusted, and I weened thou
  • hadst loved me again above all ladies; but when thou sawest this knight
  • lead me away thou madest no cheer to rescue me, but suffered my lord
  • Segwarides ride after me; but until that time I weened thou haddest
  • loved me, and therefore now I will leave thee, and never love thee
  • more. And therewithal she went unto Sir Bleoberis.
  • When Sir Tristram saw her do so he was wonderly wroth with that lady,
  • and ashamed to come to the court. Sir Tristram, said Sir Bleoberis, ye
  • are in the default, for I hear by this lady’s words she before this day
  • trusted you above all earthly knights, and, as she saith, ye have
  • deceived her, therefore wit ye well, there may no man hold that will
  • away; and rather than ye should be heartily displeased with me I would
  • ye had her, an she would abide with you. Nay, said the lady, so God me
  • help I will never go with him; for he that I loved most I weened he had
  • loved me. And therefore, Sir Tristram, she said, ride as thou came, for
  • though thou haddest overcome this knight, as ye was likely, with thee
  • never would I have gone. And I shall pray this knight so fair of his
  • knighthood, that or ever he pass this country, that he will lead me to
  • the abbey where my lord Sir Segwarides lieth. So God me help, said
  • Bleoberis, I let you wit, good knight Sir Tristram, because King Mark
  • gave me the choice of a gift in this court, and so this lady liked me
  • best—notwithstanding, she is wedded and hath a lord, and I have
  • fulfilled my quest, she shall be sent unto her husband again, and in
  • especial most for your sake, Sir Tristram; and if she would go with you
  • I would ye had her. I thank you, said Sir Tristram, but for her love I
  • shall beware what manner a lady I shall love or trust; for had her
  • lord, Sir Segwarides, been away from the court, I should have been the
  • first that should have followed you; but sithen that ye have refused
  • me, as I am true knight I shall her know passingly well that I shall
  • love or trust. And so they took their leave one from the other and
  • departed.
  • And so Sir Tristram rode unto Tintagil, and Sir Bleoberis rode unto the
  • abbey where Sir Segwarides lay sore wounded, and there he delivered his
  • lady, and departed as a noble knight; and when Sir Segwarides saw his
  • lady, he was greatly comforted; and then she told him that Sir Tristram
  • had done great battle with Sir Bleoberis, and caused him to bring her
  • again. These words pleased Sir Segwarides right well, that Sir Tristram
  • would do so much; and so that lady told all the battle unto King Mark
  • betwixt Sir Tristram and Sir Bleoberis.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How King Mark sent Sir Tristram for La Beale Isoud toward
  • Ireland, and how by fortune he arrived into England.
  • Then when this was done King Mark cast always in his heart how he might
  • destroy Sir Tristram. And then he imagined in himself to send Sir
  • Tristram into Ireland for La Beale Isoud. For Sir Tristram had so
  • praised her beauty and her goodness that King Mark said that he would
  • wed her, whereupon he prayed Sir Tristram to take his way into Ireland
  • for him on message. And all this was done to the intent to slay Sir
  • Tristram. Notwithstanding, Sir Tristram would not refuse the message
  • for no danger nor peril that might fall, for the pleasure of his uncle,
  • but to go he made him ready in the most goodliest wise that might be
  • devised. For Sir Tristram took with him the most goodliest knights that
  • he might find in the court; and they were arrayed, after the guise that
  • was then used, in the goodliest manner. So Sir Tristram departed and
  • took the sea with all his fellowship. And anon, as he was in the broad
  • sea a tempest took him and his fellowship, and drove them back into the
  • coast of England; and there they arrived fast by Camelot, and full fain
  • they were to take the land.
  • And when they were landed Sir Tristram set up his pavilion upon the
  • land of Camelot, and there he let hang his shield upon the pavilion.
  • And that same day came two knights of King Arthur’s, that one was Sir
  • Ector de Maris, and Sir Morganor. And they touched the shield, and bade
  • him come out of the pavilion for to joust, an he would joust. Ye shall
  • be answered, said Sir Tristram, an ye will tarry a little while. So he
  • made him ready, and first he smote down Sir Ector de Maris, and after
  • he smote down Sir Morganor, all with one spear, and sore bruised them.
  • And when they lay upon the earth they asked Sir Tristram what he was,
  • and of what country he was knight. Fair lords, said Sir Tristram, wit
  • ye well that I am of Cornwall. Alas, said Sir Ector, now am I ashamed
  • that ever any Cornish knight should overcome me. And then for despite
  • Sir Ector put off his armour from him, and went on foot, and would not
  • ride.
  • CHAPTER XX. How King Anguish of Ireland was summoned to come to King
  • Arthur’s court for treason.
  • Then it fell that Sir Bleoberis and Sir Blamore de Ganis, that were
  • brethren, they had summoned the King Anguish of Ireland for to come to
  • Arthur’s court upon pain of forfeiture of King Arthur’s good grace. And
  • if the King of Ireland came not in, at the day assigned and set, the
  • king should lose his lands. So it happened that at the day assigned,
  • King Arthur neither Sir Launcelot might not be there for to give the
  • judgment, for King Arthur was with Sir Launcelot at the Castle Joyous
  • Garde. And so King Arthur assigned King Carados and the King of Scots
  • to be there that day as judges. So when the kings were at Camelot King
  • Anguish of Ireland was come to know his accusers. Then was there Sir
  • Blamore de Ganis, and appealed the King of Ireland of treason, that he
  • had slain a cousin of his in his court in Ireland by treason. The king
  • was sore abashed of his accusation, for-why he was come at the summons
  • of King Arthur, and or he came at Camelot he wist not wherefore he was
  • sent after. And when the king heard Sir Blamore say his will, he
  • understood well there was none other remedy but for to answer him
  • knightly; for the custom was such in those days, that an any man were
  • appealed of any treason or murder he should fight body for body, or
  • else to find another knight for him. And all manner of murders in those
  • days were called treason.
  • So when King Anguish understood his accusing he was passing heavy, for
  • he knew Sir Blamore de Ganis that he was a noble knight, and of noble
  • knights come. Then the King of Ireland was simply purveyed of his
  • answer; therefore the judges gave him respite by the third day to give
  • his answer. So the king departed unto his lodging. The meanwhile there
  • came a lady by Sir Tristram’s pavilion making great dole. What aileth
  • you, said Sir Tristram, that ye make such dole? Ah, fair knight, said
  • the lady, I am ashamed unless that some good knight help me; for a
  • great lady of worship sent by me a fair child and a rich, unto Sir
  • Launcelot du Lake, and hereby there met with me a knight, and threw me
  • down from my palfrey, and took away the child from me. Well, my lady,
  • said Sir Tristram, and for my lord Sir Launcelot’s sake I shall get you
  • that child again, or else I shall be beaten for it. And so Sir Tristram
  • took his horse, and asked the lady which way the knight rode; and then
  • she told him. And he rode after him, and within a while he overtook
  • that knight. And then Sir Tristram bade him turn and give again the
  • child.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How Sir Tristram rescued a child from a knight, and how
  • Gouvernail told him of King Anguish.
  • The knight turned his horse and made him ready to fight. And then Sir
  • Tristram smote him with a sword such a buffet that he tumbled to the
  • earth. And then he yielded him unto Sir Tristram. Then come thy way,
  • said Sir Tristram, and bring the child to the lady again. So he took
  • his horse meekly and rode with Sir Tristram; and then by the way Sir
  • Tristram asked him his name. Then he said, My name is Breuse Saunce
  • Pite. So when he had delivered that child to the lady, he said: Sir, as
  • in this the child is well remedied. Then Sir Tristram let him go again
  • that sore repented him after, for he was a great foe unto many good
  • knights of King Arthur’s court.
  • Then when Sir Tristram was in his pavilion Gouvernail, his man, came
  • and told him how that King Anguish of Ireland was come thither, and he
  • was put in great distress; and there Gouvernail told Sir Tristram how
  • King Anguish was summoned and appealed of murder. So God me help, said
  • Sir Tristram, these be the best tidings that ever came to me this seven
  • years, for now shall the King of Ireland have need of my help; for I
  • daresay there is no knight in this country that is not of Arthur’s
  • court dare do battle with Sir Blamore de Ganis; and for to win the love
  • of the King of Ireland I will take the battle upon me; and therefore
  • Gouvernail bring me, I charge thee, to the king.
  • Then Gouvernail went unto King Anguish of Ireland, and saluted him
  • fair. The king welcomed him and asked him what he would. Sir, said
  • Gouvernail, here is a knight near hand that desireth to speak with you:
  • he bade me say he would do you service. What knight is he? said the
  • king. Sir, said he, it is Sir Tristram de Liones, that for your good
  • grace that ye showed him in your lands will reward you in this country.
  • Come on, fellow, said the king, with me anon and show me unto Sir
  • Tristram. So the king took a little hackney and but few fellowship with
  • him, until he came unto Sir Tristram’s pavilion. And when Sir Tristram
  • saw the king he ran unto him and would have holden his stirrup. But the
  • king leapt from his horse lightly, and either halsed other in their
  • arms. My gracious lord, said Sir Tristram, gramercy of your great
  • goodnesses showed unto me in your marches and lands: and at that time I
  • promised you to do you service an ever it lay in my power. And, gentle
  • knight, said the king unto Sir Tristram, now have I great need of you,
  • never had I so great need of no knight’s help. How so, my good lord?
  • said Sir Tristram. I shall tell you, said the king: I am summoned and
  • appealed from my country for the death of a knight that was kin unto
  • the good knight Sir Launcelot; wherefore Sir Blamore de Ganis, brother
  • to Sir Bleoberis hath appealed me to fight with him, outher to find a
  • knight in my stead. And well I wot, said the king, these that are come
  • of King Ban’s blood, as Sir Launcelot and these other, are passing good
  • knights, and hard men for to win in battle as any that I know now
  • living. Sir, said Sir Tristram, for the good lordship ye showed me in
  • Ireland, and for my lady your daughter’s sake, La Beale Isoud, I will
  • take the battle for you upon this condition that ye shall grant me two
  • things: that one is that ye shall swear to me that ye are in the right,
  • that ye were never consenting to the knight’s death; Sir, then said Sir
  • Tristram, when that I have done this battle, if God give me grace that
  • I speed, that ye shall give me a reward, what thing reasonable that I
  • will ask of you. So God me help, said the king, ye shall have
  • whatsomever ye will ask. It is well said, said Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How Sir Tristram fought for Sir Anguish and overcame his
  • adversary, and how his adversary would never yield him.
  • Now make your answer that your champion is ready, for I shall die in
  • your quarrel rather than to be recreant. I have no doubt of you, said
  • the king, that, an ye should have ado with Sir Launcelot du Lake— Sir,
  • said Sir Tristram, as for Sir Launcelot, he is called the noblest
  • knight of the world, and wit ye well that the knights of his blood are
  • noble men, and dread shame; and as for Bleoberis, brother unto Sir
  • Blamore, I have done battle with him, therefore upon my head it is no
  • shame to call him a good knight. It is noised, said the king, that
  • Blamore is the hardier knight. Sir, as for that let him be, he shall
  • never be refused, an as he were the best knight that now beareth shield
  • or spear.
  • So King Anguish departed unto King Carados and the kings that were that
  • time as judges, and told them that he had found his champion ready.
  • Then by the commandment of the kings Sir Blamore de Ganis and Sir
  • Tristram were sent for to hear the charge. And when they were come
  • before the judges there were many kings and knights beheld Sir
  • Tristram, and much speech they had of him because that he slew Sir
  • Marhaus, the good knight, and because he for-jousted Sir Palamides the
  • good knight. So when they had taken their charge they withdrew them to
  • make them ready to do battle.
  • Then said Sir Bleoberis unto his brother, Sir Blamore: Fair dear
  • brother, remember of what kin we be come of, and what a man is Sir
  • Launcelot du Lake, neither farther nor nearer but brother’s children,
  • and there was never none of our kin that ever was shamed in battle; and
  • rather suffer death, brother, than to be shamed. Brother, said Blamore,
  • have ye no doubt of me, for I shall never shame none of my blood;
  • howbeit I am sure that yonder knight is called a passing good knight as
  • of his time one of the world, yet shall I never yield me, nor say the
  • loath word: well may he happen to smite me down with his great might of
  • chivalry, but rather shall he slay me than I shall yield me as
  • recreant. God speed you well, said Sir Bleoberis, for ye shall find him
  • the mightiest knight that ever ye had ado withal, for I know him, for I
  • have had ado with him. God me speed, said Sir Blamore de Ganis; and
  • therewith he took his horse at the one end of the lists, and Sir
  • Tristram at the other end of the lists, and so they feutred their
  • spears and came together as it had been thunder; and there Sir Tristram
  • through great might smote down Sir Blamore and his horse to the earth.
  • Then anon Sir Blamore avoided his horse and pulled out his sword and
  • threw his shield afore him, and bade Sir Tristram alight: For though an
  • horse hath failed me, I trust to God the earth will not fail me. And
  • then Sir Tristram alighted, and dressed him unto battle; and there they
  • lashed together strongly as racing and tracing, foining and dashing,
  • many sad strokes, that the kings and knights had great wonder that they
  • might stand; for ever they fought like wood men, so that there was
  • never knights seen fight more fiercely than they did; for Sir Blamore
  • was so hasty that he would have no rest, that all men wondered that
  • they had breath to stand on their feet; and all the place was bloody
  • that they fought in. And at the last, Sir Tristram smote Sir Blamore
  • such a buffet upon the helm that he there fell down upon his side, and
  • Sir Tristram stood and beheld him.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How Sir Blamore desired Tristram to slay him, and how
  • Sir Tristram spared him, and how they took appointment.
  • Then when Sir Blamore might speak, he said thus: Sir Tristram de
  • Liones, I require thee, as thou art a noble knight, and the best knight
  • that ever I found, that thou wilt slay me out, for I would not live to
  • be made lord of all the earth, for I have liefer die with worship than
  • live with shame; and needs, Sir Tristram, thou must slay me, or else
  • thou shalt never win the field, for I will never say the loath word.
  • And therefore if thou dare slay me, slay me, I require thee. When Sir
  • Tristram heard him say so knightly, he wist not what to do with him; he
  • remembering him of both parties, of what blood he was come, and for Sir
  • Launcelot’s sake he would be loath to slay him; and in the other party
  • in no wise he might not choose, but that he must make him to say the
  • loath word, or else to slay him.
  • Then Sir Tristram stert aback, and went to the kings that were judges,
  • and there he kneeled down to-fore them, and besought them for their
  • worships, and for King Arthur’s and Sir Launcelot’s sake, that they
  • would take this matter in their hands. For, my fair lords, said Sir
  • Tristram, it were shame and pity that this noble knight that yonder
  • lieth should be slain; for ye hear well, shamed will he not be, and I
  • pray to God that he never be slain nor shamed for me. And as for the
  • king for whom I fight for, I shall require him, as I am his true
  • champion and true knight in this field, that he will have mercy upon
  • this good knight. So God me help, said King Anguish, I will for your
  • sake; Sir Tristram, be ruled as ye will have me, for I know you for my
  • true knight; and therefore I will heartily pray the kings that be here
  • as judges to take it in their hands. And the kings that were judges
  • called Sir Bleoberis to them, and asked him his advice. My lords, said
  • Bleoberis, though my brother be beaten, and hath the worse through
  • might of arms, I dare say, though Sir Tristram hath beaten his body he
  • hath not beaten his heart, and I thank God he is not shamed this day;
  • and rather than he should be shamed I require you, said Bleoberis, let
  • Sir Tristram slay him out. It shall not be so, said the kings, for his
  • part adversary, both the king and the champion, have pity of Sir
  • Blamore’s knighthood. My lords, said Bleoberis, I will right well as ye
  • will.
  • Then the kings called the King of Ireland, and found him goodly and
  • treatable. And then, by all their advices, Sir Tristram and Sir
  • Bleoberis took up Sir Blamore, and the two brethren were accorded with
  • King Anguish, and kissed and made friends for ever. And then Sir
  • Blamore and Sir Tristram kissed together, and there they made their
  • oaths that they would never none of them two brethren fight with Sir
  • Tristram, and Sir Tristram made the same oath. And for that gentle
  • battle all the blood of Sir Launcelot loved Sir Tristram for ever.
  • Then King Anguish and Sir Tristram took their leave, and sailed into
  • Ireland with great noblesse and joy. So when they were in Ireland the
  • king let make it known throughout all the land how and in what manner
  • Sir Tristram had done for him. Then the queen and all that there were
  • made the most of him that they might. But the joy that La Beale Isoud
  • made of Sir Tristram there might no tongue tell, for of all men earthly
  • she loved him most.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Sir Tristram demanded La Beale Isoud for King Mark,
  • and how Sir Tristram and Isoud drank the love drink.
  • Then upon a day King Anguish asked Sir Tristram why he asked not his
  • boon, for whatsomever he had promised him he should have it without
  • fail. Sir, said Sir Tristram, now is it time; this is all that I will
  • desire, that ye will give me La Beale Isoud, your daughter, not for
  • myself, but for mine uncle, King Mark, that shall have her to wife, for
  • so have I promised him. Alas, said the king, I had liefer than all the
  • land that I have ye would wed her yourself. Sir, an I did then I were
  • shamed for ever in this world, and false of my promise. Therefore, said
  • Sir I Tristram, I pray you hold your promise that ye promised me; for
  • this is my desire, that ye will give me La Beale Isoud to go with me
  • into Cornwall for to be wedded to King Mark, mine uncle. As for that,
  • said King Anguish, ye shall have her with you to do with her what it
  • please you; that is for to say if that ye list to wed her yourself,
  • that is me liefest, and if ye will give her unto King Mark, your uncle,
  • that is in your choice. So, to make short conclusion, La Beale Isoud
  • was made ready to go with Sir Tristram, and Dame Bragwaine went with
  • her for her chief gentlewoman, with many other.
  • Then the queen, Isoud’s mother, gave to her and Dame Bragwaine, her
  • daughter’s gentlewoman, and unto Gouvernail, a drink, and charged them
  • that what day King Mark should wed, that same day they should give him
  • that drink, so that King Mark should drink to La Beale Isoud, and then,
  • said the queen, I undertake either shall love other the days of their
  • life. So this drink was given unto Dame Bragwaine, and unto Gouvernail.
  • And then anon Sir Tristram took the sea, and La Beale Isoud; and when
  • they were in their cabin, it happed so that they were thirsty, and they
  • saw a little flasket of gold stand by them, and it seemed by the colour
  • and the taste that it was noble wine. Then Sir Tristram took the
  • flasket in his hand, and said, Madam Isoud, here is the best drink that
  • ever ye drank, that Dame Bragwaine, your maiden, and Gouvernail, my
  • servant, have kept for themselves. Then they laughed and made good
  • cheer, and either drank to other freely, and they thought never drink
  • that ever they drank to other was so sweet nor so good. But by that
  • their drink was in their bodies, they loved either other so well that
  • never their love departed for weal neither for woe. And thus it happed
  • the love first betwixt Sir Tristram and La Beale Isoud, the which love
  • never departed the days of their life.
  • So then they sailed till by fortune they came nigh a castle that hight
  • Pluere, and thereby arrived for to repose them, weening to them to have
  • had good harbourage. But anon as Sir Tristram was within the castle
  • they were taken prisoners; for the custom of the castle was such; who
  • that rode by that castle and brought any lady, he must needs fight with
  • the lord, that hight Breunor. And if it were so that Breunor won the
  • field, then should the knight stranger and his lady be put to death,
  • what that ever they were; and if it were so that the strange knight won
  • the field of Sir Breunor, then should he die and his lady both. This
  • custom was used many winters, for it was called the Castle Pluere, that
  • is to say the Weeping Castle.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Sir Tristram and Isoud were in prison, and how he
  • fought for her beauty, and smote of another lady’s head.
  • Thus as Sir Tristram and La Beale Isoud were in prison, it happed a
  • knight and a lady came unto them where they were, to cheer them. I have
  • marvel, said Tristram unto the knight and the lady, what is the cause
  • the lord of this castle holdeth us in prison: it was never the custom
  • of no place of worship that ever I came in, when a knight and a lady
  • asked harbour, and they to receive them, and after to destroy them that
  • be his guests. Sir, said the knight, this is the old custom of this
  • castle, that when a knight cometh here he must needs fight with our
  • lord, and he that is weaker must lose his head. And when that is done,
  • if his lady that he bringeth be fouler than our lord’s wife, she must
  • lose her head: and if she be fairer proved than is our lady, then shall
  • the lady of this castle lose her head. So God me help, said Sir
  • Tristram, this is a foul custom and a shameful. But one advantage have
  • I, said Sir Tristram, I have a lady is fair enough, fairer saw I never
  • in all my life-days, and I doubt not for lack of beauty she shall not
  • lose her head; and rather than I should lose my head I will fight for
  • it on a fair field. Wherefore, sir knight, I pray you tell your lord
  • that I will be ready as to-morn with my lady, and myself to do battle,
  • if it be so I may have my horse and mine armour. Sir, said that knight,
  • I undertake that your desire shall be sped right well. And then he
  • said: Take your rest, and look that ye be up betimes and make you ready
  • and your lady, for ye shall want no thing that you behoveth. And
  • therewith he departed, and on the morn betimes that same knight came to
  • Sir Tristram, and fetched him out and his lady, and brought him horse
  • and armour that was his own, and bade him make him ready to the field,
  • for all the estates and commons of that lordship were there ready to
  • behold that battle and judgment.
  • Then came Sir Breunor, the lord of that castle, with his lady in his
  • hand, muffled, and asked Sir Tristram where was his lady: For an thy
  • lady be fairer than mine, with thy sword smite off my lady’s head; and
  • if my lady be fairer than thine, with my sword I must strike off her
  • head. And if I may win thee, yet shall thy lady be mine, and thou shalt
  • lose thy head. Sir, said Tristram, this is a foul custom and horrible;
  • and rather than my lady should lose her head, yet had I liefer lose my
  • head. Nay, nay, said Sir Breunor, the ladies shall be first showed
  • together, and the one shall have her judgment. Nay, I will not so, said
  • Sir Tristram, for here is none that will give righteous judgment. But I
  • doubt not, said Sir Tristram, my lady is fairer than thine, and that
  • will I prove and make good with my hand. And whosomever he be that will
  • say the contrary I will prove it on his head. And therewith Sir
  • Tristram showed La Beale Isoud, and turned her thrice about with his
  • naked sword in his hand. And when Sir Breunor saw that, he did the same
  • wise turn his lady. But when Sir Breunor beheld La Beale Isoud, him
  • thought he saw never a fairer lady, and then he dread his lady’s head
  • should be off. And so all the people that were there present gave
  • judgment that La Beale Isoud was the fairer lady and the better made.
  • How now, said Sir Tristram, meseemeth it were pity that my lady should
  • lose her head, but because thou and she of long time have used this
  • wicked custom, and by you both have many good knights and ladies been
  • destroyed, for that cause it were no loss to destroy you both. So God
  • me help, said Sir Breunor, for to say the sooth, thy lady is fairer
  • than mine, and that me sore repenteth. And so I hear the people privily
  • say, for of all women I saw none so fair; and therefore, an thou wilt
  • slay my lady, I doubt not but I shall slay thee and have thy lady. Thou
  • shalt win her, said Sir Tristram, as dear as ever knight won lady. And
  • because of thine own judgment, as thou wouldst have done to my lady if
  • that she had been fouler, and because of the evil custom, give me thy
  • lady, said Sir Tristram. And therewithal Sir Tristram strode unto him
  • and took his lady from him, and with an awk stroke he smote off her
  • head clean. Well, knight, said Sir Breunor, now hast thou done me a
  • despite.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How Sir Tristram fought with Sir Breunor, and at the last
  • smote off his head.
  • Now take thine horse: sithen I am ladyless I will win thy lady an I
  • may.
  • Then they took their horses and came together as it had been the
  • thunder; and Sir Tristram smote Sir Breunor clean from his horse, and
  • lightly he rose up; and as Sir Tristram came again by him he thrust his
  • horse throughout both the shoulders, that his horse hurled here and
  • there and fell dead to the ground. And ever Sir Breunor ran after to
  • have slain Sir Tristram, but Sir Tristram was light and nimble, and
  • voided his horse lightly. And or ever Sir Tristram might dress his
  • shield and his sword the other gave him three or four sad strokes. Then
  • they rushed together like two boars, tracing and traversing mightily
  • and wisely as two noble knights. For this Sir Breunor was a proved
  • knight, and had been or then the death of many good knights, that it
  • was pity that he had so long endured.
  • Thus they fought, hurling here and there nigh two hours, and either
  • were wounded sore. Then at the last Sir Breunor rashed upon Sir
  • Tristram and took him in his arms, for he trusted much in his strength.
  • Then was Sir Tristram called the strongest and the highest knight of
  • the world; for he was called bigger than Sir Launcelot, but Sir
  • Launcelot was better breathed. So anon Sir Tristram thrust Sir Breunor
  • down grovelling, and then he unlaced his helm and struck off his head.
  • And then all they that longed to the castle came to him, and did him
  • homage and fealty, praying him that he would abide there still a little
  • while to fordo that foul custom. Sir Tristram granted thereto. The
  • meanwhile one of the knights of the castle rode unto Sir Galahad, the
  • haut prince, the which was Sir Breunor’s son, which was a noble knight,
  • and told him what misadventure his father had and his mother.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How Sir Galahad fought with Sir Tristram, and how Sir
  • Tristram yielded him and promised to fellowship with Launcelot.
  • Then came Sir Galahad, and the King with the Hundred Knights with him;
  • and this Sir Galahad proffered to fight with Sir Tristram hand for
  • hand. And so they made them ready to go unto battle on horseback with
  • great courage. Then Sir Galahad and Sir Tristram met together so hard
  • that either bare other down, horse and all, to the earth. And then they
  • avoided their horses as noble knights, and dressed their shields, and
  • drew their swords with ire and rancour, and they lashed together many
  • sad strokes, and one while striking, another while foining, tracing and
  • traversing as noble knights; thus they fought long, near half a day,
  • and either were sore wounded. At the last Sir Tristram waxed light and
  • big, and doubled his strokes, and drove Sir Galahad aback on the one
  • side and on the other, so that he was like to have been slain.
  • With that came the King with the Hundred Knights, and all that
  • fellowship went fiercely upon Sir Tristram. When Sir Tristram saw them
  • coming upon him, then he wist well he might not endure. Then as a wise
  • knight of war, he said to Sir Galahad, the haut prince: Sir, ye show to
  • me no knighthood, for to suffer all your men to have ado with me all at
  • once; and as meseemeth ye be a noble knight of your hands it is great
  • shame to you. So God me help, said Sir Galahad, there is none other way
  • but thou must yield thee to me, other else to die, said Sir Galahad to
  • Sir Tristram. I will rather yield me to you than die for that is more
  • for the might of your men than of your hands. And therewithal Sir
  • Tristram took his own sword by the point, and put the pommel in the
  • hand of Sir Galahad.
  • Therewithal came the King with the Hundred Knights, and hard began to
  • assail Sir Tristram. Let be, said Sir Galahad, be ye not so hardy to
  • touch him, for I have given this knight his life. That is your shame,
  • said the King with the Hundred Knights; hath he not slain your father
  • and your mother? As for that, said Sir Galahad, I may not wite him
  • greatly, for my father had him in prison, and enforced him to do battle
  • with him; and my father had such a custom that was a shameful custom,
  • that what knight came there to ask harbour his lady must needs die but
  • if she were fairer than my mother; and if my father overcame that
  • knight he must needs die. This was a shameful custom and usage, a
  • knight for his harbour-asking to have such harbourage. And for this
  • custom I would never draw about him. So God me help, said the King,
  • this was a shameful custom. Truly, said Sir Galahad, so seemed me; and
  • meseemed it had been great pity that this knight should have been
  • slain, for I dare say he is the noblest man that beareth life, but if
  • it were Sir Launcelot du Lake. Now, fair knight, said Sir Galahad, I
  • require thee tell me thy name, and of whence thou art, and whither thou
  • wilt. Sir, he said, my name is Sir Tristram de Liones, and from King
  • Mark of Cornwall I was sent on message unto King Anguish of Ireland,
  • for to fetch his daughter to be his wife, and here she is ready to go
  • with me into Cornwall, and her name is La Beale Isoud. And, Sir
  • Tristram, said Sir Galahad, the haut prince, well be ye found in these
  • marches, and so ye will promise me to go unto Sir Launcelot du Lake,
  • and accompany with him, ye shall go where ye will, and your fair lady
  • with you; and I shall promise you never in all my days shall such
  • customs be used in this castle as have been used. Sir, said Sir
  • Tristram, now I let you wit, so God me help, I weened ye had been Sir
  • Launcelot du Lake when I saw you first, and therefore I dread you the
  • more; and sir, I promise you, said Sir Tristram, as soon as I may I
  • will see Sir Launcelot and in fellowship me with him; for of all the
  • knights of the world I most desire his fellowship.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How Sir Launcelot met with Sir Carados bearing away Sir
  • Gawaine, and of the rescue of Sir Gawaine.
  • And then Sir Tristram took his leave when he saw his time, and took the
  • sea. And in the meanwhile word came unto Sir Launcelot and to Sir
  • Tristram that Sir Carados, the mighty king, that was made like a giant,
  • fought with Sir Gawaine, and gave him such strokes that he swooned in
  • his saddle, and after that he took him by the collar and pulled him out
  • of his saddle, and fast bound him to the saddle-bow, and so rode his
  • way with him toward his castle. And as he rode, by fortune Sir
  • Launcelot met with Sir Carados, and anon he knew Sir Gawaine that lay
  • bound after him. Ah, said Sir Launcelot unto Sir Gawaine, how stands it
  • with you? Never so hard, said Sir Gawaine, unless that ye help me, for
  • so God me help, without ye rescue me I know no knight that may, but
  • outher you or Sir Tristram. Wherefore Sir Launcelot was heavy of Sir
  • Gawaine’s words. And then Sir Launcelot bade Sir Carados: Lay down that
  • knight and fight with me. Thou art but a fool, said Sir Carados, for I
  • will serve you in the same wise. As for that, said Sir Launcelot, spare
  • me not, for I warn thee I will not spare thee. And then he bound Sir
  • Gawaine hand and foot, and so threw him to the ground. And then he gat
  • his spear of his squire, and departed from Sir Launcelot to fetch his
  • course. And so either met with other, and brake their spears to their
  • hands; and then they pulled out swords, and hurtled together on
  • horseback more than an hour. And at the last Sir Launcelot smote Sir
  • Carados such a buffet upon the helm that it pierced his brain-pan. So
  • then Sir Launcelot took Sir Carados by the collar and pulled him under
  • his horse’s feet, and then he alighted and pulled off his helm and
  • struck off his head. And then Sir Launcelot unbound Sir Gawaine. So
  • this same tale was told to Sir Galahad and to Sir Tristram:—here may ye
  • hear the nobleness that followeth Sir Launcelot. Alas, said Sir
  • Tristram, an I had not this message in hand with this fair lady, truly
  • I would never stint or I had found Sir Launcelot. Then Sir Tristram and
  • La Beale Isoud went to the sea and came into Cornwall, and there all
  • the barons met them.
  • CHAPTER XXIX. Of the wedding of King Mark to La Beale Isoud, and of
  • Bragwaine her maid, and of Palamides.
  • And anon they were richly wedded with great noblesse. But ever, as the
  • French book saith, Sir Tristram and La Beale Isoud loved ever together.
  • Then was there great jousts and great tourneying, and many lords and
  • ladies were at that feast, and Sir Tristram was most praised of all
  • other. Thus dured the feast long, and after the feast was done, within
  • a little while after, by the assent of two ladies that were with Queen
  • Isoud, they ordained for hate and envy for to destroy Dame Bragwaine,
  • that was maiden and lady unto La Beale Isoud; and she was sent into the
  • forest for to fetch herbs, and there she was met, and bound feet and
  • hand to a tree, and so she was bounden three days. And by fortune, Sir
  • Palamides found Dame Bragwaine, and there he delivered her from the
  • death, and brought her to a nunnery there beside, for to be recovered.
  • When Isoud the queen missed her maiden, wit ye well she was right heavy
  • as ever was any queen, for of all earthly women she loved her best: the
  • cause was for she came with her out of her country. And so upon a day
  • Queen Isoud walked into the forest to put away her thoughts, and there
  • she went herself unto a well and made great moan. And suddenly there
  • came Palamides to her, and had heard all her complaint, and said: Madam
  • Isoud, an ye will grant me my boon, I shall bring to you Dame Bragwaine
  • safe and sound. And the queen was so glad of his proffer that suddenly
  • unadvised she granted all his asking. Well, Madam, said Palamides, I
  • trust to your promise, and if ye will abide here half an hour I shall
  • bring her to you. I shall abide you, said La Beale Isoud. And Sir
  • Palamides rode forth his way to that nunnery, and lightly he came again
  • with Dame Bragwaine; but by her good will she would not have come
  • again, because for love of the queen she stood in adventure of her
  • life. Notwithstanding, half against her will, she went with Sir
  • Palamides unto the queen. And when the queen saw her she was passing
  • glad. Now, Madam, said Palamides, remember upon your promise, for I
  • have fulfilled my promise. Sir Palamides, said the queen, I wot not
  • what is your desire, but I will that ye wit, howbeit I promised you
  • largely, I thought none evil, nor I warn you none evil will I do.
  • Madam, said Sir Palamides, as at this time, ye shall not know my
  • desire, but before my lord your husband there shall ye know that I will
  • have my desire that ye have promised me. And therewith the queen
  • departed, and rode home to the king, and Sir Palamides rode after her.
  • And when Sir Palamides came before the king, he said: Sir King, I
  • require you as ye be a righteous king, that ye will judge me the right.
  • Tell me your cause, said the king, and ye shall have right.
  • CHAPTER XXX. How Palamides demanded Queen Isoud, and how Lambegus rode
  • after to rescue her, and of the escape of Isoud.
  • Sir, said Palamides, I promised your Queen Isoud to bring again Dame
  • Bragwaine that she had lost, upon this covenant, that she should grant
  • me a boon that I would ask, and without grudging, outher advisement,
  • she granted me. What say ye, my lady? said the king. It is as he saith,
  • so God me help, said the queen; to say thee sooth I promised him his
  • asking for love and joy that I had to see her. Well, Madam, said the
  • king, and if ye were hasty to grant him what boon he would ask, I will
  • well that ye perform your promise. Then, said Palamides, I will that ye
  • wit that I will have your queen to lead her and govern her whereas me
  • list. Therewith the king stood still, and bethought him of Sir
  • Tristram, and deemed that he would rescue her. And then hastily the
  • king answered: Take her with the adventures that shall fall of it, for
  • as I suppose thou wilt not enjoy her no while. As for that, said
  • Palamides, I dare right well abide the adventure. And so, to make short
  • tale, Sir Palamides took her by the hand and said: Madam, grudge not to
  • go with me, for I desire nothing but your own promise. As for that,
  • said the queen, I fear not greatly to go with thee, howbeit thou hast
  • me at advantage upon my promise, for I doubt not I shall be
  • worshipfully rescued from thee. As for that, said Sir Palamides, be it
  • as it be may. So Queen Isoud was set behind Palamides, and rode his
  • way.
  • Anon the king sent after Sir Tristram, but in no wise he could be
  • found, for he was in the forest a-hunting; for that was always his
  • custom, but if he used arms, to chase and to hunt in the forests. Alas,
  • said the king, now I am shamed for ever, that by mine own assent my
  • lady and my queen shall be devoured. Then came forth a knight, his name
  • was Lambegus, and he was a knight of Sir Tristram. My lord, said this
  • knight, sith ye have trust in my lord, Sir Tristram, wit ye well for
  • his sake I will ride after your queen and rescue her, or else I shall
  • be beaten. Gramercy, said the king, as I live, Sir Lambegus, I shall
  • deserve it. And then Sir Lambegus armed him, and rode after as fast as
  • he might. And then within a while he overtook Sir Palamides. And then
  • Sir Palamides left the queen. What art thou, said Palamides, art thou
  • Tristram? Nay, he said, I am his servant, and my name is Sir Lambegus.
  • That me repenteth, said Palamides. I had liefer thou hadst been Sir
  • Tristram. I believe you well, said Lambegus, but when thou meetest with
  • Sir Tristram thou shalt have thy hands full. And then they hurtled
  • together and all to-brast their spears, and then they pulled out their
  • swords, and hewed on helms and hauberks. At the last Sir Palamides gave
  • Sir Lambegus such a wound that he fell down like a dead knight to the
  • earth.
  • Then he looked after La Beale Isoud, and then she was gone he nist
  • where. Wit ye well Sir Palamides was never so heavy. So the queen ran
  • into the forest, and there she found a well, and therein she had
  • thought to have drowned herself. And as good fortune would, there came
  • a knight to her that had a castle thereby, his name was Sir Adtherp.
  • And when he found the queen in that mischief he rescued her, and
  • brought her to his castle. And when he wist what she was he armed him,
  • and took his horse, and said he would be avenged upon Palamides; and so
  • he rode on till he met with him, and there Sir Palamides wounded him
  • sore, and by force he made him to tell him the cause why he did battle
  • with him, and how he had led the queen unto his castle. Now bring me
  • there, said Palamides, or thou shalt die of my hands. Sir, said Sir
  • Adtherp, I am so wounded I may not follow, but ride you this way and it
  • shall bring you into my castle, and there within is the queen. Then Sir
  • Palamides rode still till he came to the castle. And at a window La
  • Beale Isoud saw Sir Palamides; then she made the gates to be shut
  • strongly. And when he saw he might not come within the castle, he put
  • off his bridle and his saddle, and put his horse to pasture, and set
  • himself down at the gate like a man that was out of his wit that recked
  • not of himself.
  • CHAPTER XXXI. How Sir Tristram rode after Palamides, and how he found
  • him and fought with him, and by the means of Isoud the battle ceased.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Tristram, that when he was come home and wist La
  • Beale Isoud was gone with Sir Palamides, wit ye well he was wroth out
  • of measure. Alas, said Sir Tristram, I am this day shamed. Then he
  • cried to Gouvernail his man: Haste thee that I were armed and on
  • horseback, for well I wot Lambegus hath no might nor strength to
  • withstand Sir Palamides: alas that I have not been in his stead! So
  • anon as he was armed and horsed Sir Tristram and Gouvernail rode after
  • into the forest, and within a while he found his knight Lambegus almost
  • wounded to the death; and Sir Tristram bare him to a forester, and
  • charged him to keep him well. And then he rode forth, and there he
  • found Sir Adtherp sore wounded, and he told him how the queen would
  • have drowned herself had he not been, and how for her sake and love he
  • had taken upon him to do battle with Sir Palamides. Where is my lady?
  • said Sir Tristram. Sir, said the knight, she is sure enough within my
  • castle, an she can hold her within it. Gramercy, said Sir Tristram, of
  • thy great goodness. And so he rode till he came nigh to that castle;
  • and then Sir Tristram saw where Sir Palamides sat at the gate sleeping,
  • and his horse pastured fast afore him. Now go thou, Gouvernail, said
  • Sir Tristram, and bid him awake, and make him ready. So Gouvernail rode
  • unto him and said: Sir Palamides, arise, and take to thee thine
  • harness. But he was in such a study he heard not what Gouvernail said.
  • So Gouvernail came again and told Sir Tristram he slept, or else he was
  • mad. Go thou again, said Sir Tristram, and bid him arise, and tell him
  • that I am here, his mortal foe. So Gouvernail rode again and put upon
  • him the butt of his spear, and said: Sir Palamides, make thee ready,
  • for wit ye well Sir Tristram hoveth yonder, and sendeth thee word he is
  • thy mortal foe. And therewithal Sir Palamides arose stilly, without
  • words, and gat his horse, and saddled him and bridled him, and lightly
  • he leapt upon, and gat his spear in his hand, and either feutred their
  • spears and hurtled fast together; and there Tristram smote down Sir
  • Palamides over his horse’s tail. Then lightly Sir Palamides put his
  • shield afore him and drew his sword. And there began strong battle on
  • both parts, for both they fought for the love of one lady, and ever she
  • lay on the walls and beheld them how they fought out of measure, and
  • either were wounded passing sore, but Palamides was much sorer wounded.
  • Thus they fought tracing and traversing more than two hours, that
  • well-nigh for dole and sorrow La Beale Isoud swooned. Alas, she said,
  • that one I loved and yet do, and the other I love not, yet it were
  • great pity that I should see Sir Palamides slain; for well I know by
  • that time the end be done Sir Palamides is but a dead knight: because
  • he is not christened I would be loath that he should die a Saracen. And
  • therewithal she came down and besought Sir Tristram to fight no more.
  • Ah, madam, said he, what mean you, will ye have me shamed? Well ye know
  • I will be ruled by you. I will not your dishonour, said La Beale Isoud,
  • but I would that ye would for my sake spare this unhappy Saracen
  • Palamides. Madam, said Sir Tristram, I will leave fighting at this time
  • for your sake. Then she said to Sir Palamides: This shall be your
  • charge, that thou shalt go out of this country while I am therein. I
  • will obey your commandment, said Sir Palamides, the which is sore
  • against my will. Then take thy way, said La Beale Isoud, unto the court
  • of King Arthur, and there recommend me unto Queen Guenever, and tell
  • her that I send her word that there be within this land but four
  • lovers, that is, Sir Launcelot du Lake and Queen Guenever, and Sir
  • Tristram de Liones and Queen Isoud.
  • CHAPTER XXXII. How Sir Tristram brought Queen Isoud home, and of the
  • debate of King Mark and Sir Tristram.
  • And so Sir Palamides departed with great heaviness. And Sir Tristram
  • took the queen and brought her again to King Mark, and then was there
  • made great joy of her home-coming. Who was cherished but Sir Tristram!
  • Then Sir Tristram let fetch Sir Lambegus, his knight, from the
  • forester’s house, and it was long or he was whole, but at the last he
  • was well recovered. Thus they lived with joy and play a long while. But
  • ever Sir Andred, that was nigh cousin to Sir Tristram, lay in a watch
  • to wait betwixt Sir Tristram and La Beale Isoud, for to take them and
  • slander them. So upon a day Sir Tristram talked with La Beale Isoud in
  • a window, and that espied Sir Andred, and told it to the King. Then
  • King Mark took a sword in his hand and came to Sir Tristram, and called
  • him false traitor, and would have stricken him. But Sir Tristram was
  • nigh him, and ran under his sword, and took it out of his hand. And
  • then the King cried: Where are my knights and my men? I charge you slay
  • this traitor. But at that time there was not one would move for his
  • words. When Sir Tristram saw that there was not one would be against
  • him, he shook the sword to the king, and made countenance as though he
  • would have stricken him. And then King Mark fled, and Sir Tristram
  • followed him, and smote upon him five or six strokes flatling on the
  • neck, that he made him to fall upon the nose. And then Sir Tristram
  • yede his way and armed him, and took his horse and his man, and so he
  • rode into that forest.
  • And there upon a day Sir Tristram met with two brethren that were
  • knights with King Mark, and there he struck off the head of the one,
  • and wounded the other to the death; and he made him to bear his
  • brother’s head in his helm unto the king, and thirty more there he
  • wounded. And when that knight came before the king to say his message,
  • he there died afore the king and the queen. Then King Mark called his
  • council unto him, and asked advice of his barons what was best to do
  • with Sir Tristram. Sir, said the barons, in especial Sir Dinas, the
  • Seneschal, Sir, we will give you counsel for to send for Sir Tristram,
  • for we will that ye wit many men will hold with Sir Tristram an he were
  • hard bestead. And sir, said Sir Dinas, ye shall understand that Sir
  • Tristram is called peerless and makeless of any Christian knight, and
  • of his might and hardiness we knew none so good a knight, but if it be
  • Sir Launcelot du Lake. And if he depart from your court and go to King
  • Arthur’s court, wit ye well he will get him such friends there that he
  • will not set by your malice. And therefore, sir, I counsel you to take
  • him to your grace. I will well, said the king, that he be sent for,
  • that we may be friends. Then the barons sent for Sir Tristram under a
  • safe conduct. And so when Sir Tristram came to the king he was welcome,
  • and no rehearsal was made, and there was game and play. And then the
  • king and the queen went a-hunting, and Sir Tristram.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII. How Sir Lamorak jousted with thirty knights, and Sir
  • Tristram at the request of King Mark smote his horse down.
  • The king and the queen made their pavilions and their tents in that
  • forest beside a river, and there was daily hunting and jousting, for
  • there were ever thirty knights ready to joust unto all them that came
  • in at that time. And there by fortune came Sir Lamorak de Galis and Sir
  • Driant; and there Sir Driant jousted right well, but at the last he had
  • a fall. Then Sir Lamorak proffered to joust. And when he began he fared
  • so with the thirty knights that there was not one of them but that he
  • gave him a fall, and some of them were sore hurt. I marvel, said King
  • Mark, what knight he is that doth such deeds of arms. Sir, said Sir
  • Tristram, I know him well for a noble knight as few now be living, and
  • his name is Sir Lamorak de Galis. It were great shame, said the king,
  • that he should go thus away, unless that some of you meet with him
  • better. Sir, said Sir Tristram, meseemeth it were no worship for a
  • noble man to have ado with him: and for because at this time he hath
  • done over much for any mean knight living, therefore, as meseemeth, it
  • were great shame and villainy to tempt him any more at this time,
  • insomuch as he and his horse are weary both; for the deeds of arms that
  • he hath done this day, an they be well considered, it were enough for
  • Sir Launcelot du Lake. As for that, said King Mark, I require you, as
  • ye love me and my lady the queen, La Beale Isoud, take your arms and
  • joust with Sir Lamorak de Galis. Sir, said Sir Tristram, ye bid me do a
  • thing that is against knighthood, and well I can deem that I shall give
  • him a fall, for it is no mastery, for my horse and I be fresh both, and
  • so is not his horse and he; and wit ye well that he will take it for
  • great unkindness, for ever one good knight is loath to take another at
  • disadvantage; but because I will not displease you, as ye require me so
  • will I do, and obey your commandment.
  • And so Sir Tristram armed him and took his horse, and put him forth,
  • and there Sir Lamorak met him mightily, and what with the might of his
  • own spear, and of Sir Tristram’s spear, Sir Lamorak’s horse fell to the
  • earth, and he sitting in the saddle. Then anon as lightly as he might
  • he avoided the saddle and his horse, and put his shield afore him and
  • drew his sword. And then he bade Sir Tristram: Alight, thou knight, an
  • thou durst. Nay, said Sir Tristram, I will no more have ado with thee,
  • for I have done to thee over much unto my dishonour and to thy worship.
  • As for that, said Sir Lamorak, I can thee no thank; since thou hast
  • for-jousted me on horseback I require thee and I beseech thee, an thou
  • be Sir Tristram, fight with me on foot. I will not so, said Sir
  • Tristram; and wit ye well my name is Sir Tristram de Liones, and well I
  • know ye be Sir Lamorak de Galis, and this that I have done to you was
  • against my will, but I was required thereto; but to say that I will do
  • at your request as at this time, I will have no more ado with you, for
  • me shameth of that I have done. As for the shame, said Sir Lamorak, on
  • thy part or on mine, bear thou it an thou wilt, for though a mare’s son
  • hath failed me, now a queen’s son shall not fail thee; and therefore,
  • an thou be such a knight as men call thee, I require thee, alight, and
  • fight with me. Sir Lamorak, said Sir Tristram, I understand your heart
  • is great, and cause why ye have, to say thee sooth; for it would grieve
  • me an any knight should keep him fresh and then to strike down a weary
  • knight, for that knight nor horse was never formed that alway might
  • stand or endure. And therefore, said Sir Tristram, I will not have ado
  • with you, for me forthinketh of that I have done. As for that, said Sir
  • Lamorak, I shall quit you, an ever I see my time.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV. How Sir Lamorak sent an horn to King Mark in despite of
  • Sir Tristram, and how Sir Tristram was driven into a chapel.
  • So he departed from him with Sir Driant, and by the way they met with a
  • knight that was sent from Morgan le Fay unto King Arthur; and this
  • knight had a fair horn harnessed with gold, and the horn had such a
  • virtue that there might no lady nor gentlewoman drink of that horn but
  • if she were true to her husband, and if she were false she should spill
  • all the drink, and if she were true to her lord she might drink
  • peaceable. And because of the Queen Guenever, and in the despite of Sir
  • Launcelot, this horn was sent unto King Arthur; and by force Sir
  • Lamorak made that knight to tell all the cause why he bare that horn.
  • Now shalt thou bear this horn, said Lamorak, unto King Mark, or else
  • choose thou to die for it; for I tell thee plainly, in despite and
  • reproof of Sir Tristram thou shalt bear that horn unto King Mark, his
  • uncle, and say thou to him that I sent it him for to assay his lady,
  • and if she be true to him he shall prove her. So the knight went his
  • way unto King Mark, and brought him that rich horn, and said that Sir
  • Lamorak sent it him, and thereto he told him the virtue of that horn.
  • Then the king made Queen Isoud to drink thereof, and an hundred ladies,
  • and there were but four ladies of all those that drank clean. Alas,
  • said King Mark, this is a great despite, and sware a great oath that
  • she should be burnt and the other ladies.
  • Then the barons gathered them together, and said plainly they would not
  • have those ladies burnt for an horn made by sorcery, that came from as
  • false a sorceress and witch as then was living. For that horn did never
  • good, but caused strife and debate, and always in her days she had been
  • an enemy to all true lovers. So there were many knights made their
  • avow, an ever they met with Morgan le Fay, that they would show her
  • short courtesy. Also Sir Tristram was passing wroth that Sir Lamorak
  • sent that horn unto King Mark, for well he knew that it was done in the
  • despite of him. And therefore he thought to quite Sir Lamorak.
  • Then Sir Tristram used daily and nightly to go to Queen Isoud when he
  • might, and ever Sir Andred his cousin watched him night and day for to
  • take him with La Beale Isoud. And so upon a night Sir Andred espied the
  • hour and the time when Sir Tristram went to his lady. Then Sir Andred
  • gat unto him twelve knights, and at midnight he set upon Sir Tristram
  • secretly and suddenly and there Sir Tristram was taken naked abed with
  • La Beale Isoud, and then was he bound hand and foot, and so was he kept
  • until day. And then by the assent of King Mark, and of Sir Andred, and
  • of some of the barons, Sir Tristram was led unto a chapel that stood
  • upon the sea rocks, there for to take his judgment: and so he was led
  • bounden with forty knights. And when Sir Tristram saw that there was
  • none other boot but needs that he must die, then said he: Fair lords,
  • remember what I have done for the country of Cornwall, and in what
  • jeopardy I have been in for the weal of you all; for when I fought for
  • the truage of Cornwall with Sir Marhaus, the good knight, I was
  • promised for to be better rewarded, when ye all refused to take the
  • battle; therefore, as ye be good gentle knights, see me not thus
  • shamefully to die, for it is shame to all knighthood thus to see me
  • die; for I dare say, said Sir Tristram, that I never met with no knight
  • but I was as good as he, or better. Fie upon thee, said Sir Andred,
  • false traitor that thou art, with thine avaunting; for all thy boast
  • thou shalt die this day. O Andred, Andred, said Sir Tristram, thou
  • shouldst be my kinsman, and now thou art to me full unfriendly, but an
  • there were no more but thou and I, thou wouldst not put me to death.
  • No! said Sir Andred, and therewith he drew his sword, and would have
  • slain him.
  • When Sir Tristram saw him make such countenance he looked upon both his
  • hands that were fast bounden unto two knights, and suddenly he pulled
  • them both to him, and unwrast his hands, and then he leapt unto his
  • cousin, Sir Andred, and wrested his sword out of his hands; then he
  • smote Sir Andred that he fell to the earth, and so Sir Tristram fought
  • till that he had killed ten knights. So then Sir Tristram gat the
  • chapel and kept it mightily. Then the cry was great, and the people
  • drew fast unto Sir Andred, mo than an hundred. When Sir Tristram saw
  • the people draw unto him, he remembered he was naked, and sperd fast
  • the chapel door, and brake the bars of a window, and so he leapt out
  • and fell upon the crags in the sea. And so at that time Sir Andred nor
  • none of his fellows might get to him, at that time.
  • CHAPTER XXXV. How Sir Tristram was holpen by his men, and of Queen
  • Isoud which was put in a lazar-cote, and how Tristram was hurt.
  • So when they were departed, Gouvernail, and Sir Lambegus, and Sir
  • Sentraille de Lushon, that were Sir Tristram’s men, sought their
  • master. When they heard he was escaped then they were passing glad; and
  • on the rocks they found him, and with towels they pulled him up. And
  • then Sir Tristram asked them where was La Beale Isoud, for he weened
  • she had been had away of Andred’s people. Sir, said Gouvernail, she is
  • put in a lazar-cote. Alas, said Sir Tristram, this is a full ungoodly
  • place for such a fair lady, and if I may she shall not be long there.
  • And so he took his men and went thereas was La Beale Isoud, and fetched
  • her away, and brought her into a forest to a fair manor, and Sir
  • Tristram there abode with her. So the good knight bade his men go from
  • him: For at this time I may not help you. So they departed all save
  • Gouvernail. And so upon a day Sir Tristram yede into the forest for to
  • disport him, and then it happened that there he fell sleep; and there
  • came a man that Sir Tristram aforehand had slain his brother, and when
  • this man had found him he shot him through the shoulder with an arrow,
  • and Sir Tristram leapt up and killed that man. And in the meantime it
  • was told King Mark how Sir Tristram and La Beale Isoud were in that
  • same manor, and as soon as ever he might thither he came with many
  • knights to slay Sir Tristram. And when he came there he found him gone;
  • and there he took La Beale Isoud home with him, and kept her strait
  • that by no means never she might wit nor send unto Tristram, nor he
  • unto her. And then when Sir Tristram came toward the old manor he found
  • the track of many horses, and thereby he wist his lady was gone. And
  • then Sir Tristram took great sorrow, and endured with great pain long
  • time, for the arrow that he was hurt withal was envenomed.
  • Then by the mean of La Beale Isoud she told a lady that was cousin unto
  • Dame Bragwaine, and she came to Sir Tristram, and told him that he
  • might not be whole by no means. For thy lady, La Beale Isoud, may not
  • help thee, therefore she biddeth you haste into Brittany to King Howel,
  • and there ye shall find his daughter, Isoud la Blanche Mains, and she
  • shall help thee. Then Sir Tristram and Gouvernail gat them shipping,
  • and so sailed into Brittany. And when King Howel wist that it was Sir
  • Tristram he was full glad of him. Sir, he said, I am come into this
  • country to have help of your daughter, for it is told me that there is
  • none other may heal me but she; and so within a while she healed him.
  • CHAPTER XXXVI. How Sir Tristram served in war King Howel of Brittany,
  • and slew his adversary in the field.
  • There was an earl that hight Grip, and this earl made great war upon
  • the king, and put the king to the worse, and besieged him. And on a
  • time Sir Kehydius, that was son to King Howel, as he issued out he was
  • sore wounded, nigh to the death. Then Gouvernail went to the king and
  • said: Sir, I counsel you to desire my lord, Sir Tristram, as in your
  • need to help you. I will do by your counsel, said the king. And so he
  • yede unto Sir Tristram, and prayed him in his wars to help him: For my
  • son, Sir Kehydius, may not go into the field. Sir, said Sir Tristram, I
  • will go to the field and do what I may. Then Sir Tristram issued out of
  • the town with such fellowship as he might make, and did such deeds that
  • all Brittany spake of him. And then, at the last, by great might and
  • force, he slew the Earl Grip with his own hands, and more than an
  • hundred knights he slew that day. And then Sir Tristram was received
  • worshipfully with procession. Then King Howel embraced him in his arms,
  • and said: Sir Tristram, all my kingdom I will resign to thee. God
  • defend, said Sir Tristram, for I am beholden unto you for your
  • daughter’s sake to do for you.
  • Then by the great means of King Howel and Kehydius his son, by great
  • proffers, there grew great love betwixt Isoud and Sir Tristram, for
  • that lady was both good and fair, and a woman of noble blood and fame.
  • And for because Sir Tristram had such cheer and riches, and all other
  • pleasaunce that he had, almost he had forsaken La Beale Isoud. And so
  • upon a time Sir Tristram agreed to wed Isoud la Blanche Mains. And at
  • the last they were wedded, and solemnly held their marriage. And so
  • when they were abed both Sir Tristram remembered him of his old lady La
  • Beale Isoud. And then he took such a thought suddenly that he was all
  • dismayed, and other cheer made he none but with clipping and kissing;
  • as for other fleshly lusts Sir Tristram never thought nor had ado with
  • her: such mention maketh the French book; also it maketh mention that
  • the lady weened there had been no pleasure but kissing and clipping.
  • And in the meantime there was a knight in Brittany, his name was
  • Suppinabiles, and he came over the sea into England, and then he came
  • into the court of King Arthur, and there he met with Sir Launcelot du
  • Lake, and told him of the marriage of Sir Tristram. Then said Sir
  • Launcelot: Fie upon him, untrue knight to his lady, that so noble a
  • knight as Sir Tristram is should be found to his first lady false, La
  • Beale Isoud, Queen of Cornwall; but say ye him this, said Sir
  • Launcelot, that of all knights in the world I loved him most, and had
  • most joy of him, and all was for his noble deeds; and let him wit the
  • love between him and me is done for ever, and that I give him warning
  • from this day forth as his mortal enemy.
  • CHAPTER XXXVII. How Sir Suppinabiles told Sir Tristram how he was
  • defamed in the court of King Arthur, and of Sir Lamorak.
  • Then departed Sir Suppinabiles unto Brittany again, and there he found
  • Sir Tristram, and told him that he had been in King Arthur’s court.
  • Then said Sir Tristram: Heard ye anything of me? So God me help, said
  • Sir Suppinabiles, there I heard Sir Launcelot speak of you great shame,
  • and that ye be a false knight to your lady and he bade me do you to wit
  • that he will be your mortal enemy in every place where he may meet you.
  • That me repenteth, said Tristram, for of all knights I loved to be in
  • his fellowship. So Sir Tristram made great moan and was ashamed that
  • noble knights should defame him for the sake of his lady. And in this
  • meanwhile La Beale Isoud made a letter unto Queen Guenever, complaining
  • her of the untruth of Sir Tristram, and how he had wedded the king’s
  • daughter of Brittany. Queen Guenever sent her another letter, and bade
  • her be of good cheer, for she should have joy after sorrow, for Sir
  • Tristram was so noble a knight called, that by crafts of sorcery ladies
  • would make such noble men to wed them. But in the end, Queen Guenever
  • said, it shall be thus, that he shall hate her, and love you better
  • than ever he did to-fore.
  • So leave we Sir Tristram in Brittany, and speak we of Sir Lamorak de
  • Galis, that as he sailed his ship fell on a rock and perished all, save
  • Sir Lamorak and his squire; and there he swam mightily, and fishers of
  • the Isle of Servage took him up, and his squire was drowned, and the
  • shipmen had great labour to save Sir Lamorak’s life, for all the
  • comfort that they could do.
  • And the lord of that isle, hight Sir Nabon le Noire, a great mighty
  • giant. And this Sir Nabon hated all the knights of King Arthur’s, and
  • in no wise he would do them favour. And these fishers told Sir Lamorak
  • all the guise of Sir Nabon; how there came never knight of King
  • Arthur’s but he destroyed him. And at the last battle that he did was
  • slain Sir Nanowne le Petite, the which he put to a shameful death in
  • despite of King Arthur, for he was drawn limb-meal. That forthinketh
  • me, said Sir Lamorak, for that knight’s death, for he was my cousin;
  • and if I were at mine ease as well as ever I was, I would revenge his
  • death. Peace, said the fishers, and make here no words, for or ever ye
  • depart from hence Sir Nabon must know that ye have been here, or else
  • we should die for your sake. So that I be whole, said Lamorak, of my
  • disease that I have taken in the sea, I will that ye tell him that I am
  • a knight of King Arthur’s, for I was never afeard to reneye my lord.
  • CHAPTER XXXVIII. How Sir Tristram and his wife arrived in Wales, and
  • how he met there with Sir Lamorak.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Tristram, that upon a day he took a little barget,
  • and his wife Isoud la Blanche Mains, with Sir Kehydius her brother, to
  • play them in the coasts. And when they were from the land, there was a
  • wind drove them in to the coast of Wales upon this Isle of Servage,
  • whereas was Sir Lamorak, and there the barget all to-rove; and there
  • Dame Isoud was hurt; and as well as they might they gat into the
  • forest, and there by a well he saw Segwarides and a damosel. And then
  • either saluted other. Sir, said Segwarides, I know you for Sir Tristram
  • de Liones, the man in the world that I have most cause to hate, because
  • ye departed the love between me and my wife; but as for that, said Sir
  • Segwarides, I will never hate a noble knight for a light lady; and
  • therefore, I pray you, be my friend, and I will be yours unto my power;
  • for wit ye well ye are hard bestead in this valley, and we shall have
  • enough to do either of us to succour other. And then Sir Segwarides
  • brought Sir Tristram to a lady thereby that was born in Cornwall, and
  • she told him all the perils of that valley, and how there came never
  • knight there but he were taken prisoner or slain. Wit you well, fair
  • lady, said Sir Tristram, that I slew Sir Marhaus and delivered Cornwall
  • from the truage of Ireland, and I am he that delivered the King of
  • Ireland from Sir Blamore de Ganis, and I am he that beat Sir Palamides;
  • and wit ye well I am Sir Tristram de Liones, that by the grace of God
  • shall deliver this woful Isle of Servage. So Sir Tristram was well
  • eased.
  • Then one told him there was a knight of King Arthur’s that was wrecked
  • on the rocks. What is his name? said Sir Tristram. We wot not, said the
  • fishers, but he keepeth it no counsel but that he is a knight of King
  • Arthur’s, and by the mighty lord of this isle he setteth nought. I pray
  • you, said Sir Tristram, an ye may, bring him hither that I may see him,
  • and if he be any of the knights of Arthur’s I shall know him. Then the
  • lady prayed the fishers to bring him to her place. So on the morrow
  • they brought him thither in a fisher’s raiment; and as soon as Sir
  • Tristram saw him he smiled upon him and knew him well, but he knew not
  • Sir Tristram. Fair sir, said Sir Tristram, meseemeth by your cheer ye
  • have been diseased but late, and also methinketh I should know you
  • heretofore. I will well, said Sir Lamorak, that ye have seen me and met
  • with me. Fair sir, said Sir Tristram, tell me your name. Upon a
  • covenant I will tell you, said Sir Lamorak, that is, that ye will tell
  • me whether ye be lord of this island or no, that is called Nabon le
  • Noire. Forsooth, said Sir Tristram, I am not he, nor I hold not of him;
  • I am his foe as well as ye be, and so shall I be found or I depart out
  • of this isle. Well, said Sir Lamorak, since ye have said so largely
  • unto me, my name is Sir Lamorak de Galis, son unto King Pellinore.
  • Forsooth, I trow well, said Sir Tristram, for an ye said other I know
  • the contrary. What are ye, said Sir Lamorak, that knoweth me? I am Sir
  • Tristram de Liones. Ah, sir, remember ye not of the fall ye did give me
  • once, and after ye refused me to fight on foot. That was not for fear I
  • had of you, said Sir Tristram, but me shamed at that time to have more
  • ado with you, for meseemed ye had enough; but, Sir Lamorak, for my
  • kindness many ladies ye put to a reproof when ye sent the horn from
  • Morgan le Fay to King Mark, whereas ye did this in despite of me. Well,
  • said he, an it were to do again, so would I do, for I had liefer strife
  • and debate fell in King Mark’s court rather than Arthur’s court, for
  • the honour of both courts be not alike. As to that, said Sir Tristram,
  • I know well; but that that was done it was for despite of me, but all
  • your malice, I thank God, hurt not greatly. Therefore, said Sir
  • Tristram, ye shall leave all your malice, and so will I, and let us
  • assay how we may win worship between you and me upon this giant Sir
  • Nabon le Noire that is lord of this island, to destroy him. Sir, said
  • Sir Lamorak, now I understand your knighthood, it may not be false that
  • all men say, for of your bounty, noblesse, and worship, of all knights
  • ye are peerless, and for your courtesy and gentleness I showed you
  • ungentleness, and that now me repenteth.
  • CHAPTER XXXIX. How Sir Tristram fought with Sir Nabon, and overcame
  • him, and made Sir Segwarides lord of the isle.
  • In the meantime there came word that Sir Nabon had made a cry that all
  • the people of that isle should be at his castle the fifth day after.
  • And the same day the son of Nabon should be made knight, and all the
  • knights of that valley and thereabout should be there to joust, and all
  • those of the realm of Logris should be there to joust with them of
  • North Wales: and thither came five hundred knights, and they of the
  • country brought thither Sir Lamorak, and Sir Tristram, and Sir
  • Kehydius, and Sir Segwarides, for they durst none otherwise do; and
  • then Sir Nabon lent Sir Lamorak horse and armour at Sir Lamorak’s
  • desire, and Sir Lamorak jousted and did such deeds of arms that Nabon
  • and all the people said there was never knight that ever they saw do
  • such deeds of arms; for, as the French book saith, he for-jousted all
  • that were there, for the most part of five hundred knights, that none
  • abode him in his saddle.
  • Then Sir Nabon proffered to play with him his play: For I saw never no
  • knight do so much upon a day. I will well, said Sir Lamorak, play as I
  • may, but I am weary and sore bruised. And there either gat a spear, but
  • Nabon would not encounter with Sir Lamorak, but smote his horse in the
  • forehead, and so slew him; and then Sir Lamorak yede on foot, and
  • turned his shield and drew his sword, and there began strong battle on
  • foot. But Sir Lamorak was so sore bruised and short breathed, that he
  • traced and traversed somewhat aback. Fair fellow, said Sir Nabon, hold
  • thy hand and I shall show thee more courtesy than ever I showed knight,
  • because I have seen this day thy noble knighthood, and therefore stand
  • thou by, and I will wit whether any of thy fellows will have ado with
  • me. Then when Sir Tristram heard that, he stepped forth and said:
  • Nabon, lend me horse and sure armour, and I will have ado with thee.
  • Well, fellow, said Sir Nabon, go thou to yonder pavilion, and arm thee
  • of the best thou findest there, and I shall play a marvellous play with
  • thee. Then said Sir Tristram: Look ye play well, or else peradventure I
  • shall learn you a new play. That is well said, fellow, said Sir Nabon.
  • So when Sir Tristram was armed as him liked best, and well shielded and
  • sworded, he dressed to him on foot; for well he knew that Sir Nabon
  • would not abide a stroke with a spear, therefore he would slay all
  • knights’ horses. Now, fair fellow, Sir Nabon, let us play. So then they
  • fought long on foot, tracing and traversing, smiting and foining long
  • without any rest. At the last Sir Nabon prayed him to tell him his
  • name. Sir Nabon, I tell thee my name is Sir Tristram de Liones, a
  • knight of Cornwall under King Mark. Thou art welcome, said Sir Nabon,
  • for of all knights I have most desired to fight with thee or with Sir
  • Launcelot.
  • So then they went eagerly together, and Sir Tristram slew Sir Nabon,
  • and so forthwith he leapt to his son, and struck off his head; and then
  • all the country said they would hold of Sir Tristram. Nay, said Sir
  • Tristram, I will not so; here is a worshipful knight, Sir Lamorak de
  • Galis, that for me he shall be lord of this country, for he hath done
  • here great deeds of arms. Nay, said Sir Lamorak, I will not be lord of
  • this country, for I have not deserved it as well as ye, therefore give
  • ye it where ye will, for I will none have. Well, said Sir Tristram,
  • since ye nor I will not have it, let us give it to him that hath not so
  • well deserved it. Do as ye list, said Segwarides, for the gift is
  • yours, for I will none have an I had deserved it. So was it given to
  • Segwarides, whereof he thanked them; and so was he lord, and
  • worshipfully he did govern it. And then Sir Segwarides delivered all
  • prisoners, and set good governance in that valley; and so he returned
  • into Cornwall, and told King Mark and La Beale Isoud how Sir Tristram
  • had advanced him to the Isle of Servage, and there he proclaimed in all
  • Cornwall of all the adventures of these two knights, so was it openly
  • known. But full woe was La Beale Isoud when she heard tell that Sir
  • Tristram was wedded to Isoud la Blanche Mains.
  • CHAPTER XL. How Sir Lamorak departed from Sir Tristram, and how he met
  • with Sir Frol, and after with Sir Launcelot.
  • So turn we unto Sir Lamorak, that rode toward Arthur’s court, and Sir
  • Tristram’s wife and Kehydius took a vessel and sailed into Brittany,
  • unto King Howel, where he was welcome. And when he heard of these
  • adventures they marvelled of his noble deeds. Now turn we unto Sir
  • Lamorak, that when he was departed from Sir Tristram he rode out of the
  • forest, till he came to an hermitage. When the hermit saw him, he asked
  • him from whence he came. Sir, said Sir Lamorak, I come from this
  • valley. Sir, said the hermit: thereof I marvel. For this twenty winter
  • I saw never no knight pass this country but he was either slain or
  • villainously wounded, or pass as a poor prisoner. Those ill customs,
  • said Sir Lamorak, are fordone, for Sir Tristram slew your lord, Sir
  • Nabon, and his son. Then was the hermit glad, and all his brethren, for
  • he said there was never such a tyrant among Christian men. And
  • therefore, said the hermit, this valley and franchise we will hold of
  • Sir Tristram.
  • So on the morrow Sir Lamorak departed; and as he rode he saw four
  • knights fight against one, and that one knight defended him well, but
  • at the last the four knights had him down. And then Sir Lamorak went
  • betwixt them, and asked them why they would slay that one knight, and
  • said it was shame, four against one. Thou shalt well wit, said the four
  • knights, that he is false. That is your tale, said Sir Lamorak, and
  • when I hear him also speak, I will say as ye say. Then said Lamorak:
  • Ah, knight, can ye not excuse you, but that ye are a false knight. Sir,
  • said he, yet can I excuse me both with my word and with my hands, that
  • I will make good upon one of the best of them, my body to his body.
  • Then spake they all at once: We will not jeopardy our bodies as for
  • thee. But wit thou well, they said, an King Arthur were here himself,
  • it should not lie in his power to save his life. That is too much said,
  • said Sir Lamorak, but many speak behind a man more than they will say
  • to his face; and because of your words ye shall understand that I am
  • one of the simplest of King Arthur’s court; in the worship of my lord
  • now do your best, and in despite of you I shall rescue him. And then
  • they lashed all at once to Sir Lamorak, but anon at two strokes Sir
  • Lamorak had slain two of them, and then the other two fled. So then Sir
  • Lamorak turned again to that knight, and asked him his name. Sir, he
  • said, my name is Sir Frol of the Out Isles. Then he rode with Sir
  • Lamorak and bare him company.
  • And as they rode by the way they saw a seemly knight riding against
  • them, and all in white. Ah, said Frol, yonder knight jousted late with
  • me and smote me down, therefore I will joust with him. Ye shall not do
  • so, said Sir Lamorak, by my counsel, an ye will tell me your quarrel,
  • whether ye jousted at his request, or he at yours. Nay, said Sir Frol,
  • I jousted with him at my request. Sir, said Lamorak, then will I
  • counsel you deal no more with him, for meseemeth by his countenance he
  • should be a noble knight, and no japer; for methinketh he should be of
  • the Table Round. Therefore I will not spare, said Sir Frol. And then he
  • cried and said: Sir knight, make thee ready to joust. That needeth not,
  • said the White Knight, for I have no lust to joust with thee; but yet
  • they feutred their spears, and the White Knight overthrew Sir Frol, and
  • then he rode his way a soft pace. Then Sir Lamorak rode after him, and
  • prayed him to tell him his name: For meseemeth ye should be of the
  • fellowship of the Round Table. Upon a covenant, said he, I will tell
  • you my name, so that ye will not discover my name, and also that ye
  • will tell me yours. Then, said he, my name is Sir Lamorak de Galis. And
  • my name is Sir Launcelot du Lake. Then they put up their swords, and
  • kissed heartily together, and either made great joy of other. Sir, said
  • Sir Lamorak, an it please you I will do you service. God defend, said
  • Launcelot, that any of so noble a blood as ye be should do me service.
  • Then he said: More, I am in a quest that I must do myself alone. Now
  • God speed you, said Sir Lamorak, and so they departed. Then Sir Lamorak
  • came to Sir Frol and horsed him again. What knight is that? said Sir
  • Frol. Sir, he said, it is not for you to know, nor it is no point of my
  • charge. Ye are the more uncourteous, said Sir Frol, and therefore I
  • will depart from you. Ye may do as ye list, said Sir Lamorak, and yet
  • by my company ye have saved the fairest flower of your garland; so they
  • departed.
  • CHAPTER XLI. How Sir Lamorak slew Sir Frol, and of the courteous
  • fighting with Sir Belliance his brother.
  • Then within two or three days Sir Lamorak found a knight at a well
  • sleeping, and his lady sat with him and waked. Right so came Sir
  • Gawaine and took the knight’s lady, and set her up behind his squire.
  • So Sir Lamorak rode after Sir Gawaine, and said: Sir Gawaine, turn
  • again. And then said Sir Gawaine: What will ye do with me? for I am
  • nephew unto King Arthur. Sir, said he, for that cause I will spare you,
  • else that lady should abide with me, or else ye should joust with me.
  • Then Sir Gawaine turned him and ran to him that ought the lady, with
  • his spear, but the knight with pure might smote down Sir Gawaine, and
  • took his lady with him. All this Sir Lamorak saw, and said to himself:
  • But I revenge my fellow he will say of me dishonour in King Arthur’s
  • court. Then Sir Lamorak returned and proffered that knight to joust.
  • Sir, said he, I am ready. And there they came together with all their
  • might, and there Sir Lamorak smote the knight through both sides that
  • he fell to the earth dead.
  • Then that lady rode to that knight’s brother that hight Belliance le
  • Orgulus, that dwelt fast thereby, and then she told him how his brother
  • was slain. Alas, said he, I will be revenged. And so he horsed him, and
  • armed him, and within a while he overtook Sir Lamorak, and bade him:
  • Turn and leave that lady, for thou and I must play a new play; for thou
  • hast slain my brother Sir Frol, that was a better knight than ever wert
  • thou. It might well be, said Sir Lamorak, but this day in the field I
  • was found the better. So they rode together, and unhorsed other, and
  • turned their shields, and drew their swords, and fought mightily as
  • noble knights proved, by the space of two hours. So then Sir Belliance
  • prayed him to tell him his name. Sir, said he, my name is Sir Lamorak
  • de Galis. Ah, said Sir Belliance, thou art the man in the world that I
  • most hate, for I slew my sons for thy sake, where I saved thy life, and
  • now thou hast slain my brother Sir Frol. Alas, how should I be accorded
  • with thee; therefore defend thee, for thou shalt die, there is none
  • other remedy. Alas, said Sir Lamorak, full well me ought to know you,
  • for ye are the man that most have done for me. And therewithal Sir
  • Lamorak kneeled down, and besought him of grace. Arise, said Sir
  • Belliance, or else thereas thou kneelest I shall slay thee. That shall
  • not need, said Sir Lamorak, for I will yield me unto you, not for fear
  • of you, nor for your strength, but your goodness maketh me full loath
  • to have ado with you; wherefore I require you for God’s sake, and for
  • the honour of knighthood, forgive me all that I have offended unto you.
  • Alas, said Belliance, leave thy kneeling, or else I shall slay thee
  • without mercy.
  • Then they yede again unto battle, and either wounded other, that all
  • the ground was bloody thereas they fought. And at the last Belliance
  • withdrew him aback and set him down softly upon a little hill, for he
  • was so faint for bleeding that he might not stand. Then Sir Lamorak
  • threw his shield upon his back, and asked him what cheer. Well, said
  • Sir Belliance. Ah, Sir, yet shall I show you favour in your mal-ease.
  • Ah, Knight Sir Belliance, said Sir Lamorak, thou art a fool, for an I
  • had had thee at such advantage as thou hast done me, I should slay
  • thee; but thy gentleness is so good and so large, that I must needs
  • forgive thee mine evil will. And then Sir Lamorak kneeled down, and
  • unlaced first his umberere, and then his own, and then either kissed
  • other with weeping tears. Then Sir Lamorak led Sir Belliance to an
  • abbey fast by, and there Sir Lamorak would not depart from Belliance
  • till he was whole. And then they sware together that none of them
  • should never fight against other. So Sir Lamorak departed and went to
  • the court of King Arthur.
  • Here leave we of Sir Lamorak and of Sir Tristram. And here beginneth
  • the history of La Cote Male Taile.
  • BOOK IX.
  • CHAPTER I. How a young man came into the court of King Arthur, and how
  • Sir Kay called him in scorn La Cote Male Taile.
  • At the court of King Arthur there came a young man and bigly made, and
  • he was richly beseen: and he desired to be made knight of the king, but
  • his over-garment sat over-thwartly, howbeit it was rich cloth of gold.
  • What is your name? said King Arthur. Sir, said he, my name is Breunor
  • le Noire, and within short space ye shall know that I am of good kin.
  • It may well be, said Sir Kay, the Seneschal, but in mockage ye shall be
  • called La Cote Male Taile, that is as much to say, the evil-shapen coat
  • It is a great thing that thou askest, said the king; and for what cause
  • wearest thou that rich coat? tell me, for I can well think for some
  • cause it is. Sir, he answered, I had a father, a noble knight, and as
  • he rode a-hunting, upon a day it happed him to lay him down to sleep;
  • and there came a knight that had been long his enemy, and when he saw
  • he was fast asleep he all to-hew him; and this same coat had my father
  • on the same time; and that maketh this coat to sit so evil upon me, for
  • the strokes be on it as I found it, and never shall be amended for me.
  • Thus to have my father’s death in remembrance I wear this coat till I
  • be revenged; and because ye are called the most noblest king of the
  • world I come to you that ye should make me knight. Sir, said Sir
  • Lamorak and Sir Gaheris, it were well done to make him knight; for him
  • beseemeth well of person and of countenance, that he shall prove a good
  • man, and a good knight, and a mighty; for, Sir, an ye be remembered,
  • even such one was Sir Launcelot du Lake when he came first into this
  • court, and full few of us knew from whence he came; and now is he
  • proved the man of most worship in the world; and all your court and all
  • your Round Table is by Sir Launcelot worshipped and amended more than
  • by any knight now living. That is truth, said the king, and to-morrow
  • at your request I shall make him knight.
  • So on the morrow there was an hart found, and thither rode King Arthur
  • with a company of his knights to slay the hart. And this young man that
  • Sir Kay named La Cote Male Taile was there left behind with Queen
  • Guenever; and by sudden adventure there was an horrible lion kept in a
  • strong tower of stone, and it happened that he at that time brake
  • loose, and came hurling afore the queen and her knights. And when the
  • queen saw the lion she cried and fled, and prayed her knights to rescue
  • her. And there was none of them all but twelve that abode, and all the
  • other fled. Then said La Cote Male Taile: Now I see well that all
  • coward knights be not dead; and therewithal he drew his sword and
  • dressed him afore the lion. And that lion gaped wide and came upon him
  • ramping to have slain him. And he then smote him in the midst of the
  • head such a mighty stroke that it clave his head in sunder, and dashed
  • to the earth. Then was it told the queen how the young man that Sir Kay
  • named by scorn La Cote Male Taile had slain the lion. With that the
  • king came home. And when the queen told him of that adventure, he was
  • well pleased, and said: Upon pain of mine head he shall prove a noble
  • man and a faithful knight, and true of his promise: then the king
  • forthwithal made him knight. Now Sir, said this young knight, I require
  • you and all the knights of your court, that ye call me by none other
  • name but La Cote Male Taile: in so much as Sir Kay hath so named me so
  • will I be called. I assent me well thereto, said the king.
  • CHAPTER II. How a damosel came into the court and desired a knight to
  • take on him an enquest, which La Cote Male Taile emprised.
  • Then that same day there came a damosel into the court, and she brought
  • with her a great black shield, with a white hand in the midst holding a
  • sword. Other picture was there none in that shield. When King Arthur
  • saw her he asked her from whence she came and what she would. Sir, she
  • said, I have ridden long and many a day with this shield many ways, and
  • for this cause I am come to your court: there was a good knight that
  • ought this shield, and this knight had undertaken a great deed of arms
  • to enchieve it; and so it misfortuned him another strong knight met
  • with him by sudden adventure, and there they fought long, and either
  • wounded other passing sore; and they were so weary that they left that
  • battle even hand. So this knight that ought this shield saw none other
  • way but he must die; and then he commanded me to bear this shield to
  • the court of King Arthur, he requiring and praying some good knight to
  • take this shield, and that he would fulfil the quest that he was in.
  • Now what say ye to this quest? said King Arthur; is there any of you
  • here that will take upon him to wield this shield? Then was there not
  • one that would speak one word. Then Sir Kay took the shield in his
  • hands. Sir knight, said the damosel, what is your name? Wit ye well,
  • said he, my name is Sir Kay, the Seneschal, that wide-where is known.
  • Sir, said that damosel, lay down that shield, for wit ye well it
  • falleth not for you, for he must be a better knight than ye that shall
  • wield this shield. Damosel, said Sir Kay, wit ye well I took this
  • shield in my hands by your leave for to behold it, not to that intent;
  • but go wheresomever thou wilt, for I will not go with you.
  • Then the damosel stood still a great while and beheld many of those
  • knights. Then spake the knight, La Cote Male Taile: Fair damosel, I
  • will take the shield and that adventure upon me, so I wist I should
  • know whitherward my journey might be; for because I was this day made
  • knight I would take this adventure upon me. What is your name, fair
  • young man? said the damosel. My name is, said he, La Cote Male Taile.
  • Well mayest thou be called so, said the damosel, the knight with the
  • evil-shapen coat; but an thou be so hardy to take upon thee to bear
  • that shield and to follow me, wit thou well thy skin shall be as well
  • hewn as thy coat. As for that, said La Cote Male Taile, when I am so
  • hewn I will ask you no salve to heal me withal. And forthwithal there
  • came into the court two squires and brought him great horses, and his
  • armour, and his spears, and anon he was armed and took his leave. I
  • would not by my will, said the king, that ye took upon you that hard
  • adventure. Sir, said he, this adventure is mine, and the first that
  • ever I took upon me, and that will I follow whatsomever come of me.
  • Then that damosel departed, and La Cote Male Taile fast followed after.
  • And within a while he overtook the damosel, and anon she missaid him in
  • the foulest manner.
  • CHAPTER III. How La Cote Male Taile overthrew Sir Dagonet the king’s
  • fool, and of the rebuke that he had of the damosel.
  • Then Sir Kay ordained Sir Dagonet, King Arthur’s fool, to follow after
  • La Cote Male Taile; and there Sir Kay ordained that Sir Dagonet was
  • horsed and armed, and bade him follow La Cote Male Taile and proffer
  • him to joust, and so he did; and when he saw La Cote Male Taile, he
  • cried and bade him make him ready to joust. So Sir La Cote Male Taile
  • smote Sir Dagonet over his horse’s croup. Then the damosel mocked La
  • Cote Male Taile, and said: Fie for shame! now art thou shamed in
  • Arthur’s court, when they send a fool to have ado with thee, and
  • specially at thy first jousts; thus she rode long, and chid. And within
  • a while there came Sir Bleoberis, the good knight, and there he jousted
  • with La Cote Male Taile, and there Sir Bleoberis smote him so sore,
  • that horse and all fell to the earth. Then La Cote Male Taile arose up
  • lightly, and dressed his shield, and drew his sword, and would have
  • done battle to the utterance, for he was wood wroth. Not so, said Sir
  • Bleoberis de Ganis, as at this time I will not fight upon foot. Then
  • the damosel Maledisant rebuked him in the foulest manner, and bade him:
  • Turn again, coward. Ah, damosel, he said, I pray you of mercy to missay
  • me no more, my grief is enough though ye give me no more; I call myself
  • never the worse knight when a mare’s son faileth me, and also I count
  • me never the worse knight for a fall of Sir Bleoberis.
  • So thus he rode with her two days; and by fortune there came Sir
  • Palomides and encountered with him, and he in the same wise served him
  • as did Bleoberis to-forehand. What dost thou here in my fellowship?
  • said the damosel Maledisant, thou canst not sit no knight, nor
  • withstand him one buffet, but if it were Sir Dagonet. Ah, fair damosel,
  • I am not the worse to take a fall of Sir Palomides, and yet great
  • disworship have I none, for neither Bleoberis nor yet Palomides would
  • not fight with me on foot. As for that, said the damosel, wit thou well
  • they have disdain and scorn to light off their horses to fight with
  • such a lewd knight as thou art. So in the meanwhile there came Sir
  • Mordred, Sir Gawaine’s brother, and so he fell in the fellowship with
  • the damosel Maledisant. And then they came afore the Castle Orgulous,
  • and there was such a custom that there might no knight come by that
  • castle but either he must joust or be prisoner, or at the least to lose
  • his horse and his harness. And there came out two knights against them,
  • and Sir Mordred jousted with the foremost, and that knight of the
  • castle smote Sir Mordred down off his horse. And then La Cote Male
  • Taile jousted with that other, and either of them smote other down,
  • horse and all, to the earth. And when they avoided their horses, then
  • either of them took other’s horses. And then La Cote Male Taile rode
  • unto that knight that smote down Sir Mordred, and jousted with him. And
  • there Sir La Cote Male Taile hurt and wounded him passing sore, and put
  • him from his horse as he had been dead. So he turned unto him that met
  • him afore, and he took the flight towards the castle, and Sir La Cote
  • Male Taile rode after him into the Castle Orgulous, and there La Cote
  • Male Taile slew him.
  • CHAPTER IV. How La Cote Male Taile fought against an hundred knights,
  • and how he escaped by the mean of a lady.
  • And anon there came an hundred knights about him and assailed him; and
  • when he saw his horse should be slain he alighted and voided his horse,
  • and put the bridle under his feet, and so put him out of the gate. And
  • when he had so done he hurled in among them, and dressed his back unto
  • a lady’s chamber-wall, thinking himself that he had liefer die there
  • with worship than to abide the rebukes of the damosel Maledisant. And
  • in the meantime as he stood and fought, that lady whose was the chamber
  • went out slily at her postern, and without the gates she found La Cote
  • Male Taile’s horse, and lightly she gat him by the bridle, and tied him
  • to the postern. And then she went unto her chamber slily again for to
  • behold how that one knight fought against an hundred knights. And when
  • she had beheld him long she went to a window behind his back, and said:
  • Thou knight, thou fightest wonderly well, but for all that at the last
  • thou must needs die, but, an thou canst through thy mighty prowess, win
  • unto yonder postern, for there have I fastened thy horse to abide thee:
  • but wit thou well thou must think on thy worship, and think not to die,
  • for thou mayst not win unto that postern without thou do nobly and
  • mightily. When La Cote Male Taile heard her say so he gripped his sword
  • in his hands, and put his shield fair afore him, and through the
  • thickest press he thrulled through them. And when he came to the
  • postern he found there ready four knights, and at two the first strokes
  • he slew two of the knights, and the other fled; and so he won his horse
  • and rode from them. And all as it was it was rehearsed in King Arthur’s
  • court, how he slew twelve knights within the Castle Orgulous; and so he
  • rode on his way.
  • And in the meanwhile the damosel said to Sir Mordred: I ween my foolish
  • knight be either slain or taken prisoner: then were they ware where he
  • came riding. And when he was come unto them he told all how he had sped
  • and escaped in despite of them all: And some of the best of them will
  • tell no tales. Thou liest falsely, said the damosel, that dare I make
  • good, but as a fool and a dastard to all knighthood they have let thee
  • pass. That may ye prove, said La Cote Male Taile. With that she sent a
  • courier of hers, that rode alway with her, for to know the truth of
  • this deed; and so he rode thither lightly, and asked how and in what
  • manner that La Cote Male Taile was escaped out of the castle. Then all
  • the knights cursed him, and said that he was a fiend and no man: For he
  • hath slain here twelve of our best knights, and we weened unto this day
  • that it had been too much for Sir Launcelot du Lake or for Sir Tristram
  • de Liones. And in despite of us all he is departed from us and maugre
  • our heads.
  • With this answer the courier departed and came to Maledisant his lady,
  • and told her all how Sir La Cote Male Taile had sped at the Castle
  • Orgulous. Then she smote down her head, and said little. By my head,
  • said Sir Mordred to the damosel, ye are greatly to blame so to rebuke
  • him, for I warn you plainly he is a good knight, and I doubt not but he
  • shall prove a noble knight; but as yet he may not yet sit sure on
  • horseback, for he that shall be a good horseman it must come of usage
  • and exercise. But when he cometh to the strokes of his sword he is then
  • noble and mighty, and that saw Sir Bleoberis and Sir Palomides, for wit
  • ye well they are wily men of arms, and anon they know when they see a
  • young knight by his riding, how they are sure to give him a fall from
  • his horse or a great buffet. But for the most part they will not light
  • on foot with young knights, for they are wight and strongly armed. For
  • in likewise Sir Launcelot du Lake, when he was first made knight, he
  • was often put to the worse upon horseback, but ever upon foot he
  • recovered his renown, and slew and defoiled many knights of the Round
  • Table. And therefore the rebukes that Sir Launcelot did unto many
  • knights causeth them that be men of prowess to beware; for often I have
  • seen the old proved knights rebuked and slain by them that were but
  • young beginners. Thus they rode sure talking by the way together.
  • Here leave we off a while of this tale, and speak we of Sir Launcelot
  • du Lake.
  • CHAPTER V. How Sir Launcelot came to the court and heard of La Cote
  • Male Taile, and how he followed after him, and how La Cote Male Taile
  • was prisoner.
  • That when he was come to the court of King Arthur, then heard he tell
  • of the young knight La Cote Male Taile, how he slew the lion, and how
  • he took upon him the adventure of the black shield, the which was named
  • at that time the hardiest adventure of the world. So God me save, said
  • Sir Launcelot unto many of his fellows, it was shame to all the noble
  • knights to suffer such a young knight to take such adventure upon him
  • for his destruction; for I will that ye wit, said Sir Launcelot, that
  • that damosel Maledisant hath borne that shield many a day for to seek
  • the most proved knights, and that was she that Breuse Saunce Pite took
  • that shield from her, and after Tristram de Liones rescued that shield
  • from him and gave it to the damosel again, a little afore that time
  • that Sir Tristram fought with my nephew Sir Blamore de Ganis, for a
  • quarrel that was betwixt the King of Ireland and him. Then many knights
  • were sorry that Sir La Cote Male Taile was gone forth to that
  • adventure. Truly, said Sir Launcelot, I cast me to ride after him. And
  • within seven days Sir Launcelot overtook La Cote Male Taile, and then
  • he saluted him and the damosel Maledisant. And when Sir Mordred saw Sir
  • Launcelot, then he left their fellowship; and so Sir Launcelot rode
  • with them all a day, and ever that damosel rebuked La Cote Male Taile;
  • and then Sir Launcelot answered for him, then she left off, and rebuked
  • Sir Launcelot.
  • So this meantime Sir Tristram sent by a damosel a letter unto Sir
  • Launcelot, excusing him of the wedding of Isoud la Blanche Mains; and
  • said in the letter, as he was a true knight he had never ado fleshly
  • with Isoud la Blanche Mains; and passing courteously and gentily Sir
  • Tristram wrote unto Sir Launcelot, ever beseeching him to be his good
  • friend and unto La Beale Isoud of Cornwall, and that Sir Launcelot
  • would excuse him if that ever he saw her. And within short time by the
  • grace of God, said Sir Tristram, that he would speak with La Beale
  • Isoud, and with him right hastily. Then Sir Launcelot departed from the
  • damosel and from Sir La Cote Male Taile, for to oversee that letter,
  • and to write another letter unto Sir Tristram de Liones.
  • And in the meanwhile La Cote Male Taile rode with the damosel until
  • they came to a castle that hight Pendragon; and there were six knights
  • stood afore him, and one of them proffered to joust with La Cote Male
  • Taile. And there La Cote Male Taile smote him over his horse’s croup.
  • And then the five knights set upon him all at once with their spears,
  • and there they smote La Cote Male Taile down, horse and man. And then
  • they alighted suddenly, and set their hands upon him all at once, and
  • took him prisoner, and so led him unto the castle and kept him as
  • prisoner.
  • And on the morn Sir Launcelot arose, and delivered the damosel with
  • letters unto Sir Tristram, and then he took his way after La Cote Male
  • Taile; and by the way upon a bridge there was a knight proffered Sir
  • Launcelot to joust, and Sir Launcelot smote him down, and then they
  • fought upon foot a noble battle together, and a mighty; and at the last
  • Sir Launcelot smote him down grovelling upon his hands and his knees.
  • And then that knight yielded him, and Sir Launcelot received him fair.
  • Sir, said the knight, I require thee tell me your name, for much my
  • heart giveth unto you. Nay, said Sir Launcelot, as at this time I will
  • not tell you my name, unless then that ye tell me your name. Certainly,
  • said the knight, my name is Sir Nerovens, that was made knight of my
  • lord Sir Launcelot du Lake. Ah, Nerovens de Lile, said Sir Launcelot, I
  • am right glad that ye are proved a good knight, for now wit ye well my
  • name is Sir Launcelot du Lake. Alas, said Sir Nerovens de Lile, what
  • have I done! And therewithal flatling he fell to his feet, and would
  • have kissed them, but Sir Launcelot would not let him; and then either
  • made great joy of other. And then Sir Nerovens told Sir Launcelot that
  • he should not go by the Castle of Pendragon: For there is a lord, a
  • mighty knight, and many knights with him, and this night I heard say
  • that they took a knight prisoner yesterday that rode with a damosel,
  • and they say he is a Knight of the Round Table.
  • CHAPTER VI. How Sir Launcelot fought with six knights, and after with
  • Sir Brian, and how he delivered the prisoners.
  • Ah, said Sir Launcelot, that knight is my fellow, and him shall I
  • rescue or else I shall lose my life therefore. And therewithal he rode
  • fast till he came before the Castle of Pendragon; and anon therewithal
  • there came six knights, and all made them ready to set upon Sir
  • Launcelot at once; then Sir Launcelot feutred his spear, and smote the
  • foremost that he brake his back in-sunder, and three of them hit and
  • three failed. And then Sir Launcelot passed through them, and lightly
  • he turned in again, and smote another knight through the breast and
  • throughout the back more than an ell, and therewithal his spear brake.
  • So then all the remnant of the four knights drew their swords and
  • lashed at Sir Launcelot. And at every stroke Sir Launcelot bestowed so
  • his strokes that at four strokes sundry they avoided their saddles,
  • passing sore wounded; and forthwithal he rode hurling into that castle.
  • And anon the lord of the castle, that was that time cleped Sir Brian de
  • les Isles, the which was a noble man and a great enemy unto King
  • Arthur, within a while he was armed and upon horseback. And then they
  • feutred their spears and hurled together so strongly that both their
  • horses rashed to the earth. And then they avoided their saddles, and
  • dressed their shields, and drew their swords, and flang together as
  • wood men, and there were many strokes given in a while. At the last Sir
  • Launcelot gave to Sir Brian such a buffet that he kneeled upon his
  • knees, and then Sir Launcelot rashed upon him, and with great force he
  • pulled off his helm; and when Sir Brian saw that he should be slain he
  • yielded him, and put him in his mercy and in his grace. Then Sir
  • Launcelot made him to deliver all his prisoners that he had within his
  • castle, and therein Sir Launcelot found of Arthur’s knights thirty, and
  • forty ladies, and so he delivered them; and then he rode his way. And
  • anon as La Cote Male Taile was delivered he gat his horse, and his
  • harness, and his damosel Maledisant.
  • The meanwhile Sir Nerovens, that Sir Launcelot had foughten withal
  • afore at the bridge, he sent a damosel after Sir Launcelot to wit how
  • he sped at the Castle of Pendragon. And then they within the castle
  • marvelled what knight he was, when Sir Brian and his knights delivered
  • all those prisoners. Have ye no marvel, said the damosel, for the best
  • knight in this world was here, and did this journey, and wit ye well,
  • she said, it was Sir Launcelot. Then was Sir Brian full glad, and so
  • was his lady, and all his knights, that such a man should win them. And
  • when the damosel and La Cote Male Taile understood that it was Sir
  • Launcelot du Lake that had ridden with them in fellowship, and that she
  • remembered her how she had rebuked him and called him coward, then was
  • she passing heavy.
  • CHAPTER VII. How Sir Launcelot met with the damosel named Male disant,
  • and named her the Damosel Bienpensant.
  • So then they took their horses and rode forth a pace after Sir
  • Launcelot. And within two mile they overtook him, and saluted him, and
  • thanked him, and the damosel cried Sir Launcelot mercy of her evil deed
  • and saying: For now I know the flower of all knighthood is departed
  • even between Sir Tristram and you. For God knoweth, said the damosel,
  • that I have sought you my lord, Sir Launcelot, and Sir Tristram long,
  • and now I thank God I have met with you; and once at Camelot I met with
  • Sir Tristram, and there he rescued this black shield with the white
  • hand holding a naked sword that Sir Breuse Saunce Pite had taken from
  • me. Now, fair damosel, said Sir Launcelot, who told you my name? Sir,
  • said she, there came a damosel from a knight that ye fought withal at
  • the bridge, and she told me your name was Sir Launcelot du Lake. Blame
  • have she then, said Sir Launcelot, but her lord, Sir Nerovens, hath
  • told her. But, damosel, said Sir Launcelot, upon this covenant I will
  • ride with you, so that ye will not rebuke this knight Sir La Cote Male
  • Taile no more; for he is a good knight, and I doubt not he shall prove
  • a noble knight, and for his sake and pity that he should not be
  • destroyed I followed him to succour him in this great need. Ah, Jesu
  • thank you, said the damosel, for now I will say unto you and to him
  • both, I rebuked him never for no hate that I hated him, but for great
  • love that I had to him. For ever I supposed that he had been too young
  • and too tender to take upon him these adventures. And therefore by my
  • will I would have driven him away for jealousy that I had of his life,
  • for it may be no young knight’s deed that shall enchieve this adventure
  • to the end. Pardieu, said Sir Launcelot, it is well said, and where ye
  • are called the Damosel Maledisant I will call you the Damosel
  • Bienpensant.
  • And so they rode forth a great while unto they came to the border of
  • the country of Surluse, and there they found a fair village with a
  • strong bridge like a fortress. And when Sir Launcelot and they were at
  • the bridge there stert forth afore them of gentlemen and yeomen many,
  • that said: Fair lords, ye may not pass this bridge and this fortress
  • because of that black shield that I see one of you bear, and therefore
  • there shall not pass but one of you at once; therefore choose you which
  • of you shall enter within this bridge first. Then Sir Launcelot
  • proffered himself first to enter within this bridge. Sir, said La Cote
  • Male Taile, I beseech you let me enter within this fortress, and if I
  • may speed well I will send for you, and if it happened that I be slain,
  • there it goeth. And if so be that I am a prisoner taken, then may ye
  • rescue me. I am loath, said Sir Launcelot, to let you pass this
  • passage. Sir, said La Cote Male Taile, I pray you let me put my body in
  • this adventure. Now go your way, said Sir Launcelot, and Jesu be your
  • speed.
  • So he entered, and anon there met with him two brethren, the one hight
  • Sir Plaine de Force, and the other hight Sir Plaine de Amours. And anon
  • they met with Sir La Cote Male Taile; and first La Cote Male Taile
  • smote down Plaine de Force, and after he smote down Plaine de Amours;
  • and then they dressed them to their shields and swords, and bade La
  • Cote Male Taile alight, and so he did; and there was dashing and
  • foining with swords, and so they began to assail full hard La Cote Male
  • Taile, and many great wounds they gave him upon his head, and upon his
  • breast, and upon his shoulders. And as he might ever among he gave sad
  • strokes again. And then the two brethren traced and traversed for to be
  • of both hands of Sir La Cote Male Taile, but he by fine force and
  • knightly prowess gat them afore him. And then when he felt himself so
  • wounded, then he doubled his strokes, and gave them so many wounds that
  • he felled them to the earth, and would have slain them had they not
  • yielded them. And right so Sir La Cote Male Taile took the best horse
  • that there was of them three, and so rode forth his way to the other
  • fortress and bridge; and there he met with the third brother whose name
  • was Sir Plenorius, a full noble knight, and there they jousted
  • together, and either smote other down, horse and man, to the earth. And
  • then they avoided their horses, and dressed their shields, and drew
  • their swords, and gave many sad strokes, and one while the one knight
  • was afore on the bridge, and another while the other. And thus they
  • fought two hours and more, and never rested. And ever Sir Launcelot and
  • the damosel beheld them. Alas, said the damosel, my knight fighteth
  • passing sore and over long. Now may ye see, said Sir Launcelot, that he
  • is a noble knight, for to consider his first battle, and his grievous
  • wounds; and even forthwithal so wounded as he is, it is marvel that he
  • may endure this long battle with that good knight.
  • CHAPTER VIII. How La Cote Male Taile was taken prisoner, and after
  • rescued by Sir Launcelot, and how Sir Launcelot overcame four brethren.
  • This meanwhile Sir La Cote Male Taile sank right down upon the earth,
  • what for-wounded and what for-bled he might not stand. Then the other
  • knight had pity of him, and said: Fair young knight, dismay you not,
  • for had ye been fresh when ye met with me, as I was, I wot well that I
  • should not have endured so long as ye have done; and therefore for your
  • noble deeds of arms I shall show to you kindness and gentleness in all
  • that I may. And forthwithal this noble knight, Sir Plenorius, took him
  • up in his arms, and led him into his tower. And then he commanded him
  • the wine, and made to search him and to stop his bleeding wounds. Sir,
  • said La Cote Male Taile, withdraw you from me, and hie you to yonder
  • bridge again, for there will meet with you another manner knight than
  • ever was I. Why, said Plenorius, is there another manner knight behind
  • of your fellowship? Yea, said La Cote Male Taile, there is a much
  • better knight than I am. What is his name? said Plenorius. Ye shall not
  • know for me, said La Cote Male Taile. Well, said the knight, he shall
  • be encountered withal whatsomever he be.
  • Then Sir Plenorius heard a knight call that said: Sir Plenorius, where
  • art thou? either thou must deliver me the prisoner that thou hast led
  • unto thy tower, or else come and do battle with me. Then Plenorius gat
  • his horse, and came with a spear in his hand walloping toward Sir
  • Launcelot; and then they began to feutre their spears, and came
  • together as thunder, and smote either other so mightily that their
  • horses fell down under them. And then they avoided their horses, and
  • pulled out their swords, and like two bulls they lashed together with
  • great strokes and foins; but ever Sir Launcelot recovered ground upon
  • him, and Sir Plenorius traced to have gone about him. But Sir Launcelot
  • would not suffer that, but bare him backer and backer, till he came
  • nigh his tower gate. And then said Sir Launcelot: I know thee well for
  • a good knight, but wit thou well thy life and death is in my hand, and
  • therefore yield thee to me, and thy prisoner. The other answered no
  • word, but struck mightily upon Sir Launcelot’s helm, that the fire
  • sprang out of his eyes. Then Sir Launcelot doubled his strokes so
  • thick, and smote at him so mightily, that he made him kneel upon his
  • knees. And therewith Sir Launcelot leapt upon him, and pulled him
  • grovelling down. Then Sir Plenorius yielded him, and his tower, and all
  • his prisoners at his will.
  • Then Sir Launcelot received him and took his troth; and then he rode to
  • the other bridge, and there Sir Launcelot jousted with other three of
  • his brethren, the one hight Pillounes, and the other hight Pellogris,
  • and the third Sir Pellandris. And first upon horseback Sir Launcelot
  • smote them down, and afterward he beat them on foot, and made them to
  • yield them unto him; and then he returned unto Sir Plenorius, and there
  • he found in his prison King Carados of Scotland, and many other
  • knights, and all they were delivered. And then Sir La Cote Male Taile
  • came to Sir Launcelot, and then Sir Launcelot would have given him all
  • these fortresses and these bridges. Nay, said La Cote Male Taile, I
  • will not have Sir Plenorius’ livelihood; with that he will grant you,
  • my lord Sir Launcelot, to come unto King Arthur’s court, and to be his
  • knight, and all his brethren, I will pray you, my lord, to let him have
  • his livelihood. I will well, said Sir Launcelot, with this that he will
  • come to the court of King Arthur and become his man, and his brethren
  • five. And as for you, Sir Plenorius, I will undertake, said Sir
  • Launcelot, at the next feast, so there be a place voided, that ye shall
  • be Knight of the Round Table. Sir, said Plenorius, at the next feast of
  • Pentecost I will be at Arthur’s court, and at that time I will be
  • guided and ruled as King Arthur and ye will have me. Then Sir Launcelot
  • and Sir La Cote Male Taile reposed them there, unto the time that Sir
  • La Cote Male Taile was whole of his wounds, and there they had merry
  • cheer, and good rest, and many good games, and there were many fair
  • ladies.
  • CHAPTER IX. How Sir Launcelot made La Cote Male Taile lord of the
  • Castle of Pendragon, and after was made knight of the Round Table.
  • And in the meanwhile came Sir Kay, the Seneschal, and Sir Brandiles,
  • and anon they fellowshipped with them. And then within ten days, then
  • departed those knights of Arthur’s court from these fortresses. And as
  • Sir Launcelot came by the Castle of Pendragon there he put Sir Brian de
  • les Isles from his lands, for cause he would never be withhold with
  • King Arthur; and all that Castle of Pendragon and all the lands thereof
  • he gave to Sir La Cote Male Taile. And then Sir Launcelot sent for
  • Nerovens that he made once knight, and he made him to have all the rule
  • of that castle and of that country, under La Cote Male Taile; and so
  • they rode to Arthur’s court all wholly together. And at Pentecost next
  • following there was Sir Plenorius and Sir La Cote Male Taile, called
  • otherwise by right Sir Breunor le Noire, both made Knights of the Table
  • Round; and great lands King Arthur gave them, and there Breunor le
  • Noire wedded that damosel Maledisant. And after she was called
  • Beauvivante, but ever after for the more part he was called La Cote
  • Male Taile; and he proved a passing noble knight, and mighty; and many
  • worshipful deeds he did after in his life; and Sir Plenorius proved a
  • noble knight and full of prowess, and all the days of their life for
  • the most part they awaited upon Sir Launcelot; and Sir Plenorius’
  • brethren were ever knights of King Arthur. And also, as the French book
  • maketh mention, Sir La Cote Male Taile avenged his father’s death.
  • CHAPTER X. How La Beale Isoud sent letters to Sir Tristram by her maid
  • Bragwaine, and of divers adventures of Sir Tristram.
  • Now leave we here Sir La Cote Male Taile, and turn we unto Sir Tristram
  • de Liones that was in Brittany. When La Beale Isoud understood that he
  • was wedded she sent to him by her maiden Bragwaine as piteous letters
  • as could be thought and made, and her conclusion was that, an it
  • pleased Sir Tristram, that he would come to her court, and bring with
  • him Isoud la Blanche Mains, and they should be kept as well as she
  • herself. Then Sir Tristram called unto him Sir Kehydius, and asked him
  • whether he would go with him into Cornwall secretly. He answered him
  • that he was ready at all times. And then he let ordain privily a little
  • vessel, and therein they went, Sir Tristram, Kehydius, Dame Bragwaine,
  • and Gouvernail, Sir Tristram’s squire. So when they were in the sea a
  • contrarious wind blew them on the coasts of North Wales, nigh the
  • Castle Perilous. Then said Sir Tristram: Here shall ye abide me these
  • ten days, and Gouvernail, my squire, with you. And if so be I come not
  • again by that day take the next way into Cornwall; for in this forest
  • are many strange adventures, as I have heard say, and some of them I
  • cast me to prove or I depart. And when I may I shall hie me after you.
  • Then Sir Tristram and Kehydius took their horses and departed from
  • their fellowship. And so they rode within that forest a mile and more;
  • and at the last Sir Tristram saw afore him a likely knight, armed,
  • sitting by a well, and a strong mighty horse passing nigh him tied to
  • an oak, and a man hoving and riding by him leading an horse laden with
  • spears. And this knight that sat at the well seemed by his countenance
  • to be passing heavy. Then Sir Tristram rode near him and said: Fair
  • knight, why sit ye so drooping? ye seem to be a knight-errant by your
  • arms and harness, and therefore dress you to joust with one of us, or
  • with both. Therewithal that knight made no words, but took his shield
  • and buckled it about his neck, and lightly he took his horse and leapt
  • upon him. And then he took a great spear of his squire, and departed
  • his way a furlong. Sir Kehydius asked leave of Sir Tristram to joust
  • first. Do your best, said Sir Tristram. So they met together, and there
  • Sir Kehydius had a fall, and was sore wounded on high above the paps.
  • Then Sir Tristram said: Knight, that is well jousted, now make you
  • ready unto me. I am ready, said the knight. And then that knight took a
  • greater spear in his hand, and encountered with Sir Tristram, and there
  • by great force that knight smote down Sir Tristram from his horse and
  • had a great fall. Then Sir Tristram was sore ashamed, and lightly he
  • avoided his horse, and put his shield afore his shoulder, and drew his
  • sword. And then Sir Tristram required that knight of his knighthood to
  • alight upon foot and fight with him. I will well, said the knight; and
  • so he alighted upon foot, and avoided his horse, and cast his shield
  • upon his shoulder, and drew his sword, and there they fought a long
  • battle together full nigh two hours. Then Sir Tristram said: Fair
  • knight, hold thine hand, and tell me of whence thou art, and what is
  • thy name. As for that, said the knight, I will be avised; but an thou
  • wilt tell me thy name peradventure I will tell thee mine.
  • CHAPTER XI. How Sir Tristram met with Sir Lamorak de Galis, and how
  • they fought, and after accorded never to fight together.
  • Now fair knight, he said, my name is Sir Tristram de Liones. Sir, said
  • the other knight, and my name is Sir Lamorak de Galis. Ah, Sir Lamorak,
  • said Sir Tristram, well be we met, and bethink thee now of the despite
  • thou didst me of the sending of the horn unto King Mark’s court, to the
  • intent to have slain or dishonoured my lady the queen, La Beale Isoud;
  • and therefore wit thou well, said Sir Tristram, the one of us shall die
  • or we depart. Sir, said Sir Lamorak, remember that we were together in
  • the Isle of Servage, and at that time ye promised me great friendship.
  • Then Sir Tristram would make no longer delays, but lashed at Sir
  • Lamorak; and thus they fought long till either were weary of other.
  • Then Sir Tristram said to Sir Lamorak: In all my life met I never with
  • such a knight that was so big and well breathed as ye be, therefore,
  • said Sir Tristram, it were pity that any of us both should here be
  • mischieved. Sir said Sir Lamorak, for your renown and name I will that
  • ye have the worship of this battle, and therefore I will yield me unto
  • you. And therewith he took the point of his sword to yield him. Nay,
  • said Sir Tristram, ye shall not do so, for well I know your proffers,
  • and more of your gentleness than for any fear or dread ye have of me.
  • And therewithal Sir Tristram proffered him his sword and said: Sir
  • Lamorak, as an overcome knight I yield me unto you as to a man of the
  • most noble prowess that ever I met withal. Nay, said Sir Lamorak, I
  • will do you gentleness; I require you let us be sworn together that
  • never none of us shall after this day have ado with other. And
  • therewithal Sir Tristram and Sir Lamorak sware that never none of them
  • should fight against other, nor for weal nor for woe.
  • CHAPTER XII. How Sir Palomides followed the Questing Beast, and smote
  • down Sir Tristram and Sir Lamorak with one spear.
  • And this meanwhile there came Sir Palomides, the good knight, following
  • the Questing Beast that had in shape a head like a serpent’s head, and
  • a body like a leopard, buttocks like a lion, and footed like an hart;
  • and in his body there was such a noise as it had been the noise of
  • thirty couple of hounds questing, and such a noise that beast made
  • wheresomever he went; and this beast ever more Sir Palomides followed,
  • for it was called his quest. And right so as he followed this beast it
  • came by Sir Tristram, and soon after came Palomides. And to brief this
  • matter he smote down Sir Tristram and Sir Lamorak both with one spear;
  • and so he departed after the beast Galtisant, that was called the
  • Questing Beast; wherefore these two knights were passing wroth that Sir
  • Palomides would not fight on foot with them. Here men may understand
  • that be of worship, that he was never formed that all times might
  • stand, but sometime he was put to the worse by mal-fortune; and at
  • sometime the worse knight put the better knight to a rebuke.
  • Then Sir Tristram and Sir Lamorak gat Sir Kehydius upon a shield
  • betwixt them both, and led him to a forester’s lodge, and there they
  • gave him in charge to keep him well, and with him they abode three
  • days. Then the two knights took their horses and at the cross they
  • departed. And then said Sir Tristram to Sir Lamorak: I require you if
  • ye hap to meet with Sir Palomides, say him that he shall find me at the
  • same well where I met him, and there I, Sir Tristram, shall prove
  • whether he be better knight than I. And so either departed from other a
  • sundry way, and Sir Tristram rode nigh thereas was Sir Kehydius; and
  • Sir Lamorak rode until he came to a chapel, and there he put his horse
  • unto pasture. And anon there came Sir Meliagaunce, that was King
  • Bagdemagus’ son, and he there put his horse to pasture, and was not
  • ware of Sir Lamorak; and then this knight Sir Meliagaunce made his moan
  • of the love that he had to Queen Guenever, and there he made a woful
  • complaint. All this heard Sir Lamorak, and on the morn Sir Lamorak took
  • his horse and rode unto the forest, and there he met with two knights
  • hoving under the wood-shaw. Fair knights, said Sir Lamorak, what do ye
  • hoving here and watching? and if ye be knights-errant that will joust,
  • lo I am ready. Nay, sir knight, they said, not so, we abide not here to
  • joust with you, but we lie here in await of a knight that slew our
  • brother. What knight was that, said Sir Lamorak, that you would fain
  • meet withal? Sir, they said, it is Sir Launcelot that slew our brother,
  • and if ever we may meet with him he shall not escape, but we shall slay
  • him. Ye take upon you a great charge, said Sir Lamorak, for Sir
  • Launcelot is a noble proved knight. As for that we doubt not, for there
  • nis none of us but we are good enough for him. I will not believe that,
  • said Sir Lamorak, for I heard never yet of no knight the days of my
  • life but Sir Launcelot was too big for him.
  • CHAPTER XIII. How Sir Lamorak met with Sir Meliagaunce, and fought
  • together for the beauty of Dame Guenever.
  • Right so as they stood talking thus Sir Lamorak was ware how Sir
  • Launcelot came riding straight toward them; then Sir Lamorak saluted
  • him, and he him again. And then Sir Lamorak asked Sir Launcelot if
  • there were anything that he might do for him in these marches. Nay,
  • said Sir Launcelot, not at this time I thank you. Then either departed
  • from other, and Sir Lamorak rode again thereas he left the two knights,
  • and then he found them hid in the leaved wood. Fie on you, said Sir
  • Lamorak, false cowards, pity and shame it is that any of you should
  • take the high order of knighthood. So Sir Lamorak departed from them,
  • and within a while he met with Sir Meliagaunce. And then Sir Lamorak
  • asked him why he loved Queen Guenever as he did: For I was not far from
  • you when ye made your complaint by the chapel. Did ye so? said Sir
  • Meliagaunce, then will I abide by it: I love Queen Guenever, what will
  • ye with it? I will prove and make good that she is the fairest lady and
  • most of beauty in the world. As to that, said Sir Lamorak, I say nay
  • thereto, for Queen Morgawse of Orkney, mother to Sir Gawaine, and his
  • mother is the fairest queen and lady that beareth the life. That is not
  • so, said Sir Meliagaunce, and that will I prove with my hands upon thy
  • body. Will ye so? said Sir Lamorak, and in a better quarrel keep I not
  • to fight. Then they departed either from other in great wrath. And then
  • they came riding together as it had been thunder, and either smote
  • other so sore that their horses fell backward to the earth. And then
  • they avoided their horses, and dressed their shields, and drew their
  • swords. And then they hurtled together as wild boars, and thus they
  • fought a great while. For Meliagaunce was a good man and of great
  • might, but Sir Lamorak was hard big for him, and put him always aback,
  • but either had wounded other sore.
  • And as they stood thus fighting, by fortune came Sir Launcelot and Sir
  • Bleoberis riding. And then Sir Launcelot rode betwixt them, and asked
  • them for what cause they fought so together: And ye are both knights of
  • King Arthur!
  • Sir, said Meliagaunce, I shall tell you for what cause we do this
  • battle. I praised my lady, Queen Guenever, and said she was the fairest
  • lady of the world, and Sir Lamorak said nay thereto, for he said Queen
  • Morgawse of Orkney was fairer than she and more of beauty. Ah, Sir
  • Lamorak, why sayest thou so? it is not thy part to dispraise thy
  • princess that thou art under her obeissance, and we all. And therewith
  • he alighted on foot, and said: For this quarrel, make thee ready, for I
  • will prove upon thee that Queen Guenever is the fairest lady and most
  • of bounty in the world. Sir, said Sir Lamorak, I am loath to have ado
  • with you in this quarrel, for every man thinketh his own lady fairest;
  • and though I praise the lady that I love most ye should not be wroth;
  • for though my lady Queen Guenever, be fairest in your eye, wit ye well
  • Queen Morgawse of Orkney is fairest in mine eye, and so every knight
  • thinketh his own lady fairest; and wit ye well, sir, ye are the man in
  • the world except Sir Tristram that I am most loathest to have ado
  • withal, but, an ye will needs fight with me I shall endure you as long
  • as I may. Then spake Sir Bleoberis and said: My lord Sir Launcelot, I
  • wist you never so misadvised as ye are now, for Sir Lamorak sayeth you
  • but reason and knightly; for I warn you I have a lady, and methinketh
  • that she is the fairest lady of the world. Were this a great reason
  • that ye should be wroth with me for such language? And well ye wot,
  • that Sir Lamorak is as noble a knight as I know, and he hath ought you
  • and us ever good will, and therefore I pray you be good friends. Then
  • Sir Launcelot said unto Sir Lamorak. I pray you forgive me mine evil
  • will, and if I was misadvised I will amend it. Sir, said Sir Lamorak,
  • the amends is soon made betwixt you and me. And so Sir Launcelot and
  • Sir Bleoberis departed, and Sir Meliagaunce and Sir Lamorak took their
  • horses, and either departed from other.
  • And within a while came King Arthur, and met with Sir Lamorak, and
  • jousted with him; and there he smote down Sir Lamorak, and wounded him
  • sore with a spear, and so he rode from him; wherefore Sir Lamorak was
  • wroth that he would not fight with him on foot, howbeit that Sir
  • Lamorak knew not King Arthur.
  • CHAPTER XIV. How Sir Kay met with Sir Tristram, and after of the shame
  • spoken of the knights of Cornwall, and how they jousted.
  • Now leave we of this tale, and speak we of Sir Tristram, that as he
  • rode he met with Sir Kay, the Seneschal; and there Sir Kay asked Sir
  • Tristram of what country he was. He answered that he was of the country
  • of Cornwall. It may well be, said Sir Kay, for yet heard I never that
  • ever good knight came out of Cornwall. That is evil spoken, said Sir
  • Tristram, but an it please you to tell me your name I require you. Sir,
  • wit ye well, said Sir Kay, that my name is Sir Kay, the Seneschal. Is
  • that your name? said Sir Tristram, now wit ye well that ye are named
  • the shamefullest knight of your tongue that now is living; howbeit ye
  • are called a good knight, but ye are called unfortunate, and passing
  • overthwart of your tongue. And thus they rode together till they came
  • to a bridge. And there was a knight would not let them pass till one of
  • them jousted with him; and so that knight jousted with Sir Kay, and
  • there that knight gave Sir Kay a fall: his name was Sir Tor, Sir
  • Lamorak’s half-brother. And then they two rode to their lodging, and
  • there they found Sir Brandiles, and Sir Tor came thither anon after.
  • And as they sat at supper these four knights, three of them spake all
  • shame by Cornish knights. Sir Tristram heard all that they said and he
  • said but little, but he thought the more, but at that time he
  • discovered not his name.
  • Upon the morn Sir Tristram took his horse and abode them upon their
  • way. And there Sir Brandiles proffered to joust with Sir Tristram, and
  • Sir Tristram smote him down, horse and all, to the earth. Then Sir Tor
  • le Fise de Vayshoure encountered with Sir Tristram and there Sir
  • Tristram smote him down, and then he rode his way, and Sir Kay followed
  • him, but he would not of his fellowship. Then Sir Brandiles came to Sir
  • Kay and said: I would wit fain what is that knight’s name. Come on with
  • me, said Sir Kay, and we shall pray him to tell us his name. So they
  • rode together till they came nigh him, and then they were ware where he
  • sat by a well, and had put off his helm to drink at the well. And when
  • he saw them come he laced on his helm lightly, and took his horse, and
  • proffered them to joust. Nay, said Sir Brandiles, we jousted late
  • enough with you, we come not in that intent. But for this we come to
  • require you of knighthood to tell us your name. My fair knights, sithen
  • that is your desire, and to please you, ye shall wit that my name is
  • Sir Tristram de Liones, nephew unto King Mark of Cornwall. In good
  • time, said Sir Brandiles, and well be ye found, and wit ye well that we
  • be right glad that we have found you, and we be of a fellowship that
  • would be right glad of your company. For ye are the knight in the world
  • that the noble fellowship of the Round Table most desireth to have the
  • company of. God thank them said Sir Tristram, of their great goodness,
  • but as yet I feel well that I am unable to be of their fellowship, for
  • I was never yet of such deeds of worthiness to be in the company of
  • such a fellowship. Ah, said Sir Kay, an ye be Sir Tristram de Liones,
  • ye are the man called now most of prowess except Sir Launcelot du Lake;
  • for he beareth not the life, Christian nor heathen, that can find such
  • another knight, to speak of his prowess, and of his hands, and his
  • truth withal. For yet could there never creature say of him dishonour
  • and make it good. Thus they talked a great while, and then they
  • departed either from other such ways as them seemed best.
  • CHAPTER XV. How King Arthur was brought into the Forest Perilous, and
  • how Sir Tristram saved his life.
  • Now shall ye hear what was the cause that King Arthur came into the
  • Forest Perilous, that was in North Wales, by the means of a lady. Her
  • name was Annowre, and this lady came to King Arthur at Cardiff; and she
  • by fair promise and fair behests made King Arthur to ride with her into
  • that Forest Perilous; and she was a great sorceress; and many days she
  • had loved King Arthur, and because she would have him to lie by her she
  • came into that country. So when the king was gone with her many of his
  • knights followed after King Arthur when they missed him, as Sir
  • Launcelot, Brandiles, and many other; and when she had brought him to
  • her tower she desired him to lie by her; and then the king remembered
  • him of his lady, and would not lie by her for no craft that she could
  • do. Then every day she would make him ride into that forest with his
  • own knights, to the intent to have had King Arthur slain. For when this
  • Lady Annowre saw that she might not have him at her will, then she
  • laboured by false means to have destroyed King Arthur, and slain.
  • Then the Lady of the Lake that was alway friendly to King Arthur, she
  • understood by her subtle crafts that King Arthur was like to be
  • destroyed. And therefore this Lady of the Lake, that hight Nimue, came
  • into that forest to seek after Sir Launcelot du Lake or Sir Tristram
  • for to help King Arthur; foras that same day this Lady of the Lake knew
  • well that King Arthur should be slain, unless that he had help of one
  • of these two knights. And thus she rode up and down till she met with
  • Sir Tristram, and anon as she saw him she knew him. O my lord Sir
  • Tristram, she said, well be ye met, and blessed be the time that I have
  • met with you; for this same day, and within these two hours, shall be
  • done the foulest deed that ever was done in this land. O fair damosel,
  • said Sir Tristram, may I amend it. Come on with me, she said, and that
  • in all the haste ye may, for ye shall see the most worshipfullest
  • knight of the world hard bestead. Then said Sir Tristram: I am ready to
  • help such a noble man. He is neither better nor worse, said the Lady of
  • the Lake, but the noble King Arthur himself. God defend, said Sir
  • Tristram, that ever he should be in such distress. Then they rode
  • together a great pace, until they came to a little turret or castle;
  • and underneath that castle they saw a knight standing upon foot
  • fighting with two knights; and so Sir Tristram beheld them, and at the
  • last the two knights smote down the one knight, and that one of them
  • unlaced his helm to have slain him. And the Lady Annowre gat King
  • Arthur’s sword in her hand to have stricken off his head. And
  • therewithal came Sir Tristram with all his might, crying: Traitress,
  • traitress, leave that. And anon there Sir Tristram smote the one of the
  • knights through the body that he fell dead; and then he rashed to the
  • other and smote his back asunder; and in the meanwhile the Lady of the
  • Lake cried to King Arthur: Let not that false lady escape. Then King
  • Arthur overtook her, and with the same sword he smote off her head, and
  • the Lady of the Lake took up her head and hung it up by the hair of her
  • saddle-bow. And then Sir Tristram horsed King Arthur and rode forth
  • with him, but he charged the Lady of the Lake not to discover his name
  • as at that time.
  • When the king was horsed he thanked heartily Sir Tristram, and desired
  • to wit his name; but he would not tell him, but that he was a poor
  • knight adventurous; and so he bare King Arthur fellowship till he met
  • with some of his knights. And within a while he met with Sir Ector de
  • Maris, and he knew not King Arthur nor Sir Tristram, and he desired to
  • joust with one of them. Then Sir Tristram rode unto Sir Ector, and
  • smote him from his horse. And when he had done so he came again to the
  • king and said: My lord, yonder is one of your knights, he may bare you
  • fellowship, and another day that deed that I have done for you I trust
  • to God ye shall understand that I would do you service. Alas, said King
  • Arthur, let me wit what ye are? Not at this time, said Sir Tristram. So
  • he departed and left King Arthur and Sir Ector together.
  • CHAPTER XVI. How Sir Tristram came to La Beale Isoud, and how Kehydius
  • began to love Beale Isoud, and of a letter that Tristram found.
  • And then at a day set Sir Tristram and Sir Lamorak met at the well; and
  • then they took Kehydius at the forester’s house, and so they rode with
  • him to the ship where they left Dame Bragwaine and Gouvernail, and so
  • they sailed into Cornwall all wholly together. And by assent and
  • information of Dame Bragwaine when they were landed they rode unto Sir
  • Dinas, the Seneschal, a trusty friend of Sir Tristram’s. And so Dame
  • Bragwaine and Sir Dinas rode to the court of King Mark, and told the
  • queen, La Beale Isoud, that Sir Tristram was nigh her in that country.
  • Then for very pure joy La Beale Isoud swooned; and when she might speak
  • she said: Gentle knight Seneschal, help that I might speak with him,
  • outher my heart will brast. Then Sir Dinas and Dame Bragwaine brought
  • Sir Tristram and Kehydius privily unto the court, unto a chamber
  • whereas La Beale Isoud had assigned it; and to tell the joys that were
  • betwixt La Beale Isoud and Sir Tristram, there is no tongue can tell
  • it, nor heart think it, nor pen write it. And as the French book maketh
  • mention, at the first time that ever Sir Kehydius saw La Beale Isoud he
  • was so enamoured upon her that for very pure love he might never
  • withdraw it. And at the last, as ye shall hear or the book be ended,
  • Sir Kehydius died for the love of La Beale Isoud. And then privily he
  • wrote unto her letters and ballads of the most goodliest that were used
  • in those days. And when La Beale Isoud understood his letters she had
  • pity of his complaint, and unavised she wrote another letter to comfort
  • him withal.
  • And Sir Tristram was all this while in a turret at the commandment of
  • La Beale Isoud, and when she might she came unto Sir Tristram. So on a
  • day King Mark played at the chess under a chamber window; and at that
  • time Sir Tristram and Sir Kehydius were within the chamber over King
  • Mark, and as it mishapped Sir Tristram found the letter that Kehydius
  • sent unto La Beale Isoud, also he had found the letter that she wrote
  • unto Kehydius, and at that same time La Beale Isoud was in the same
  • chamber. Then Sir Tristram came unto La Beale Isoud and said: Madam,
  • here is a letter that was sent unto you, and here is the letter that ye
  • sent unto him that sent you that letter. Alas, Madam, the good love
  • that I have loved you; and many lands and riches have I forsaken for
  • your love, and now ye are a traitress to me, the which doth me great
  • pain. But as for thee, Sir Kehydius, I brought thee out of Brittany
  • into this country, and thy father, King Howel, I won his lands, howbeit
  • I wedded thy sister Isoud la Blanche Mains for the goodness she did
  • unto me. And yet, as I am true knight, she is a clean maiden for me;
  • but wit thou well, Sir Kehydius, for this falsehood and treason thou
  • hast done me, I will revenge it upon thee. And therewithal Sir Tristram
  • drew out his sword and said: Sir Kehydius, keep thee, and then La Beale
  • Isoud swooned to the earth. And when Sir Kehydius saw Sir Tristram come
  • upon him he saw none other boot, but leapt out at a bay-window even
  • over the head where sat King Mark playing at the chess. And when the
  • king saw one come hurling over his head he said: Fellow, what art thou,
  • and what is the cause thou leapest out at that window? My lord the
  • king, said Kehydius, it fortuned me that I was asleep in the window
  • above your head, and as I slept I slumbered, and so I fell down. And
  • thus Sir Kehydius excused him.
  • CHAPTER XVII. How Sir Tristram departed from Tintagil, and how he
  • sorrowed and was so long in a forest till he was out of his mind.
  • Then Sir Tristram dread sore lest he were discovered unto the king that
  • he was there; wherefore he drew him to the strength of the Tower, and
  • armed him in such armour as he had for to fight with them that would
  • withstand him. And so when Sir Tristram saw there was no resistance
  • against him he sent Gouvernail for his horse and his spear, and
  • knightly he rode forth out of the castle openly, that was called the
  • Castle of Tintagil. And even at gate he met with Gingalin, Sir
  • Gawaine’s son. And anon Sir Gingalin put his spear in his rest, and ran
  • upon Sir Tristram and brake his spear; and Sir Tristram at that time
  • had but a sword, and gave him such a buffet upon the helm that he fell
  • down from his saddle, and his sword slid adown, and carved asunder his
  • horse’s neck. And so Sir Tristram rode his way into the forest, and all
  • this doing saw King Mark. And then he sent a squire unto the hurt
  • knight, and commanded him to come to him, and so he did. And when King
  • Mark wist that it was Sir Gingalin he welcomed him and gave him an
  • horse, and asked him what knight it was that had encountered with him.
  • Sir, said Gingalin, I wot not what knight he was, but well I wot that
  • he sigheth and maketh great dole.
  • Then Sir Tristram within a while met with a knight of his own, that
  • hight Sir Fergus. And when he had met with him he made great sorrow,
  • insomuch that he fell down off his horse in a swoon, and in such sorrow
  • he was in three days and three nights. Then at the last Sir Tristram
  • sent unto the court by Sir Fergus, for to spere what tidings. And so as
  • he rode by the way he met with a damosel that came from Sir Palomides,
  • to know and seek how Sir Tristram did. Then Sir Fergus told her how he
  • was almost out of his mind. Alas, said the damosel, where shall I find
  • him? In such a place, said Sir Fergus. Then Sir Fergus found Queen
  • Isoud sick in her bed, making the greatest dole that ever any earthly
  • woman made. And when the damosel found Sir Tristram she made great dole
  • because she might not amend him, for the more she made of him the more
  • was his pain. And at the last Sir Tristram took his horse and rode away
  • from her. And then was it three days or that she could find him, and
  • then she brought him meat and drink, but he would none; and then
  • another time Sir Tristram escaped away from the damosel, and it happed
  • him to ride by the same castle where Sir Palomides and Sir Tristram did
  • battle when La Beale Isoud departed them. And there by fortune the
  • damosel met with Sir Tristram again, making the greatest dole that ever
  • earthly creature made; and she yede to the lady of that castle and told
  • her of the misadventure of Sir Tristram. Alas, said the lady of that
  • castle, where is my lord, Sir Tristram? Right here by your castle, said
  • the damosel. In good time, said the lady, is he so nigh me; he shall
  • have meat and drink of the best; and an harp I have of his whereupon he
  • taught me, for of goodly harping he beareth the prize in the world. So
  • this lady and damosel brought him meat and drink, but he ate little
  • thereof. Then upon a night he put his horse from him, and then he
  • unlaced his armour, and then Sir Tristram would go into the wilderness,
  • and brast down the trees and boughs; and otherwhile when he found the
  • harp that the lady sent him, then would he harp, and play thereupon and
  • weep together. And sometime when Sir Tristram was in the wood that the
  • lady wist not where he was, then would she sit her down and play upon
  • that harp: then would Sir Tristram come to that harp, and hearken
  • thereto, and sometime he would harp himself. Thus he there endured a
  • quarter of a year. Then at the last he ran his way, and she wist not
  • where he was become. And then was he naked and waxed lean and poor of
  • flesh; and so he fell in the fellowship of herdmen and shepherds, and
  • daily they would give him some of their meat and drink. And when he did
  • any shrewd deed they would beat him with rods, and so they clipped him
  • with shears and made him like a fool.
  • CHAPTER XVIII. How Sir Tristram soused Dagonet in a well, and how
  • Palomides sent a damosel to seek Tristram, and how Palomides met with
  • King Mark.
  • And upon a day Dagonet, King Arthur’s fool, came into Cornwall with two
  • squires with him; and as they rode through that forest they came by a
  • fair well where Sir Tristram was wont to be; and the weather was hot,
  • and they alighted to drink of that well, and in the meanwhile their
  • horses brake loose. Right so Sir Tristram came unto them, and first he
  • soused Sir Dagonet in that well, and after his squires, and thereat
  • laughed the shepherds; and forthwithal he ran after their horses and
  • brought them again one by one, and right so, wet as they were, he made
  • them leap up and ride their ways. Thus Sir Tristram endured there an
  • half year naked, and would never come in town nor village. The
  • meanwhile the damosel that Sir Palomides sent to seek Sir Tristram, she
  • yede unto Sir Palomides and told him all the mischief that Sir Tristram
  • endured. Alas, said Sir Palomides, it is great pity that ever so noble
  • a knight should be so mischieved for the love of a lady; but
  • nevertheless, I will go and seek him, and comfort him an I may. Then a
  • little before that time La Beale Isoud had commanded Sir Kehydius out
  • of the country of Cornwall. So Sir Kehydius departed with a dolorous
  • heart, and by adventure he met with Sir Palomides, and they
  • enfellowshipped together; and either complained to other of their hot
  • love that they loved La Beale Isoud. Now let us, said Sir Palomides,
  • seek Sir Tristram, that loved her as well as we, and let us prove
  • whether we may recover him. So they rode into that forest, and three
  • days and three nights they would never take their lodging, but ever
  • sought Sir Tristram.
  • And upon a time, by adventure, they met with King Mark that was ridden
  • from his men all alone. When they saw him Sir Palomides knew him, but
  • Sir Kehydius knew him not. Ah, false king, said Sir Palomides, it is
  • pity thou hast thy life, for thou art a destroyer of all worshipful
  • knights, and by thy mischief and thy vengeance thou hast destroyed that
  • most noble knight, Sir Tristram de Liones. And therefore defend thee,
  • said Sir Palomides, for thou shalt die this day. That were shame, said
  • King Mark, for ye two are armed and I am unarmed. As for that, said Sir
  • Palomides, I shall find a remedy therefore; here is a knight with me,
  • and thou shalt have his harness. Nay, said King Mark, I will not have
  • ado with you, for cause have ye none to me; for all the misease that
  • Sir Tristram hath was for a letter that he found; for as to me I did to
  • him no displeasure, and God knoweth I am full sorry for his disease and
  • malady. So when the king had thus excused him they were friends, and
  • King Mark would have had them unto Tintagil; but Sir Palomides would
  • not, but turned unto the realm of Logris, and Sir Kehydius said that he
  • would go into Brittany.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Dagonet again, that when he and his squires were
  • upon horseback he deemed that the shepherds had sent that fool to array
  • them so, because that they laughed at them, and so they rode unto the
  • keepers of beasts and all to-beat them. Sir Tristram saw them beat that
  • were wont to give him meat and drink, then he ran thither and gat Sir
  • Dagonet by the head, and gave him such a fall to the earth that he
  • bruised him sore so that he lay still. And then he wrast his sword out
  • of his hand, and therewith he ran to one of his squires and smote off
  • his head, and the other fled. And so Sir Tristram took his way with
  • that sword in his hand, running as he had been wild wood. Then Sir
  • Dagonet rode to King Mark and told him how he had sped in that forest.
  • And therefore, said Sir Dagonet, beware, King Mark, that thou come not
  • about that well in the forest, for there is a fool naked, and that fool
  • and I fool met together, and he had almost slain me. Ah, said King
  • Mark, that is Sir Matto le Breune, that fell out of his wit because he
  • lost his lady; for when Sir Gaheris smote down Sir Matto and won his
  • lady of him, never since was he in his mind, and that was pity, for he
  • was a good knight.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How it was noised how Sir Tristram was dead, and how La
  • Beale Isoud would have slain herself.
  • Then Sir Andred, that was cousin unto Sir Tristram, made a lady that
  • was his paramour to say and to noise it that she was with Sir Tristram
  • or ever he died. And this tale she brought unto King Mark’s court, that
  • she buried him by a well, and that or he died he besought King Mark to
  • make his cousin, Sir Andred, king of the country of Liones, of the
  • which Sir Tristram was lord of. All this did Sir Andred because he
  • would have had Sir Tristram’s lands. And when King Mark heard tell that
  • Sir Tristram was dead he wept and made great dole. But when Queen Isoud
  • heard of these tidings she made such sorrow that she was nigh out of
  • her mind; and so upon a day she thought to slay herself and never to
  • live after Sir Tristram’s death. And so upon a day La Beale Isoud gat a
  • sword privily and bare it to her garden, and there she pight the sword
  • through a plum tree up to the hilt, so that it stuck fast, and it stood
  • breast high. And as she would have run upon the sword and to have slain
  • herself all this espied King Mark, how she kneeled down and said: Sweet
  • Lord Jesu, have mercy upon me, for I may not live after the death of
  • Sir Tristram de Liones, for he was my first love and he shall be the
  • last. And with these words came King Mark and took her in his arms, and
  • then he took up the sword, and bare her away with him into a tower; and
  • there he made her to be kept, and watched her surely, and after that
  • she lay long sick, nigh at the point of death.
  • This meanwhile ran Sir Tristram naked in the forest with the sword in
  • his hand, and so he came to an hermitage, and there he laid him down
  • and slept; and in the meanwhile the hermit stole away his sword, and
  • laid meat down by him. Thus was he kept there ten days; and at the last
  • he departed and came to the herdmen again. And there was a giant in
  • that country that hight Tauleas, and for fear of Sir Tristram more than
  • seven year he durst never much go at large, but for the most part he
  • kept him in a sure castle of his own; and so this Tauleas heard tell
  • that Sir Tristram was dead, by the noise of the court of King Mark.
  • Then this Tauleas went daily at large. And so he happed upon a day he
  • came to the herdmen wandering and langering, and there he set him down
  • to rest among them. The meanwhile there came a knight of Cornwall that
  • led a lady with him, and his name was Sir Dinant; and when the giant
  • saw him he went from the herdmen and hid him under a tree, and so the
  • knight came to that well, and there he alighted to repose him. And as
  • soon as he was from his horse this giant Tauleas came betwixt this
  • knight and his horse, and took the horse and leapt upon him. So
  • forthwith he rode unto Sir Dinant and took him by the collar, and
  • pulled him afore him upon his horse, and there would have stricken off
  • his head. Then the herdmen said unto Sir Tristram: Help yonder knight.
  • Help ye him, said Sir Tristram. We dare not, said the herdmen. Then Sir
  • Tristram was ware of the sword of the knight thereas it lay; and so
  • thither he ran and took up the sword and struck off Sir Tauleas’ head,
  • and so he yede his way to the herdmen.
  • CHAPTER XX. How King Mark found Sir Tristram naked, and made him to be
  • borne home to Tintagil, and how he was there known by a brachet.
  • Then the knight took up the giant’s head and bare it with him unto King
  • Mark, and told him what adventure betid him in the forest, and how a
  • naked man rescued him from the grimly giant, Tauleas. Where had ye this
  • adventure? said King Mark. Forsooth, said Sir Dinant, at the fair
  • fountain in your forest where many adventurous knights meet, and there
  • is the mad man. Well, said King Mark, I will see that wild man. So
  • within a day or two King Mark commanded his knights and his hunters
  • that they should be ready on the morn for to hunt, and so upon the morn
  • he went unto that forest. And when the king came to that well he found
  • there lying by that well a fair naked man, and a sword by him. Then
  • King Mark blew and straked, and therewith his knights came to him; and
  • then the king commanded his knights to: Take that naked man with
  • fairness, and bring him to my castle. So they did softly and fair, and
  • cast mantles upon Sir Tristram, and so led him unto Tintagil; and there
  • they bathed him, and washed him, and gave him hot suppings till they
  • had brought him well to his remembrance; but all this while there was
  • no creature that knew Sir Tristram, nor what man he was.
  • So it fell upon a day that the queen, La Beale Isoud, heard of such a
  • man, that ran naked in the forest, and how the king had brought him
  • home to the court. Then La Beale Isoud called unto her Dame Bragwaine
  • and said: Come on with me, for we will go see this man that my lord
  • brought from the forest the last day. So they passed forth, and spered
  • where was the sick man. And then a squire told the queen that he was in
  • the garden taking his rest, and reposing him against the sun. So when
  • the queen looked upon Sir Tristram she was not remembered of him. But
  • ever she said unto Dame Bragwaine: Meseemeth I should have seen him
  • heretofore in many places. But as soon as Sir Tristram saw her he knew
  • her well enough. And then he turned away his visage and wept.
  • Then the queen had always a little brachet with her that Sir Tristram
  • gave her the first time that ever she came into Cornwall, and never
  • would that brachet depart from her but if Sir Tristram was nigh thereas
  • was La Beale Isoud; and this brachet was sent from the king’s daughter
  • of France unto Sir Tristram for great love. And anon as this little
  • brachet felt a savour of Sir Tristram, she leapt upon him and licked
  • his lears and his ears, and then she whined and quested, and she
  • smelled at his feet and at his hands, and on all parts of his body that
  • she might come to. Ah, my lady, said Dame Bragwaine unto La Beale
  • Isoud, alas, alas, said she, I see it is mine own lord, Sir Tristram.
  • And thereupon Isoud fell down in a swoon, and so lay a great while And
  • when she might speak she said: My lord Sir Tristram, blessed be God ye
  • have your life, and now I am sure ye shall be discovered by this little
  • brachet, for she will never leave you. And also I am sure as soon as my
  • lord, King Mark, do know you he will banish you out of the country of
  • Cornwall, or else he will destroy you; for God’s sake, mine own lord,
  • grant King Mark his will, and then draw you unto the court of King
  • Arthur, for there are ye beloved, and ever when I may I shall send unto
  • you; and when ye list ye may come to me, and at all times early and
  • late I will be at your commandment, to live as poor a life as ever did
  • queen or lady. O Madam, said Sir Tristram, go from me, for mickle anger
  • and danger have I escaped for your love.
  • CHAPTER XXI. How King Mark, by the advice of his council, banished Sir
  • Tristram out of Cornwall the term of ten years.
  • Then the queen departed, but the brachet would not from him; and
  • therewithal came King Mark, and the brachet set upon him, and bayed at
  • them all. There withal Sir Andred spake and said: Sir, this is Sir
  • Tristram, I see by the brachet. Nay, said the king, I cannot suppose
  • that. Then the king asked him upon his faith what he was, and what was
  • his name. So God me help, said he, my name is Sir Tristram de Liones;
  • now do by me what ye list. Ah, said King Mark, me repenteth of your
  • recovery. And then he let call his barons to judge Sir Tristram to the
  • death. Then many of his barons would not assent thereto, and in
  • especial Sir Dinas, the Seneschal, and Sir Fergus. And so by the advice
  • of them all Sir Tristram was banished out of the country for ten year,
  • and thereupon he took his oath upon a book before the king and his
  • barons. And so he was made to depart out of the country of Cornwall;
  • and there were many barons brought him unto his ship, of the which some
  • were his friends and some his foes. And in the meanwhile there came a
  • knight of King Arthur’s, his name was Dinadan, and his coming was for
  • to seek after Sir Tristram; then they showed him where he was armed at
  • all points going to the ship. Now fair knight, said Sir Dinadan, or ye
  • pass this court that ye will joust with me I require thee. With a good
  • will, said Sir Tristram, an these lords will give me leave. Then the
  • barons granted thereto, and so they ran together, and there Sir
  • Tristram gave Sir Dinadan a fall. And then he prayed Sir Tristram to
  • give him leave to go in his fellowship. Ye shall be right welcome, said
  • then Sir Tristram.
  • And so they took their horses and rode to their ships together, and
  • when Sir Tristram was in the sea he said: Greet well King Mark and all
  • mine enemies, and say them I will come again when I may; and well am I
  • rewarded for the fighting with Sir Marhaus, and delivered all this
  • country from servage; and well am I rewarded for the fetching and costs
  • of Queen Isoud out of Ireland, and the danger that I was in first and
  • last, and by the way coming home what danger I had to bring again Queen
  • Isoud from the Castle Pluere; and well am I rewarded when I fought with
  • Sir Bleoberis for Sir Segwarides’ wife; and well am I rewarded when I
  • fought with Sir Blamore de Ganis for King Anguish, father unto La Beale
  • Isoud; and well am I rewarded when I smote down the good knight, Sir
  • Lamorak de Galis, at King Mark’s request; and well am I rewarded when I
  • fought with the King with the Hundred Knights, and the King of
  • Northgalis, and both these would have put his land in servage, and by
  • me they were put to a rebuke; and well am I rewarded for the slaying of
  • Tauleas, the mighty giant, and many other deeds have I done for him,
  • and now have I my warison. And tell King Mark that many noble knights
  • of the Table Round have spared the barons of this country for my sake.
  • Also am I not well rewarded when I fought with the good knight Sir
  • Palomides and rescued Queen Isoud from him; and at that time King Mark
  • said afore all his barons I should have been better rewarded. And
  • forthwithal he took the sea.
  • CHAPTER XXII. How a damosel sought help to help Sir Launcelot against
  • thirty knights, and how Sir Tristram fought with them.
  • And at the next landing, fast by the sea, there met with Sir Tristram
  • and with Sir Dinadan, Sir Ector de Maris and Sir Bors de Ganis; and
  • there Sir Ector jousted with Sir Dinadan, and he smote him and his
  • horse down. And then Sir Tristram would have jousted with Sir Bors, and
  • Sir Bors said that he would not joust with no Cornish knights, for they
  • are not called men of worship; and all this was done upon a bridge. And
  • with this came Sir Bleoberis and Sir Driant, and Sir Bleoberis
  • proffered to joust with Sir Tristram, and there Sir Tristram smote down
  • Sir Bleoberis. Then said Sir Bors de Ganis: I wist never Cornish knight
  • of so great valour nor so valiant as that knight that beareth the
  • trappings embroidered with crowns. And then Sir Tristram and Sir
  • Dinadan departed from them into a forest, and there met them a damosel
  • that came for the love of Sir Launcelot to seek after some noble
  • knights of King Arthur’s court for to rescue Sir Launcelot. And so Sir
  • Launcelot was ordained, for-by the treason of Queen Morgan le Fay to
  • have slain Sir Launcelot, and for that cause she ordained thirty
  • knights to lie in await for Sir Launcelot, and this damosel knew this
  • treason. And for this cause the damosel came for to seek noble knights
  • to help Sir Launcelot. For that night, or the day after, Sir Launcelot
  • should come where these thirty knights were. And so this damosel met
  • with Sir Bors and Sir Ector and with Sir Driant, and there she told
  • them all four of the treason of Morgan le Fay; and then they promised
  • her that they would be nigh where Sir Launcelot should meet with the
  • thirty knights. And if so be they set upon him we will do rescues as we
  • can.
  • So the damosel departed, and by adventure the damosel met with Sir
  • Tristram and with Sir Dinadan, and there the damosel told them all the
  • treason that was ordained for Sir Launcelot. Fair damosel, said Sir
  • Tristram, bring me to that same place where they should meet with Sir
  • Launcelot. Then said Sir Dinadan: What will ye do? it is not for us to
  • fight with thirty knights, and wit you well I will not thereof; as to
  • match one knight two or three is enough an they be men, but for to
  • match fifteen knights that will I never undertake. Fie for shame, said
  • Sir Tristram, do but your part. Nay, said Sir Dinadan, I will not
  • thereof but if ye will lend me your shield, for ye bear a shield of
  • Cornwall; and for the cowardice that is named to the knights of
  • Cornwall, by your shields ye be ever forborne. Nay, said Sir Tristram,
  • I will not depart from my shield for her sake that gave it me. But one
  • thing, said Sir Tristram, I promise thee, Sir Dinadan, but if thou wilt
  • promise me to abide with me, here I shall slay thee, for I desire no
  • more of thee but answer one knight. And if thy heart will not serve
  • thee, stand by and look upon me and them. Sir, said Sir Dinadan, I
  • promise you to look upon and to do what I may to save myself, but I
  • would I had not met with you.
  • So then anon these thirty knights came fast by these four knights, and
  • they were ware of them, and either of other. And so these thirty
  • knights let them pass, for this cause, that they would not wrath them,
  • if case be that they had ado with Sir Launcelot; and the four knights
  • let them pass to this intent, that they would see and behold what they
  • would do with Sir Launcelot. And so the thirty knights passed on and
  • came by Sir Tristram and by Sir Dinadan, and then Sir Tristram cried on
  • high: Lo, here is a knight against you for the love of Sir Launcelot.
  • And there he slew two with one spear and ten with his sword. And then
  • came in Sir Dinadan and he did passing well, and so of the thirty
  • knights there went but ten away, and they fled. All this battle saw Sir
  • Bors de Ganis and his three fellows, and then they saw well it was the
  • same knight that jousted with them at the bridge; then they took their
  • horses and rode unto Sir Tristram, and praised him and thanked him of
  • his good deeds, and they all desired Sir Tristram to go with them to
  • their lodging; and he said: Nay, he would not go to no lodging. Then
  • they all four knights prayed him to tell them his name. Fair lords,
  • said Sir Tristram, as at this time I will not tell you my name.
  • CHAPTER XXIII. How Sir Tristram and Sir Dinadan came to a lodging where
  • they must joust with two knights.
  • Then Sir Tristram and Sir Dinadan rode forth their way till they came
  • to the shepherds and to the herdmen, and there they asked them if they
  • knew any lodging or harbour there nigh hand. Forsooth, sirs, said the
  • herdmen, hereby is good lodging in a castle; but there is such a custom
  • that there shall no knight be harboured but if he joust with two
  • knights, and if he be but one knight he must joust with two. And as ye
  • be therein soon shall ye be matched. There is shrewd harbour, said Sir
  • Dinadan; lodge where ye will, for I will not lodge there. Fie for
  • shame, said Sir Tristram, are ye not a knight of the Table Round?
  • wherefore ye may not with your worship refuse your lodging. Not so,
  • said the herdmen, for an ye be beaten and have the worse ye shall not
  • be lodged there, and if ye beat them ye shall be well harboured. Ah,
  • said Sir Dinadan, they are two sure knights. Then Sir Dinadan would not
  • lodge there in no manner but as Sir Tristram required him of his
  • knighthood; and so they rode thither. And to make short tale, Sir
  • Tristram and Sir Dinadan smote them down both, and so they entered into
  • the castle and had good cheer as they could think or devise.
  • And when they were unarmed, and thought to be merry and in good rest,
  • there came in at the gates Sir Palomides and Sir Gaheris, requiring to
  • have the custom of the castle. What array is this? said Sir Dinadan, I
  • would have my rest. That may not be, said Sir Tristram; now must we
  • needs defend the custom of this castle, insomuch as we have the better
  • of the lords of this castle, and therefore, said Sir Tristram, needs
  • must ye make you ready. In the devil’s name, said Sir Dinadan, came I
  • into your company. And so they made them ready; and Sir Gaheris
  • encountered with Sir Tristram, and Sir Gaheris had a fall; and Sir
  • Palomides encountered with Sir Dinadan, and Sir Dinadan had a fall:
  • then was it fall for fall. So then must they fight on foot. That would
  • not Sir Dinadan, for he was so sore bruised of the fall that Sir
  • Palomides gave him. Then Sir Tristram unlaced Sir Dinadan’s helm, and
  • prayed him to help him. I will not, said Sir Dinadan, for I am sore
  • wounded of the thirty knights that we had but late ago to do withal.
  • But ye fare, said Sir Dinadan unto Sir Tristram, as a madman and as a
  • man that is out of his mind that would cast himself away, and I may
  • curse the time that ever I saw you, for in all the world are not two
  • such knights that be so wood as is Sir Launcelot and ye Sir Tristram;
  • for once I fell in the fellowship of Sir Launcelot as I have done now
  • with you, and he set me a work that a quarter of a year I kept my bed.
  • Jesu defend me, said Sir Dinadan, from such two knights, and specially
  • from your fellowship. Then, said Sir Tristram, I will fight with them
  • both. Then Sir Tristram bade them come forth both, for I will fight
  • with you. Then Sir Palomides and Sir Gaheris dressed them, and smote at
  • them both. Then Dinadan smote at Sir Gaheris a stroke or two, and
  • turned from him. Nay, said Sir Palomides, it is too much shame for us
  • two knights to fight with one. And then he did bid Sir Gaheris stand
  • aside with that knight that hath no list to fight. Then they rode
  • together and fought long, and at the last Sir Tristram doubled his
  • strokes, and drove Sir Palomides aback more than three strides. And
  • then by one assent Sir Gaheris and Sir Dinadan went betwixt them, and
  • departed them in-sunder. And then by assent of Sir Tristram they would
  • have lodged together. But Sir Dinadan would not lodge in that castle.
  • And then he cursed the time that ever he came in their fellowship, and
  • so he took his horse, and his harness, and departed.
  • Then Sir Tristram prayed the lords of that castle to lend him a man to
  • bring him to a lodging, and so they did, and overtook Sir Dinadan, and
  • rode to their lodging two mile thence with a good man in a priory, and
  • there they were well at ease. And that same night Sir Bors and Sir
  • Bleoberis, and Sir Ector and Sir Driant, abode still in the same place
  • thereas Sir Tristram fought with the thirty knights; and there they met
  • with Sir Launcelot the same night, and had made promise to lodge with
  • Sir Colgrevance the same night.
  • CHAPTER XXIV. How Sir Tristram jousted with Sir Kay and Sir Sagramore
  • le Desirous, and how Sir Gawaine turned Sir Tristram from Morgan le
  • Fay.
  • But anon as the noble knight, Sir Launcelot, heard of the shield of
  • Cornwall, then wist he well that it was Sir Tristram that fought with
  • his enemies. And then Sir Launcelot praised Sir Tristram, and called
  • him the man of most worship in the world. So there was a knight in that
  • priory that hight Pellinore, and he desired to wit the name of Sir
  • Tristram, but in no wise he could not; and so Sir Tristram departed and
  • left Sir Dinadan in the priory, for he was so weary and so sore bruised
  • that he might not ride. Then this knight, Sir Pellinore, said to Sir
  • Dinadan: Sithen that ye will not tell me that knight’s name I will ride
  • after him and make him to tell me his name, or he shall die therefore.
  • Beware, sir knight, said Sir Dinadan, for an ye follow him ye shall
  • repent it. So that knight, Sir Pellinore, rode after Sir Tristram and
  • required him of jousts. Then Sir Tristram smote him down and wounded
  • him through the shoulder, and so he passed on his way. And on the next
  • day following Sir Tristram met with pursuivants, and they told him that
  • there was made a great cry of tournament between King Carados of
  • Scotland and the King of North Wales, and either should joust against
  • other at the Castle of Maidens; and these pursuivants sought all the
  • country after the good knights, and in especial King Carados let make
  • seeking for Sir Launcelot du Lake, and the King of Northgalis let seek
  • after Sir Tristram de Liones. And at that time Sir Tristram thought to
  • be at that jousts; and so by adventure they met with Sir Kay, the
  • Seneschal, and Sir Sagramore le Desirous; and Sir Kay required Sir
  • Tristram to joust, and Sir Tristram in a manner refused him, because he
  • would not be hurt nor bruised against the great jousts that should be
  • before the Castle of Maidens, and therefore thought to repose him and
  • to rest him. And alway Sir Kay cried: Sir knight of Cornwall, joust
  • with me, or else yield thee to me as recreant. When Sir Tristram heard
  • him say so he turned to him, and then Sir Kay refused him and turned
  • his back. Then Sir Tristram said: As I find thee I shall take thee.
  • Then Sir Kay turned with evil will, and Sir Tristram smote Sir Kay
  • down, and so he rode forth.
  • Then Sir Sagramore le Desirous rode after Sir Tristram, and made him to
  • joust with him, and there Sir Tristram smote down Sir Sagramore le
  • Desirous from his horse, and rode his way; and the same day he met with
  • a damosel that told him that he should win great worship of a knight
  • adventurous that did much harm in all that country. When Sir Tristram
  • heard her say so, he was glad to go with her to win worship. So Sir
  • Tristram rode with that damosel a six mile, and then met him Sir
  • Gawaine, and therewithal Sir Gawaine knew the damosel, that she was a
  • damosel of Queen Morgan le Fay. Then Sir Gawaine understood that she
  • led that knight to some mischief. Fair knight, said Sir Gawaine,
  • whither ride you now with that damosel? Sir, said Sir Tristram, I wot
  • not whither I shall ride but as the damosel will lead me. Sir, said Sir
  • Gawaine, ye shall not ride with her, for she and her lady did never
  • good, but ill. And then Sir Gawaine pulled out his sword and said:
  • Damosel, but if thou tell me anon for what cause thou leadest this
  • knight with thee thou shalt die for it right anon: I know all your
  • lady’s treason, and yours. Mercy, Sir Gawaine, she said, and if ye will
  • save my life I will tell you. Say on, said Sir Gawaine, and thou shalt
  • have thy life. Sir, she said, Queen Morgan le Fay, my lady, hath
  • ordained a thirty ladies to seek and espy after Sir Launcelot or Sir
  • Tristram, and by the trains of these ladies, who that may first meet
  • any of these two knights they should turn them unto Morgan le Fay’s
  • castle, saying that they should do deeds of worship; and if any of the
  • two knights came there, there be thirty knights lying and watching in a
  • tower to wait upon Sir Launcelot or upon Sir Tristram. Fie for shame,
  • said Sir Gawaine, that ever such false treason should be wrought or
  • used in a queen, and a king’s sister, and a king and queen’s daughter.
  • CHAPTER XXV. How Sir Tristram and Sir Gawaine rode to have foughten
  • with the thirty knights, but they durst not come out.
  • Sir, said Sir Gawaine, will ye stand with me, and we will see the
  • malice of these thirty knights. Sir, said Sir Tristram, go ye to them,
  • an it please you, and ye shall see I will not fail you, for it is not
  • long ago since I and a fellow met with thirty knights of that queen’s
  • fellowship; and God speed us so that we may win worship. So then Sir
  • Gawaine and Sir Tristram rode toward the castle where Morgan le Fay
  • was, and ever Sir Gawaine deemed well that he was Sir Tristram de
  • Liones, because he heard that two knights had slain and beaten thirty
  • knights. And when they came afore the castle Sir Gawaine spake on high
  • and said: Queen Morgan le Fay, send out your knights that ye have laid
  • in a watch for Sir Launcelot and for Sir Tristram. Now, said Sir
  • Gawaine, I know your false treason, and through all places where that I
  • ride men shall know of your false treason; and now let see, said Sir
  • Gawaine, whether ye dare come out of your castle, ye thirty knights.
  • Then the queen spake and all the thirty knights at once, and said: Sir
  • Gawaine, full well wottest thou what thou dost and sayest; for by God
  • we know thee passing well, but all that thou speakest and dost, thou
  • sayest it upon pride of that good knight that is there with thee. For
  • there be some of us that know full well the hands of that knight over
  • all well. And wit thou well, Sir Gawaine, it is more for his sake than
  • for thine that we will not come out of this castle. For wit ye well,
  • Sir Gawaine, the knight that beareth the arms of Cornwall, we know him
  • and what he is.
  • Then Sir Gawaine and Sir Tristram departed and rode on their ways a day
  • or two together; and there by adventure, they met with Sir Kay and Sir
  • Sagramore le Desirous. And then they were glad of Sir Gawaine, and he
  • of them, but they wist not what he was with the shield of Cornwall, but
  • by deeming. And thus they rode together a day or two. And then they
  • were ware of Sir Breuse Saunce Pite chasing a lady for to have slain
  • her, for he had slain her paramour afore. Hold you all still, said Sir
  • Gawaine, and show none of you forth, and ye shall see me reward yonder
  • false knight; for an he espy you he is so well horsed that he will
  • escape away. And then Sir Gawaine rode betwixt Sir Breuse and the lady,
  • and said: False knight, leave her, and have ado with me. When Sir
  • Breuse saw no more but Sir Gawaine he feutred his spear, and Sir
  • Gawaine against him; and there Sir Breuse overthrew Sir Gawaine, and
  • then he rode over him, and overthwart him twenty times to have
  • destroyed him; and when Sir Tristram saw him do so villainous a deed,
  • he hurled out against him. And when Sir Breuse saw him with the shield
  • of Cornwall he knew him well that it was Sir Tristram, and then he
  • fled, and Sir Tristram followed after him; and Sir Breuse Saunce Pite
  • was so horsed that he went his way quite, and Sir Tristram followed him
  • long, for he would fain have been avenged upon him. And so when he had
  • long chased him, he saw a fair well, and thither he rode to repose him,
  • and tied his horse till a tree.
  • CHAPTER XXVI. How damosel Bragwaine found Tristram sleeping by a well,
  • and how she delivered letters to him from La Beale Isoud.
  • And then he pulled off his helm and washed his visage and his hands,
  • and so he fell asleep. In the meanwhile came a damosel that had sought
  • Sir Tristram many ways and days within this land. And when she came to
  • the well she looked upon him, and had forgotten him as in remembrance
  • of Sir Tristram, but by his horse she knew him, that hight Passe-Brewel
  • that had been Sir Tristram’s horse many years. For when he was mad in
  • the forest Sir Fergus kept him. So this lady, Dame Bragwaine, abode
  • still till he was awake. So when she saw him wake she saluted him, and
  • he her again, for either knew other of old acquaintance; then she told
  • him how she had sought him long and broad, and there she told him how
  • she had letters from Queen La Beale Isoud. Then anon Sir Tristram read
  • them, and wit ye well he was glad, for therein was many a piteous
  • complaint. Then Sir Tristram said: Lady Bragwaine, ye shall ride with
  • me till that tournament be done at the Castle of Maidens, and then
  • shall bear letters and tidings with you. And then Sir Tristram took his
  • horse and sought lodging, and there he met with a good ancient knight
  • and prayed him to lodge with him. Right so came Gouvernail unto Sir
  • Tristram, that was glad of that lady. So this old knight’s name was Sir
  • Pellounes, and he told of the great tournament that should be at the
  • Castle of Maidens. And there Sir Launcelot and thirty-two knights of
  • his blood had ordained shields of Cornwall. And right so there came one
  • unto Sir Pellounes, and told him that Sir Persides de Bloise was come
  • home; then that knight held up his hands and thanked God of his coming
  • home. And there Sir Pellounes told Sir Tristram that in two years he
  • had not seen his son, Sir Persides. Sir, said Sir Tristram, I know your
  • son well enough for a good knight.
  • So on a time Sir Tristram and Sir Persides came to their lodging both
  • at once, and so they unarmed them, and put upon them their clothing.
  • And then these two knights each welcomed other. And when Sir Persides
  • understood that Sir Tristram was of Cornwall, he said he was once in
  • Cornwall: And there I jousted afore King Mark; and so it happed me at
  • that time to overthrow ten knights, and then came to me Sir Tristram de
  • Liones and overthrew me, and took my lady away from me, and that shall
  • I never forget, but I shall remember me an ever I see my time. Ah, said
  • Sir Tristram, now I understand that ye hate Sir Tristram. What deem ye,
  • ween ye that Sir Tristram is not able to withstand your malice? Yes,
  • said Sir Persides, I know well that Sir Tristram is a noble knight and
  • a much better knight than I, yet shall I not owe him my good will.
  • Right as they stood thus talking at a bay-window of that castle, they
  • saw many knights riding to and fro toward the tournament. And then was
  • Sir Tristram ware of a likely knight riding upon a great black horse,
  • and a black-covered shield. What knight is that, said Sir Tristram,
  • with the black horse and the black shield? he seemeth a good knight. I
  • know him well, said Sir Persides, he is one of the best knights of the
  • world. Then is it Sir Launcelot, said Tristram. Nay, said Sir Persides,
  • it is Sir Palomides, that is yet unchristened.
  • CHAPTER XXVII. How Sir Tristram had a fall with Sir Palomides, and how
  • Launcelot overthrew two knights.
  • Then they saw much people of the country salute Sir Palomides. And
  • within a while after there came a squire of the castle, that told Sir
  • Pellounes that was lord of that castle, that a knight with a black
  • shield had smitten down thirteen knights. Fair brother, said Sir
  • Tristram unto Sir Persides, let us cast upon us cloaks, and let us go
  • see the play. Not so, said Sir Persides, we will not go like knaves
  • thither, but we will ride like men and good knights to withstand our
  • enemies. So they armed them, and took their horses and great spears,
  • and thither they went thereas many knights assayed themself before the
  • tournament. And anon Sir Palomides saw Sir Persides, and then he sent a
  • squire unto him and said: Go thou to the yonder knight with the green
  • shield and therein a lion of gold, and say him I require him to joust
  • with me, and tell him that my name is Sir Palomides. When Sir Persides
  • understood that request of Sir Palomides, he made him ready, and there
  • anon they met together, but Sir Persides had a fall. Then Sir Tristram
  • dressed him to be revenged upon Sir Palomides, and that saw Sir
  • Palomides that was ready and so was not Sir Tristram, and took him at
  • an advantage and smote him over his horse’s tail when he had no spear
  • in his rest. Then stert up Sir Tristram and took his horse lightly, and
  • was wroth out of measure, and sore ashamed of that fall. Then Sir
  • Tristram sent unto Sir Palomides by Gouvernail, and prayed him to joust
  • with him at his request. Nay, said Sir Palomides, as at this time I
  • will not joust with that knight, for I know him better than he weeneth.
  • And if he be wroth he may right it to-morn at the Castle of Maidens,
  • where he may see me and many other knights.
  • With that came Sir Dinadan, and when he saw Sir Tristram wroth he list
  • not to jape. Lo, said Sir Dinadan, here may a man prove, be a man never
  • so good yet may he have a fall, and he was never so wise but he might
  • be overseen, and he rideth well that never fell. So Sir Tristram was
  • passing wroth, and said to Sir Persides and to Sir Dinadan: I will
  • revenge me. Right so as they stood talking there, there came by Sir
  • Tristram a likely knight riding passing soberly and heavily with a
  • black shield. What knight is that? said Sir Tristram unto Sir Persides.
  • I know him well, said Sir Persides, for his name is Sir Briant of North
  • Wales; so he passed on among other knights of North Wales. And there
  • came in Sir Launcelot du Lake with a shield of the arms of Cornwall,
  • and he sent a squire unto Sir Briant, and required him to joust with
  • him. Well, said Sir Briant, sithen I am required to joust I will do
  • what I may; and there Sir Launcelot smote down Sir Briant from his
  • horse a great fall. And then Sir Tristram marvelled what knight he was
  • that bare the shield of Cornwall. Whatsoever he be, said Sir Dinadan, I
  • warrant you he is of King Ban’s blood, the which be knights of the most
  • noble prowess in the world, for to account so many for so many. Then
  • there came two knights of Northgalis, that one hight Hew de la
  • Montaine, and the other Sir Madok de la Montaine, and they challenged
  • Sir Launcelot foot-hot. Sir Launcelot not refusing them but made him
  • ready, with one spear he smote them down both over their horses’
  • croups; and so Sir Launcelot rode his way. By the good lord, said Sir
  • Tristram, he is a good knight that beareth the shield of Cornwall, and
  • meseemeth he rideth in the best manner that ever I saw knight ride.
  • Then the King of Northgalis rode unto Sir Palomides and prayed him
  • heartily for his sake to joust with that knight that hath done us of
  • Northgalis despite. Sir, said Sir Palomides, I am full loath to have
  • ado with that knight, and cause why is, for as to-morn the great
  • tournament shall be; and therefore I will keep myself fresh by my will.
  • Nay, said the King of Northgalis, I pray you require him of jousts.
  • Sir, said Sir Palomides, I will joust at your request, and require that
  • knight to joust with me, and often I have seen a man have a fall at his
  • own request.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. How Sir Launcelot jousted with Palomides and overthrew
  • him, and after he was assailed with twelve knights.
  • Then Sir Palomides sent unto Sir Launcelot a squire, and required him
  • of jousts. Fair fellow, said Sir Launcelot, tell me thy lord’s name.
  • Sir, said the squire, my lord’s name is Sir Palomides, the good knight.
  • In good hour, said Sir Launcelot, for there is no knight that I saw
  • this seven years that I had liefer ado withal than with him. And so
  • either knights made them ready with two great spears. Nay, said Sir
  • Dinadan, ye shall see that Sir Palomides will quit him right well. It
  • may be so, said Sir Tristram, but I undertake that knight with the
  • shield of Cornwall shall give him a fall. I believe it not, said Sir
  • Dinadan. Right so they spurred their horses and feutred their spears,
  • and either hit other, and Sir Palomides brake a spear upon Sir
  • Launcelot, and he sat and moved not; but Sir Launcelot smote him so
  • lightly that he made his horse to avoid the saddle, and the stroke
  • brake his shield and the hauberk, and had he not fallen he had been
  • slain. How now, said Sir Tristram, I wist well by the manner of their
  • riding both that Sir Palomides should have a fall.
  • Right so Sir Launcelot rode his way, and rode to a well to drink and to
  • repose him, and they of Northgalis espied him whither he rode; and then
  • there followed him twelve knights for to have mischieved him, for this
  • cause that upon the morn at the tournament of the Castle of Maidens
  • that he should not win the victory. So they came upon Sir Launcelot
  • suddenly, and unnethe he might put upon him his helm and take his
  • horse, but they were in hands with him; and then Sir Launcelot gat his
  • spear, and rode through them, and there he slew a knight and brake a
  • spear in his body. Then he drew his sword and smote upon the right hand
  • and upon the left hand, so that within a few strokes he had slain other
  • three knights, and the remnant that abode he wounded them sore all that
  • did abide. Thus Sir Launcelot escaped from his enemies of North Wales,
  • and then Sir Launcelot rode his way till a friend, and lodged him till
  • on the morn; for he would not the first day have ado in the tournament
  • because of his great labour. And on the first day he was with King
  • Arthur thereas he was set on high upon a scaffold to discern who was
  • best worthy of his deeds. So Sir Launcelot was with King Arthur, and
  • jousted not the first day.
  • CHAPTER XXIX. How Sir Tristram behaved him the first day of the
  • tournament, and there he had the prize.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Tristram de Liones, that commanded Gouvernail, his
  • servant, to ordain him a black shield with none other remembrance
  • therein. And so Sir Persides and Sir Tristram departed from their host
  • Sir Pellounes, and they rode early toward the tournament, and then they
  • drew them to King Carados’ side, of Scotland; and anon knights began
  • the field what of King Northgalis’ part, and what of King Carados’
  • part, and there began great party. Then there was hurling and rashing.
  • Right so came in Sir Persides and Sir Tristram and so they did fare
  • that they put the King of Northgalis aback. Then came in Sir Bleoberis
  • de Ganis and Sir Gaheris with them of Northgalis, and then was Sir
  • Persides smitten down and almost slain, for more than forty horse men
  • went over him. For Sir Bleoberis did great deeds of arms, and Sir
  • Gaheris failed him not. When Sir Tristram beheld them, and saw them do
  • such deeds of arms, he marvelled what they were. Also Sir Tristram
  • thought shame that Sir Persides was so done to; and then he gat a great
  • spear in his hand, and then he rode to Sir Gaheris and smote him down
  • from his horse. And then was Sir Bleoberis wroth, and gat a spear and
  • rode against Sir Tristram in great ire; and there Sir Tristram met with
  • him, and smote Sir Bleoberis from his horse So then the King with the
  • Hundred Knights was wroth, and he horsed Sir Bleoberis and Sir Gaheris
  • again, and there began a great medley; and ever Sir Tristram held them
  • passing short, and ever Sir Bleoberis was passing busy upon Sir
  • Tristram; and there came Sir Dinadan against Sir Tristram, and Sir
  • Tristram gave him such a buffet that he swooned in his saddle. Then
  • anon Sir Dinadan came to Sir Tristram and said: Sir, I know thee better
  • than thou weenest; but here I promise thee my troth I will never come
  • against thee more, for I promise thee that sword of thine shall never
  • come on mine helm.
  • With that came Sir Bleoberis, and Sir Tristram gave him such a buffet
  • that down he laid his head; and then he caught him so sore by the helm
  • that he pulled him under his horse’s feet. And then King Arthur blew to
  • lodging. Then Sir Tristram departed to his pavilion, and Sir Dinadan
  • rode with him; and Sir Persides and King Arthur then, and the kings
  • upon both parties, marvelled what knight that was with the black
  • shield. Many said their advice, and some knew him for Sir Tristram, and
  • held their peace and would nought say. So that first day King Arthur,
  • and all the kings and lords that were judges, gave Sir Tristram the
  • prize; howbeit they knew him not, but named him the Knight with the
  • Black Shield.
  • CHAPTER XXX. How Sir Tristram returned against King Arthur’s party
  • because he saw Sir Palomides on that party.
  • Then upon the morn Sir Palomides returned from the King of Northgalis,
  • and rode to King Arthur’s side, where was King Carados, and the King of
  • Ireland, and Sir Launcelot’s kin, and Sir Gawaine’s kin. So Sir
  • Palomides sent the damosel unto Sir Tristram that he sent to seek him
  • when he was out of his mind in the forest, and this damosel asked Sir
  • Tristram what he was and what was his name?
  • As for that, said Sir Tristram, tell Sir Palomides ye shall not wit as
  • at this time unto the time I have broken two spears upon him. But let
  • him wit thus much, said Sir Tristram, that I am the same knight that he
  • smote down in over evening at the tournament; and tell him plainly on
  • what party that Sir Palomides be I will be of the contrary party.
  • Sir, said the damosel, ye shall understand that Sir Palomides will be
  • on King Arthur’s side, where the most noble knights of the world be. In
  • the name of God, said Sir Tristram, then will I be with the King of
  • Northgalis, because Sir Palomides will be on King Arthur’s side, and
  • else I would not but for his sake. So when King Arthur was come they
  • blew unto the field; and then there began a great party, and so King
  • Carados jousted with the King of the Hundred Knights, and there King
  • Carados had a fall: then was there hurling and rushing, and right so
  • came in knights of King Arthur’s, and they bare aback the King of
  • Northgalis’ knights.
  • Then Sir Tristram came in, and began so roughly and so bigly that there
  • was none might withstand him, and thus Sir Tristram dured long. And at
  • the last Sir Tristram fell among the fellowship of King Ban, and there
  • fell upon him Sir Bors de Ganis, and Sir Ector de Maris, and Sir
  • Blamore de Ganis, and many other knights. And then Sir Tristram smote
  • on the right hand and on the left hand, that all lords and ladies spake
  • of his noble deeds. But at the last Sir Tristram should have had the
  • worse had not the King with the Hundred Knights been. And then he came
  • with his fellowship and rescued Sir Tristram, and brought him away from
  • those knights that bare the shields of Cornwall. And then Sir Tristram
  • saw another fellowship by themself, and there were a forty knights
  • together, and Sir Kay, the Seneschal, was their governor. Then Sir
  • Tristram rode in amongst them, and there he smote down Sir Kay from his
  • horse; and there he fared among those knights like a greyhound among
  • conies.
  • Then Sir Launcelot found a knight that was sore wounded upon the head.
  • Sir, said Sir Launcelot, who wounded you so sore? Sir, he said, a
  • knight that beareth a black shield, and I may curse the time that ever
  • I met with him, for he is a devil and no man. So Sir Launcelot departed
  • from him and thought to meet with Sir Tristram, and so he rode with his
  • sword drawn in his hand to seek Sir Tristram; and then he espied him
  • how he hurled here and there, and at every stroke Sir Tristram wellnigh
  • smote down a knight. O mercy Jesu! said the king, sith the times I bare
  • arms saw I never no knight do so marvellous deeds of arms. And if I
  • should set upon this knight, said Sir Launcelot to himself, I did shame
  • to myself, and therewithal Sir Launcelot put up his sword. And then the
  • King with the Hundred Knights and an hundred more of North Wales set
  • upon the twenty of Sir Launcelot’s kin: and they twenty knights held
  • them ever together as wild swine, and none would fail other. And so
  • when Sir Tristram beheld the noblesse or these twenty knights he
  • marvelled of their good deeds, for he saw by their fare and by their
  • rule that they had liefer die than avoid the field. Now Jesu, said Sir
  • Tristram, well may he be valiant and full of prowess that hath such a
  • sort of noble knights unto his kin, and full like is he to be a noble
  • man that is their leader and governor. He meant it by Sir Launcelot du
  • Lake. So when Sir Tristram had beholden them long he thought shame to
  • see two hundred knights battering upon twenty knights. Then Sir
  • Tristram rode unto the King with the Hundred Knights and said: Sir,
  • leave your fighting with those twenty knights, for ye win no worship of
  • them, ye be so many and they so few; and wit ye well they will not out
  • of the field I see by their cheer and countenance; and worship get ye
  • none an ye slay them. Therefore leave your fighting with them, for I to
  • increase my worship I will ride to the twenty knights and help them
  • with all my might and power. Nay, said the King with the Hundred
  • Knights, ye shall not do so; now I see your courage and courtesy I will
  • withdraw my knights for your pleasure, for evermore a good knight will
  • favour another, and like will draw to like.
  • CHAPTER XXXI. How Sir Tristram found Palomides by a well, and brought
  • him with him to his lodging.
  • Then the King with the Hundred Knights withdrew his knights. And all
  • this while, and long to-fore, Sir Launcelot had watched upon Sir
  • Tristram with a very purpose to have fellowshipped with him. And then
  • suddenly Sir Tristram, Sir Dinadan, and Gouvernail, his man, rode their
  • way into the forest, that no man perceived where they went. So then
  • King Arthur blew unto lodging, and gave the King of Northgalis the
  • prize because Sir Tristram was upon his side. Then Sir Launcelot rode
  • here and there, so wood as lion that fauted his fill, because he had
  • lost Sir Tristram, and so he returned unto King Arthur. And then in all
  • the field was a noise that with the wind it might be heard two mile
  • thence, how the lords and ladies cried: The Knight with the Black
  • Shield hath won the field. Alas, said King Arthur, where is that knight
  • become? It is shame to all those in the field so to let him escape away
  • from you; but with gentleness and courtesy ye might have brought him
  • unto me to the Castle of Maidens. Then the noble King Arthur went unto
  • his knights and comforted them in the best wise that he could, and
  • said: My fair fellows, be not dismayed, howbeit ye have lost the field
  • this day. And many were hurt and sore wounded, and many were whole. My
  • fellows, said King Arthur, look that ye be of good cheer, for to-morn I
  • will be in the field with you and revenge you of your enemies. So that
  • night King Arthur and his knights reposed themself.
  • The damosel that came from La Beale Isoud unto Sir Tristram, all the
  • while the tournament was a-doing she was with Queen Guenever, and ever
  • the queen asked her for what cause she came into that country. Madam,
  • she answered, I come for none other cause but from my lady La Beale
  • Isoud to wit of your welfare. For in no wise she would not tell the
  • queen that she came for Sir Tristram’s sake. So this lady, Dame
  • Bragwaine, took her leave of Queen Guenever, and she rode after Sir
  • Tristram. And as she rode through the forest she heard a great cry;
  • then she commanded her squire to go into the forest to wit what was
  • that noise. And so he came to a well, and there he found a knight
  • bounden till a tree crying as he had been wood, and his horse and his
  • harness standing by him. And when he espied that squire, therewith he
  • abraid and brake himself loose, and took his sword in his hand, and ran
  • to have slain the squire. Then he took his horse and fled all that ever
  • he might unto Dame Bragwaine, and told her of his adventure. Then she
  • rode unto Sir Tristram’s pavilion, and told Sir Tristram what adventure
  • she had found in the forest. Alas, said Sir Tristram, upon my head
  • there is some good knight at mischief.
  • Then Sir Tristram took his horse and his sword and rode thither, and
  • there he heard how the knight complained unto himself and said: I,
  • woful knight Sir Palomides, what misadventure befalleth me, that thus
  • am defoiled with falsehood and treason, through Sir Bors and Sir Ector.
  • Alas, he said, why live I so long! And then he gat his sword in his
  • hands, and made many strange signs and tokens; and so through his
  • raging he threw his sword into that fountain. Then Sir Palomides wailed
  • and wrang his hands. And at the last for pure sorrow he ran into that
  • fountain, over his belly, and sought after his sword. Then Sir Tristram
  • saw that, and ran upon Sir Palomides, and held him in his arms fast.
  • What art thou, said Palomides, that holdeth me so? I am a man of this
  • forest that would thee none harm. Alas, said Sir Palomides, I may never
  • win worship where Sir Tristram is; for ever where he is an I be there,
  • then get I no worship; and if he be away for the most part I have the
  • gree, unless that Sir Launcelot be there or Sir Lamorak. Then Sir
  • Palomides said: Once in Ireland Sir Tristram put me to the worse, and
  • another time in Cornwall, and in other places in this land. What would
  • ye do, said Sir Tristram, an ye had Sir Tristram? I would fight with
  • him, said Sir Palomides, and ease my heart upon him; and yet, to say
  • thee sooth, Sir Tristram is the gentlest knight in this world living.
  • What will ye do, said Sir Tristram, will ye go with me to your lodging?
  • Nay, said he, I will go to the King with the Hundred Knights, for he
  • rescued me from Sir Bors de Ganis and Sir Ector and else had I been
  • slain traitorly. Sir Tristram said him such kind words that Sir
  • Palomides went with him to his lodging. Then Gouvernail went to-fore,
  • and charged Dame Bragwaine to go out of the way to her lodging And bid
  • ye Sir Persides that he make him no quarrels. And so they rode together
  • till they came to Sir Tristram’s pavilion, and there Sir Palomides had
  • all the cheer that might be had all that night. But in no wise Sir
  • Palomides might not know what was Sir Tristram; and so after supper
  • they yede to rest, and Sir Tristram for great travail slept till it was
  • day. And Sir Palomides might not sleep for anguish; and in the dawning
  • of the day he took his horse privily, and rode his way unto Sir Gaheris
  • and unto Sir Sagramore le Desirous, where they were in their pavilions;
  • for they three were fellows at the beginning of the tournament. And
  • then upon the morn the king blew unto the tournament upon the third
  • day.
  • CHAPTER XXXII. How Sir Tristram smote down Sir Palomides, and how he
  • jousted with King Arthur, and other feats.
  • So the King of Northgalis and the King with the Hundred Knights, they
  • two encountered with King Carados and with the King of Ireland; and
  • there the King with the Hundred Knights smote down King Carados, and
  • the King of Northgalis smote down the King of Ireland. With that came
  • in Sir Palomides, and when he came he made great work, for by his
  • indented shield he was well known. So came in King Arthur, and did
  • great deeds of arms together, and put the King of Northgalis and the
  • King with the Hundred Knights to the worse. With this came in Sir
  • Tristram with his black shield, and anon he jousted with Sir Palomides,
  • and there by fine force Sir Tristram smote Sir Palomides over his
  • horse’s croup. Then King Arthur cried: Knight with the Black Shield,
  • make thee ready to me, and in the same wise Sir Tristram smote King
  • Arthur. And then by force of King Arthur’s knights the King and Sir
  • Palomides were horsed again. Then King Arthur with a great eager heart
  • he gat a spear in his hand, and there upon the one side he smote Sir
  • Tristram over his horse. Then foot-hot Sir Palomides came upon Sir
  • Tristram, as he was upon foot, to have overridden him. Then Sir
  • Tristram was ware of him, and there he stooped aside, and with great
  • ire he gat him by the arm, and pulled him down from his horse. Then Sir
  • Palomides lightly arose, and then they dashed together mightily with
  • their swords; and many kings, queens, and lords, stood and beheld them.
  • And at the last Sir Tristram smote Sir Palomides upon the helm three
  • mighty strokes, and at every stroke that he gave him he said: This for
  • Sir Tristram’s sake. With that Sir Palomides fell to the earth
  • grovelling.
  • Then came the King with the Hundred Knights, and brought Sir Tristram
  • an horse, and so was he horsed again. By then was Sir Palomides horsed,
  • and with great ire he jousted upon Sir Tristram with his spear as it
  • was in the rest, and gave him a great dash with his sword. Then Sir
  • Tristram avoided his spear, and gat him by the neck with his both
  • hands, and pulled him clean out of his saddle, and so he bare him afore
  • him the length of ten spears, and then in the presence of them all he
  • let him fall at his adventure. Then Sir Tristram was ware of King
  • Arthur with a naked sword in his hand, and with his spear Sir Tristram
  • ran upon King Arthur; and then King Arthur boldly abode him and with
  • his sword he smote a-two his spear, and therewithal Sir Tristram
  • stonied; and so King Arthur gave him three or four strokes or he might
  • get out his sword, and at the last Sir Tristram drew his sword and
  • [either] assailed other passing hard. With that the great press
  • departed [them]. Then Sir Tristram rode here and there and did his
  • great pain, that eleven of the good knights of the blood of King Ban,
  • that was of Sir Launcelot’s kin, that day Sir Tristram smote down; that
  • all the estates marvelled of his great deeds and all cried upon the
  • Knight with the Black Shield.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII. How Sir Launcelot hurt Sir Tristram, and how after Sir
  • Tristram smote down Sir Palomides.
  • Then this cry was so large that Sir Launcelot heard it. And then he gat
  • a great spear in his hand and came towards the cry. Then Sir Launcelot
  • cried: The Knight with the Black Shield, make thee ready to joust with
  • me. When Sir Tristram heard him say so he gat his spear in his hand,
  • and either abashed down their heads, and came together as thunder; and
  • Sir Tristram’s spear brake in pieces, and Sir Launcelot by malfortune
  • struck Sir Tristram on the side a deep wound nigh to the death; but yet
  • Sir Tristram avoided not his saddle, and so the spear brake.
  • Therewithal Sir Tristram that was wounded gat out his sword, and he
  • rushed to Sir Launcelot, and gave him three great strokes upon the helm
  • that the fire sprang thereout, and Sir Launcelot abashed his head lowly
  • toward his saddle-bow. And therewithal Sir Tristram departed from the
  • field, for he felt him so wounded that he weened he should have died;
  • and Sir Dinadan espied him and followed him into the forest. Then Sir
  • Launcelot abode and did many marvellous deeds.
  • So when Sir Tristram was departed by the forest’s side he alighted, and
  • unlaced his harness and freshed his wound; then weened Sir Dinadan that
  • he should have died. Nay, nay, said Sir Tristram, Dinadan never dread
  • thee, for I am heart-whole, and of this wound I shall soon be whole, by
  • the mercy of God. By that Sir Dinadan was ware where came Palomides
  • riding straight upon them. And then Sir Tristram was ware that Sir
  • Palomides came to have destroyed him. And so Sir Dinadan gave him
  • warning, and said: Sir Tristram, my lord, ye are so sore wounded that
  • ye may not have ado with him, therefore I will ride against him and do
  • to him what I may, and if I be slain ye may pray for my soul; and in
  • the meanwhile ye may withdraw you and go into the castle, or in the
  • forest, that he shall not meet with you. Sir Tristram smiled and said:
  • I thank you, Sir Dinadan, of your good will, but ye shall wit that I am
  • able to handle him. And then anon hastily he armed him, and took his
  • horse, and a great spear in his hand, and said to Sir Dinadan: Adieu;
  • and rode toward Sir Palomides a soft pace. Then when Sir Palomides saw
  • that, he made countenance to amend his horse, but he did it for this
  • cause, for he abode Sir Gaheris that came after him. And when he was
  • come he rode toward Sir Tristram. Then Sir Tristram sent unto Sir
  • Palomides, and required him to joust with him; and if he smote down Sir
  • Palomides he would do no more to him; and if it so happened that Sir
  • Palomides smote down Sir Tristram, he bade him do his utterance. So
  • they were accorded. Then they met together, and Sir Tristram smote down
  • Sir Palomides that he had a grievous fall, so that he lay still as he
  • had been dead. And then Sir Tristram ran upon Sir Gaheris, and he would
  • not have jousted; but whether he would or not Sir Tristram smote him
  • over his horse’s croup, that he lay still as though he had been dead.
  • And then Sir Tristram rode his way and left Sir Persides’ squire within
  • the pavilions, and Sir Tristram and Sir Dinadan rode to an old knight’s
  • place to lodge them. And that old knight had five sons at the
  • tournament, for whom he prayed God heartily for their coming home. And
  • so, as the French book saith, they came home all five well beaten.
  • And when Sir Tristram departed into the forest Sir Launcelot held alway
  • the stour like hard, as a man araged that took no heed to himself, and
  • wit ye well there was many a noble knight against him. And when King
  • Arthur saw Sir Launcelot do so marvellous deeds of arms he then armed
  • him, and took his horse and his armour, and rode into the field to help
  • Sir Launcelot; and so many knights came in with King Arthur. And to
  • make short tale in conclusion, the King of Northgalis and the King of
  • the Hundred Knights were put to the worse; and because Sir Launcelot
  • abode and was the last in the field the prize was given him. But Sir
  • Launcelot would neither for king, queen, nor knight, have the prize,
  • but where the cry was cried through the field: Sir Launcelot, Sir
  • Launcelot hath won the field this day, Sir Launcelot let make another
  • cry contrary: Sir Tristram hath won the field, for he began first, and
  • last he hath endured, and so hath he done the first day, the second,
  • and the third day.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV. How the prize of the third day was given to Sir
  • Launcelot, and Sir Launcelot gave it to Sir Tristram.
  • Then all the estates and degrees high and low said of Sir Launcelot
  • great worship, for the honour that he did unto Sir Tristram; and for
  • that honour doing to Sir Tristram he was at that time more praised and
  • renowned than an he had overthrown five hundred knights; and all the
  • people wholly for this gentleness, first the estates both high and low,
  • and after the commonalty cried at once: Sir Launcelot hath won the
  • field whosoever say nay. Then was Sir Launcelot wroth and ashamed, and
  • so therewithal he rode to King Arthur. Alas, said the king, we are all
  • dismayed that Sir Tristram is thus departed from us. By God, said King
  • Arthur, he is one of the noblest knights that ever I saw hold spear or
  • sword in hand, and the most courteoust knight in his fighting; for full
  • hard I saw him, said King Arthur, when he smote Sir Palomides upon the
  • helm thrice, that he abashed his helm with his strokes, and also he
  • said: Here is a stroke for Sir Tristram, and thus thrice he said. Then
  • King Arthur, Sir Launcelot, and Sir Dodinas le Savage took their horses
  • to seek Sir Tristram, and by the means of Sir Persides he had told King
  • Arthur where Sir Tristram was in his pavilion. But when they came
  • there, Sir Tristram and Sir Dinadan were gone.
  • Then King Arthur and Sir Launcelot were heavy, and returned again to
  • the Castle of Maidens making great dole for the hurt of Sir Tristram,
  • and his sudden departing. So God me help, said King Arthur, I am more
  • heavy that I cannot meet with him than for all the hurts that all my
  • knights have had at the tournament. Right so came Sir Gaheris and told
  • King Arthur how Sir Tristram had smitten down Sir Palomides, and it was
  • at Sir Palomides’ own request. Alas, said King Arthur, that was great
  • dishonour to Sir Palomides, inasmuch as Sir Tristram was sore wounded,
  • and now may we all, kings, and knights, and men of worship, say that
  • Sir Tristram may be called a noble knight, and one of the best knights
  • that ever I saw the days of my life. For I will that ye all, kings and
  • knights, know, said King Arthur, that I never saw knight do so
  • marvellously as he hath done these three days; for he was the first
  • that began and that longest held on, save this last day. And though he
  • was hurt, it was a manly adventure of two noble knights, and when two
  • noble men encounter needs must the one have the worse, like as God will
  • suffer at that time. As for me, said Sir Launcelot, for all the lands
  • that ever my father left me I would not have hurt Sir Tristram an I had
  • known him at that time; that I hurt him was for I saw not his shield.
  • For an I had seen his black shield, I would not have meddled with him
  • for many causes; for late he did as much for me as ever did knight, and
  • that is well known that he had ado with thirty knights, and no help
  • save Sir Dinadan. And one thing shall I promise, said Sir Launcelot,
  • Sir Palomides shall repent it as in his unkindly dealing for to follow
  • that noble knight that I by mishap hurted thus. Sir Launcelot said all
  • the worship that might be said by Sir Tristram. Then King Arthur made a
  • great feast to all that would come. And thus we let pass King Arthur,
  • and a little we will turn unto Sir Palomides, that after he had a fall
  • of Sir Tristram, he was nigh-hand araged out of his wit for despite of
  • Sir Tristram. And so he followed him by adventure. And as he came by a
  • river, in his woodness he would have made his horse to have leapt over;
  • and the horse failed footing and fell in the river, wherefore Sir
  • Palomides was adread lest he should have been drowned; and then he
  • avoided his horse, and swam to the land, and let his horse go down by
  • adventure.
  • CHAPTER XXXV. How Palomides came to the castle where Sir Tristram was,
  • and of the quest that Sir Launcelot and ten knights made for Sir
  • Tristram.
  • And when he came to the land he took off his harness, and sat roaring
  • and crying as a man out of his mind. Right so came a damosel even by
  • Sir Palomides, that was sent from Sir Gawaine and his brother unto Sir
  • Mordred, that lay sick in the same place with that old knight where Sir
  • Tristram was. For, as the French book saith, Sir Persides hurt so Sir
  • Mordred a ten days afore; and had it hot been for the love of Sir
  • Gawaine and his brother, Sir Persides had slain Sir Mordred. And so
  • this damosel came by Sir Palomides, and she and he had language
  • together, the which pleased neither of them; and so the damosel rode
  • her ways till she came to the old knight’s place, and there she told
  • that old knight how she met with the woodest knight by adventure that
  • ever she met withal. What bare he in his shield? said Sir Tristram. It
  • was indented with white and black, said the damosel. Ah, said Sir
  • Tristram, that was Sir Palomides, the good knight. For well I know him,
  • said Sir Tristram, for one of the best knights living in this realm.
  • Then that old knight took a little hackney, and rode for Sir Palomides,
  • and brought him unto his own manor; and full well knew Sir Tristram Sir
  • Palomides, but he said but little, for at that time Sir Tristram was
  • walking upon his feet, and well amended of his hurts; and always when
  • Sir Palomides saw Sir Tristram he would behold him full marvellously,
  • and ever him seemed that he had seen him. Then would he say unto Sir
  • Dinadan: An ever I may meet with Sir Tristram he shall not escape mine
  • hands. I marvel, said Sir Dinadan, that ye boast behind Sir Tristram,
  • for it is but late that he was in your hands, and ye in his hands; why
  • would ye not hold him when ye had him? for I saw myself twice or thrice
  • that ye gat but little worship of Sir Tristram. Then was Sir Palomides
  • ashamed. So leave we them a little while in the old castle with the old
  • knight Sir Darras.
  • Now shall we speak of King Arthur, that said to Sir Launcelot: Had not
  • ye been we had not lost Sir Tristram, for he was here daily unto the
  • time ye met with him, and in an evil time, said Arthur, ye encountered
  • with him. My lord Arthur, said Launcelot, ye put upon me that I should
  • be cause of his departition; God knoweth it was against my will. But
  • when men be hot in deeds of arms oft they hurt their friends as well as
  • their foes. And my lord, said Sir Launcelot, ye shall understand that
  • Sir Tristram is a man that I am loath to offend, for he hath done for
  • me more than ever I did for him as yet. But then Sir Launcelot made
  • bring forth a book: and then Sir Launcelot said: Here we are ten
  • knights that will swear upon a book never to rest one night where we
  • rest another this twelvemonth until that we find Sir Tristram. And as
  • for me, said Sir Launcelot, I promise you upon this book that an I may
  • meet with him, either with fairness or foulness I shall bring him to
  • this court, or else I shall die therefore. And the names of these ten
  • knights that had undertaken this quest were these following: First was
  • Sir Launcelot, Sir Ector de Maris, Sir Bors de Ganis, and Bleoberis,
  • and Sir Blamore de Ganis, and Lucan the Butler, Sir Uwaine, Sir Galihud
  • Lionel, and Galiodin. So these ten noble knights departed from the
  • court of King Arthur, and so they rode upon their quest together until
  • they came to a cross where departed four ways, and there departed the
  • fellowship in four to seek Sir Tristram.
  • And as Sir Launcelot rode by adventure he met with Dame Bragwaine that
  • was sent into that country to seek Sir Tristram, and she fled as fast
  • as her palfrey might go. So Sir Launcelot met with her and asked her
  • why she fled. Ah, fair knight, said Dame Bragwaine, I flee for dread of
  • my life, for here followeth me Sir Breuse Saunce Pite to slay me. Hold
  • you nigh me, said Sir Launcelot. Then when Sir Launcelot saw Sir Breuse
  • Saunce Pite, Sir Launcelot cried unto him, and said: False knight
  • destroyer of ladies and damosels, now thy last days be come. When Sir
  • Breuse Saunce Pite saw Sir Launcelot’s shield he knew it well, for at
  • that time he bare not the arms of Cornwall, but he bare his own shield.
  • And then Sir Breuse fled, and Sir Launcelot followed after him. But Sir
  • Breuse was so well horsed that when him list to flee he might well
  • flee, and also abide when him list. And then Sir Launcelot returned
  • unto Dame Bragwaine, and she thanked him of his great labour.
  • CHAPTER XXXVI. How Sir Tristram, Sir Palomides, and Sir Dinadan were
  • taken and put in prison.
  • Now will we speak of Sir Lucan the butler, that by fortune he came
  • riding to the same place thereas was Sir Tristram, and in he came in
  • none other intent but to ask harbour. Then the porter asked what was
  • his name. Tell your lord that my name is Sir Lucan, the butler, a
  • Knight of the Round Table. So the porter went unto Sir Darras, lord of
  • the place, and told him who was there to ask harbour. Nay, nay, said
  • Sir Daname, that was nephew to Sir Darras, say him that he shall not be
  • lodged here, but let him wit that I, Sir Daname, will meet with him
  • anon, and bid him make him ready. So Sir Daname came forth on
  • horseback, and there they met together with spears, and Sir Lucan smote
  • down Sir Daname over his horse’s croup, and then he fled into that
  • place, and Sir Lucan rode after him, and asked after him many times.
  • Then Sir Dinadan said to Sir Tristram: It is shame to see the lord’s
  • cousin of this place defoiled. Abide, said Sir Tristram, and I shall
  • redress it. And in the meanwhile Sir Dinadan was on horseback, and he
  • jousted with Lucan the butler, and there Sir Lucan smote Dinadan
  • through the thick of the thigh, and so he rode his way; and Sir
  • Tristram was wroth that Sir Dinadan was hurt, and followed after, and
  • thought to avenge him; and within a while he overtook Sir Lucan, and
  • bade him turn; and so they met together so that Sir Tristram hurt Sir
  • Lucan passing sore and gave him a fall. With that came Sir Uwaine, a
  • gentle knight, and when he saw Sir Lucan so hurt he called Sir Tristram
  • to joust with him. Fair knight, said Sir Tristram, tell me your name I
  • require you. Sir knight, wit ye well my name is Sir Uwaine le Fise de
  • Roy Ureine. Ah, said Sir Tristram, by my will I would not have ado with
  • you at no time. Ye shall not so, said Sir Uwaine, but ye shall have ado
  • with me. And then Sir Tristram saw none other bote, but rode against
  • him, and overthrew Sir Uwaine and hurt him in the side, and so he
  • departed unto his lodging again. And when Sir Dinadan understood that
  • Sir Tristram had hurt Sir Lucan he would have ridden after Sir Lucan
  • for to have slain him, but Sir Tristram would not suffer him. Then Sir
  • Uwaine let ordain an horse litter, and brought Sir Lucan to the abbey
  • of Ganis, and the castle thereby hight the Castle of Ganis, of the
  • which Sir Bleoberis was lord. And at that castle Sir Launcelot promised
  • all his fellows to meet in the quest of Sir Tristram.
  • So when Sir Tristram was come to his lodging there came a damosel that
  • told Sir Darras that three of his sons were slain at that tournament,
  • and two grievously wounded that they were never like to help themself.
  • And all this was done by a noble knight that bare the black shield, and
  • that was he that bare the prize. Then came there one and told Sir
  • Darras that the same knight was within, him that bare the black shield.
  • Then Sir Darras yede unto Sir Tristram’s chamber, and there he found
  • his shield and showed it to the damosel. Ah sir, said the damosel, that
  • same is he that slew your three sons. Then without any tarrying Sir
  • Darras put Sir Tristram, and Sir Palomides, and Sir Dinadan, within a
  • strong prison, and there Sir Tristram was like to have died of great
  • sickness; and every day Sir Palomides would reprove Sir Tristram of old
  • hate betwixt them. And ever Sir Tristram spake fair and said little.
  • But when Sir Palomides saw the falling of sickness of Sir Tristram,
  • then was he heavy for him, and comforted him in all the best wise he
  • could. And as the French book saith, there came forty knights to Sir
  • Darras that were of his own kin, and they would have slain Sir Tristram
  • and his two fellows, but Sir Darras would not suffer that, but kept
  • them in prison, and meat and drink they had. So Sir Tristram endured
  • there great pain, for sickness had undertaken him, and that is the
  • greatest pain a prisoner may have. For all the while a prisoner may
  • have his health of body he may endure under the mercy of God and in
  • hope of good deliverance; but when sickness toucheth a prisoner’s body,
  • then may a prisoner say all wealth is him bereft, and then he hath
  • cause to wail and to weep. Right so did Sir Tristram when sickness had
  • undertaken him, for then he took such sorrow that he had almost slain
  • himself.
  • CHAPTER XXXVII. How King Mark was sorry for the good renown of Sir
  • Tristram. Some of King Arthur’s knights jousted with knights of
  • Cornwall.
  • Now will we speak, and leave Sir Tristram, Sir Palomides, and Sir
  • Dinadan in prison, and speak we of other knights that sought after Sir
  • Tristram many divers parts of this land. And some yede into Cornwall;
  • and by adventure Sir Gaheris, nephew unto King Arthur, came unto King
  • Mark, and there he was well received and sat at King Mark’s own table
  • and ate of his own mess. Then King Mark asked Sir Gaheris what tidings
  • there were in the realm of Logris. Sir, said Sir Gaheris, the king
  • reigneth as a noble knight; and now but late there was a great jousts
  • and tournament as ever I saw any in the realm of Logris, and the most
  • noble knights were at that jousts. But there was one knight that did
  • marvellously three days, and he bare a black shield, and of all knights
  • that ever I saw he proved the best knight. Then, said King Mark, that
  • was Sir Launcelot, or Sir Palomides the paynim. Not so, said Sir
  • Gheris, for both Sir Launcelot and Sir Palomides were on the contrary
  • party against the Knight with the Black Shield. Then was it Sir
  • Tristram, said the king. Yea, said Sir Gaheris. And therewithal the
  • king smote down his head, and in his heart he feared sore that Sir
  • Tristram should get him such worship in the realm of Logris
  • wherethrough that he himself should not be able to withstand him. Thus
  • Sir Gaheris had great cheer with King Mark, and with Queen La Beale
  • Isoud, the which was glad of Sir Gaheris’ words; for well she wist by
  • his deeds and manners that it was Sir Tristram. And then the king made
  • a feast royal, and to that feast came Sir Uwaine le Fise de Roy Ureine,
  • and some called him Uwaine le Blanchemains. And this Sir Uwaine
  • challenged all the knights of Cornwall. Then was the king wood wroth
  • that he had no knights to answer him. Then Sir Andred, nephew unto King
  • Mark, leapt up and said: I will encounter with Sir Uwaine. Then he yede
  • and armed him and horsed him in the best manner. And there Sir Uwaine
  • met with Sir Andred, and smote him down that he swooned on the earth.
  • Then was King Mark sorry and wroth out of measure that he had no knight
  • to revenge his nephew, Sir Andred.
  • So the king called unto him Sir Dinas, the Seneschal, and prayed him
  • for his sake to take upon him to joust with Sir Uwaine. Sir, said Sir
  • Dinas, I am full loath to have ado with any knight of the Round Table.
  • Yet, said the king, for my love take upon thee to joust. So Sir Dinas
  • made him ready, and anon they encountered together with great spears,
  • but Sir Dinas was overthrown, horse and man, a great fall. Who was
  • wroth but King Mark! Alas, he said, have I no knight that will
  • encounter with yonder knight? Sir, said Sir Gaheris, for your sake I
  • will joust. So Sir Gaheris made him ready, and when he was armed he
  • rode into the field. And when Sir Uwaine saw Sir Gaheris’ shield he
  • rode to him and said: Sir, ye do not your part. For, sir, the first
  • time ye were made Knight of the Round Table ye sware that ye should not
  • have ado with your fellowship wittingly. And pardie, Sir Gaheris, ye
  • knew me well enough by my shield, and so do I know you by your shield,
  • and though ye would break your oath I would not break mine; for there
  • is not one here, nor ye, that shall think I am afeard of you, but I
  • durst right well have ado with you, and yet we be sisters’ sons. Then
  • was Sir Gaheris ashamed, and so therewithal every knight went their
  • way, and Sir Uwaine rode into the country.
  • Then King Mark armed him, and took his horse and his spear, with a
  • squire with him. And then he rode afore Sir Uwaine, and suddenly at a
  • gap he ran upon him as he that was not ware of him, and there he smote
  • him almost through the body, and there left him. So within a while
  • there came Sir Kay and found Sir Uwaine, and asked him how he was hurt.
  • I wot not, said Sir Uwaine, why nor wherefore, but by treason I am sure
  • I gat this hurt; for here came a knight suddenly upon me or that I was
  • ware, and suddenly hurt me. Then there was come Sir Andred to seek King
  • Mark. Thou traitor knight, said Sir Kay, an I wist it were thou that
  • thus traitorly hast hurt this noble knight thou shouldst never pass my
  • hands. Sir, said Sir Andred, I did never hurt him, and that I will
  • report me to himself. Fie on you false knight, said Sir Kay, for ye of
  • Cornwall are nought worth. So Sir Kay made carry Sir Uwaine to the
  • Abbey of the Black Cross, and there he was healed. And then Sir Gaheris
  • took his leave of King Mark, but or he departed he said: Sir king, ye
  • did a foul shame unto you and your court, when ye banished Sir Tristram
  • out of this country, for ye needed not to have doubted no knight an he
  • had been here. And so he departed.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII. Of the treason of King Mark, and how Sir Gaheris smote
  • him down and Andred his cousin.
  • Then there came Sir Kay, the Seneschal, unto King Mark, and there he
  • had good cheer showing outward. Now, fair lords, said he, will ye prove
  • any adventure in the forest of Morris, in the which I know well is as
  • hard an adventure as I know any. Sir, said Sir Kay, I will prove it.
  • And Sir Gaheris said he would be avised for King Mark was ever full of
  • treason: and therewithal Sir Gaheris departed and rode his way. And by
  • the same way that Sir Kay should ride he laid him down to rest,
  • charging his squire to wait upon Sir Kay; And warn me when he cometh.
  • So within a while Sir Kay came riding that way, and then Sir Gaheris
  • took his horse and met him, and said: Sir Kay, ye are not wise to ride
  • at the request of King Mark, for he dealeth all with treason. Then said
  • Sir Kay: I require you let us prove this adventure. I shall not fail
  • you, said Sir Gaheris. And so they rode that time till a lake that was
  • that time called the Perilous Lake, and there they abode under the shaw
  • of the wood.
  • The meanwhile King Mark within the castle of Tintagil avoided all his
  • barons, and all other save such as were privy with him were avoided out
  • of his chamber. And then he let call his nephew Sir Andred, and bade
  • arm him and horse him lightly; and by that time it was midnight. And so
  • King Mark was armed in black, horse and all; and so at a privy postern
  • they two issued out with their varlets with them, and rode till they
  • came to that lake. Then Sir Kay espied them first, and gat his spear,
  • and proffered to joust. And King Mark rode against him, and smote each
  • other full hard, for the moon shone as the bright day. And there at
  • that jousts Sir Kay’s horse fell down, for his horse was not so big as
  • the king’s horse, and Sir Kay’s horse bruised him full sore. Then Sir
  • Gaheris was wroth that Sir Kay had a fall. Then he cried: Knight, sit
  • thou fast in thy saddle, for I will revenge my fellow. Then King Mark
  • was afeard of Sir Gaheris, and so with evil will King Mark rode against
  • him, and Sir Gaheris gave him such a stroke that he fell down. So then
  • forthwithal Sir Gaheris ran unto Sir Andred and smote him from his
  • horse quite, that his helm smote in the earth, and nigh had broken his
  • neck. And therewithal Sir Gaheris alighted, and gat up Sir Kay. And
  • then they yode both on foot to them, and bade them yield them, and tell
  • their names outher they should die. Then with great pain Sir Andred
  • spake first, and said: It is King Mark of Cornwall, therefore be ye
  • ware what ye do, and I am Sir Andred, his cousin. Fie on you both, said
  • Sir Gaheris, for a false traitor, and false treason hast thou wrought
  • and he both, under the feigned cheer that ye made us! it were pity,
  • said Sir Gaheris, that thou shouldst live any longer. Save my life,
  • said King Mark, and I will make amends; and consider that I am a king
  • anointed. It were the more shame, said Sir Gaheris, to save thy life;
  • thou art a king anointed with cream, and therefore thou shouldst hold
  • with all men of worship; and therefore thou art worthy to die. With
  • that he lashed at King Mark without saying any more, and covered him
  • with his shield and defended him as he might. And then Sir Kay lashed
  • at Sir Andred, and therewithal King Mark yielded him unto Sir Gaheris.
  • And then he kneeled adown, and made his oath upon the cross of the
  • sword, that never while he lived he would be against errant-knights.
  • And also he sware to be good friend unto Sir Tristram if ever he came
  • into Cornwall.
  • By then Sir Andred was on the earth, and Sir Kay would have slain him.
  • Let be, said Sir Gaheris, slay him not I pray you. It were pity, said
  • Sir Kay, that he should live any longer, for this is nigh cousin unto
  • Sir Tristram, and ever he hath been a traitor unto him, and by him he
  • was exiled out of Cornwall, and therefore I will slay him, said Sir
  • Kay. Ye shall not, said Sir Gaheris; sithen I have given the king his
  • life, I pray you give him his life. And therewithal Sir Kay let him go.
  • And so Sir Kay and Sir Gaheris rode their way unto Dinas, the
  • Seneschal, for because they heard say that he loved well Sir Tristram.
  • So they reposed them there, and soon after they rode unto the realm of
  • Logris. And so within a little while they met with Sir Launcelot that
  • always had Dame Bragwaine with him, to that intent he weened to have
  • met the sooner with Sir Tristram; and Sir Launcelot asked what tidings
  • in Cornwall, and whether they heard of Sir Tristram or not. Sir Kay and
  • Sir Gaheris answered and said, that they heard not of him. Then they
  • told Sir Launcelot word by word of their adventure. Then Sir Launcelot
  • smiled and said: Hard it is to take out of the flesh that is bred in
  • the bone; and so made them merry together.
  • CHAPTER XIX. How after that Sir Tristram, Sir Palomides, and Sir
  • Dinadan had been long in prison they were delivered.
  • Now leave we off this tale, and speak we of sir Dinas that had within
  • the castle a paramour, and she loved another knight better than him.
  • And so when sir Dinas went out a-hunting she slipped down by a towel,
  • and took with her two brachets, and so she yede to the knight that she
  • loved, and he her again. And when sir Dinas came home and missed his
  • paramour and his brachets, then was he the more wrother for his
  • brachets than for the lady. So then he rode after the knight that had
  • his paramour, and bade him turn and joust. So sir Dinas smote him down,
  • that with the fall he brake his leg and his arm. And then his lady and
  • paramour cried sir Dinas mercy, and said she would love him better than
  • ever she did. Nay, said sir Dinas, I shall never trust them that once
  • betrayed me, and therefore, as ye have begun, so end, for I will never
  • meddle with you. And so sir Dinas departed, and took his brachets with
  • him, and so rode to his castle.
  • Now will we turn unto sir Launcelot, that was right heavy that he could
  • never hear no tidings of sir Tristram, for all this while he was in
  • prison with sir Darras, Palomides, and Dinadan. Then Dame Bragwaine
  • took her leave to go into Cornwall, and sir Launcelot, sir Kay, and sir
  • Gaheris rode to seek sir Tristram in the country of Surluse.
  • Now speaketh this tale of sir Tristram and of his two fellows, for
  • every day sir Palomides brawled and said language against sir Tristram.
  • I marvel, said sir Dinadan, of thee, sir Palomides, an thou haddest sir
  • Tristram here thou wouldst do him no harm; for an a wolf and a sheep
  • were together in a prison the wolf would suffer the sheep to be in
  • peace. And wit thou well, said sir Dinadan, this same is sir Tristram
  • at a word, and now must thou do thy best with him, and let see now if
  • ye can skift it with your hands. Then was sir Palomides abashed and
  • said little. Sir Palomides, then said sir Tristram, I have heard much
  • of your maugre against me, but I will not meddle with you as at this
  • time by my will, because I dread the lord of this place that hath us in
  • governance; for an I dread him not more than I do thee, soon it should
  • be skift: so they peaced themself. Right so came in a damosel and said:
  • Knights, be of good cheer, for ye are sure of your lives, and that I
  • heard say my lord, Sir Darras. Then were they glad all three, for daily
  • they weened they should have died.
  • Then soon after this Sir Tristram fell sick that he weened to have
  • died; then Sir Dinadan wept, and so did Sir Palomides under them both
  • making great sorrow. So a damosel came in to them and found them
  • mourning. Then she went unto Sir Darras, and told him how that mighty
  • knight that bare the black shield was likely to die. That shall not be,
  • said Sir Darras, for God defend when knights come to me for succour
  • that I should suffer them to die within my prison. Therefore, said Sir
  • Darras to the damosel, fetch that knight and his fellows afore me. And
  • then anon Sir Darras saw Sir Tristram brought afore him. He said: Sir
  • knight, me repenteth of thy sickness for thou art called a full noble
  • knight, and so it seemeth by thee; and wit ye well it shall never be
  • said that Sir Darras shall destroy such a noble knight as thou art in
  • prison, howbeit that thou hast slain three of my sons whereby I was
  • greatly aggrieved. But now shalt thou go and thy fellows, and your
  • harness and horses have been fair and clean kept, and ye shall go where
  • it liketh you, upon this covenant, that thou, knight, wilt promise me
  • to be good friend to my sons two that be now alive, and also that thou
  • tell me thy name. Sir, said he, as for me my name is Sir Tristram de
  • Liones, and in Cornwall was I born, and nephew I am unto King Mark. And
  • as for the death of your sons I might not do withal, for an they had
  • been the next kin that I have I might have done none otherwise. And if
  • I had slain them by treason or treachery I had been worthy to have
  • died. All this I consider, said Sir Darras, that all that ye did was by
  • force of knighthood, and that was the cause I would not put you to
  • death. But sith ye be Sir Tristram, the good knight, I pray you
  • heartily to be my good friend and to my sons. Sir, said Sir Tristram, I
  • promise you by the faith of my body, ever while I live I will do you
  • service, for ye have done to us but as a natural knight ought to do.
  • Then Sir Tristram reposed him there till that he was amended of his
  • sickness; and when he was big and strong they took their leave, and
  • every knight took their horses, and so departed and rode together till
  • they came to a cross way. Now fellows, said Sir Tristram, here will we
  • depart in sundry ways. And because Sir Dinadan had the first adventure
  • of him I will begin.
  • CHAPTER XL. How Sir Dinadan rescued a lady from Sir Breuse Saunce Pite,
  • and how Sir Tristram received a shield of Morgan le Fay.
  • So as Sir Dinadan rode by a well he found a lady making great dole.
  • What aileth you? said Sir Dinadan. Sir knight, said the lady, I am the
  • wofullest lady of the world, for within these five days here came a
  • knight called Sir Breuse Saunce Pite, and he slew mine own brother, and
  • ever since he hath kept me at his own will, and of all men in the world
  • I hate him most; and therefore I require you of knighthood to avenge
  • me, for he will not tarry, but be here anon. Let him come, said Sir
  • Dinadan, and because of honour of all women I will do my part. With
  • this came Sir Breuse, and when he saw a knight with his lady he was
  • wood wroth. And then he said: Sir knight, keep thee from me. So they
  • hurtled together as thunder, and either smote other passing sore, but
  • Sir Dinadan put him through the shoulder a grievous wound, and or ever
  • Sir Dinadan might turn him Sir Breuse was gone and fled. Then the lady
  • prayed him to bring her to a castle there beside but four mile thence;
  • and so Sir Dinadan brought her there, and she was welcome, for the lord
  • of that castle was her uncle; and so Sir Dinadan rode his way upon his
  • adventure.
  • Now turn we this tale unto Sir Tristram, that by adventure he came to a
  • castle to ask lodging, wherein was Queen Morgan le Fay; and so when Sir
  • Tristram was let into that castle he had good cheer all that night. And
  • upon the morn when he would have departed the queen said: Wit ye well
  • ye shall not depart lightly, for ye are here as a prisoner. Jesu
  • defend! said Sir Tristram, for I was but late a prisoner. Fair knight,
  • said the queen, ye shall abide with me till that I wit what ye are and
  • from whence ye come. And ever the queen would set Sir Tristram on her
  • own side, and her paramour on the other side. And ever Queen Morgan
  • would behold Sir Tristram, and thereat the knight was jealous, and was
  • in will suddenly to have run upon Sir Tristram with a sword, but he
  • left it for shame. Then the queen said to Sir Tristram: Tell me thy
  • name, and I shall suffer you to depart when ye will. Upon that covenant
  • I tell you my name is Sir Tristram de Liones. Ah, said Morgan le Fay,
  • an I had wist that, thou shouldst not have departed so soon as thou
  • shalt. But sithen I have made a promise I will hold it, with that thou
  • wilt promise me to bear upon thee a shield that I shall deliver thee,
  • unto the castle of the Hard Rock, where King Arthur had cried a great
  • tournament, and there I pray you that ye will be, and to do for me as
  • much deeds of arms as ye may do. For at the Castle of Maidens, Sir
  • Tristram, ye did marvellous deeds of arms as ever I heard knight do.
  • Madam, said Sir Tristram, let me see the shield that I shall bear. Then
  • the shield was brought forth, and the field was goldish, with a king
  • and a queen therein painted, and a knight standing above them, [one
  • foot] upon the king’s head, and the other upon the queen’s. Madam, said
  • Sir Tristram, this is a fair shield and a mighty; but what signifieth
  • this king and this queen, and the knight standing upon both their
  • heads? I shall tell you, said Morgan le Fay, it signifieth King Arthur
  • and Queen Guenever, and a knight who holdeth them both in bondage and
  • in servage. Who is that knight? said Sir Tristram. That shall ye not
  • wit as at this time, said the queen. But as the French book saith,
  • Queen Morgan loved Sir Launcelot best, and ever she desired him, and he
  • would never love her nor do nothing at her request, and therefore she
  • held many knights together for to have taken him by strength. And
  • because she deemed that Sir Launcelot loved Queen Guenever paramour,
  • and she him again, therefore Queen Morgan le Fay ordained that shield
  • to put Sir Launcelot to a rebuke, to that intent that King Arthur might
  • understand the love between them. Then Sir Tristram took that shield
  • and promised her to bear it at the tournament at the Castle of the Hard
  • Rock. But Sir Tristram knew not that that shield was ordained against
  • Sir Launcelot, but afterward he knew it.
  • CHAPTER XLI. How Sir Tristram took with him the shield, and also how he
  • slew the paramour of Morgan le Fay.
  • So then Sir Tristram took his leave of the queen, and took the shield
  • with him. Then came the knight that held Queen Morgan le Fay, his name
  • was Sir Hemison, and he made him ready to follow Sir Tristram. Fair
  • friend, said Morgan, ride not after that knight, for ye shall not win
  • no worship of him. Fie on him, coward, said Sir Hemison, for I wist
  • never good knight come out of Cornwall but if it were Sir Tristram de
  • Liones. What an that be he? said she. Nay, nay, said he, he is with La
  • Beale Isoud, and this is but a daffish knight. Alas, my fair friend, ye
  • shall find him the best knight that ever ye met withal, for I know him
  • better than ye do. For your sake, said Sir Hemison, I shall slay him.
  • Ah, fair friend, said the queen, me repenteth that ye will follow that
  • knight, for I fear me sore of your again coming. With this this knight
  • rode his way wood wroth, and he rode after Sir Tristram as fast as he
  • had been chased with knights. When Sir Tristram heard a knight come
  • after him so fast he returned about, and saw a knight coming against
  • him. And when he came nigh to Sir Tristram he cried on high: Sir
  • knight, keep thee from me. Then they rushed together as it had been
  • thunder, and Sir Hemison brised his spear upon Sir Tristram, but his
  • harness was so good that he might not hurt him. And Sir Tristram smote
  • him harder, and bare him through the body, and he fell over his horse’s
  • croup. Then Sir Tristram turned to have done more with his sword, but
  • he saw so much blood go from him that him seemed he was likely to die,
  • and so he departed from him and came to a fair manor to an old knight,
  • and there Sir Tristram lodged.
  • CHAPTER XLII. How Morgan le Fay buried her paramour, and how Sir
  • Tristram praised Sir Launcelot and his kin.
  • Now leave to speak of Sir Tristram, and speak we of the knight that was
  • wounded to the death. Then his varlet alighted, and took off his helm,
  • and then he asked his lord whether there were any life in him. There is
  • in me life said the knight, but it is but little; and therefore leap
  • thou up behind me when thou hast holpen me up, and hold me fast that I
  • fall not, and bring me to Queen Morgan le Fay; for deep draughts of
  • death draw to my heart that I may not live, for I would fain speak with
  • her or I died: for else my soul will be in great peril an I die.
  • For[thwith] with great pain his varlet brought him to the castle, and
  • there Sir Hemison fell down dead. When Morgan le Fay saw him dead she
  • made great sorrow out of reason; and then she let despoil him unto his
  • shirt, and so she let him put into a tomb. And about the tomb she let
  • write: Here lieth Sir Hemison, slain by the hands of Sir Tristram de
  • Liones.
  • Now turn we unto Sir Tristram, that asked the knight his host if he saw
  • late any knights adventurous. Sir, he said, the last night here lodged
  • with me Ector de Maris and a damosel with him, and that damosel told me
  • that he was one of the best knights of the world. That is not so, said
  • Sir Tristram, for I know four better knights of his own blood, and the
  • first is Sir Launcelot du Lake, call him the best knight, and Sir Bors
  • de Ganis, Sir Bleoberis, Sir Blamore de Ganis, and Sir Gaheris. Nay,
  • said his host, Sir Gawaine is a better knight than he. That is not so,
  • said Sir Tristram, for I have met with them both, and I felt Sir
  • Gaheris for the better knight, and Sir Lamorak I call him as good as
  • any of them except Sir Launcelot. Why name ye not Sir Tristram? said
  • his host, for I account him as good as any of them. I know not Sir
  • Tristram, said Tristram. Thus they talked and bourded as long as them
  • list, and then went to rest. And on the morn Sir Tristram departed, and
  • took his leave of his host, and rode toward the Roche Dure, and none
  • adventure had Sir Tristram but that; and so he rested not till he came
  • to the castle, where he saw five hundred tents.
  • CHAPTER XLIII. How Sir Tristram at a tournament bare the shield that
  • Morgan le Fay delivered to him.
  • Then the King of Scots and the King of Ireland held against King
  • Arthur’s knights, and there began a great medley. So came in Sir
  • Tristram and did marvellous deeds of arms, for there he smote down many
  • knights. And ever he was afore King Arthur with that shield. And when
  • King Arthur saw that shield he marvelled greatly in what intent it was
  • made; but Queen Guenever deemed as it was, wherefore she was heavy.
  • Then was there a damosel of Queen Morgan in a chamber by King Arthur,
  • and when she heard King Arthur speak of that shield, then she spake
  • openly unto King Arthur. Sir King, wit ye well this shield was ordained
  • for you, to warn you of your shame and dishonour, and that longeth to
  • you and your queen. And then anon that damosel picked her away privily,
  • that no man wist where she was become. Then was King Arthur sad and
  • wroth, and asked from whence came that damosel. There was not one that
  • knew her nor wist where she was become. Then Queen Guenever called to
  • her Sir Ector de Maris, and there she made her complaint to him, and
  • said: I wot well this shield was made by Morgan le Fay in despite of me
  • and of Sir Launcelot, wherefore I dread me sore lest I should be
  • destroyed. And ever the king beheld Sir Tristram, that did so
  • marvellous deeds of arms that he wondered sore what knight he might be,
  • and well he wist it was not Sir Launcelot. And it was told him that Sir
  • Tristram was in Petit Britain with Isoud la Blanche Mains, for he
  • deemed, an he had been in the realm of Logris, Sir Launcelot or some of
  • his fellows that were in the quest of Sir Tristram that they should
  • have found him or that time. So King Arthur had marvel what knight he
  • might be. And ever Sir Arthur’s eye was on that shield. All that espied
  • the queen, and that made her sore afeard.
  • Then ever Sir Tristram smote down knights wonderly to behold, what upon
  • the right hand and upon the left hand, that unnethe no knight might
  • withstand him. And the King of Scots and the King of Ireland began to
  • withdraw them. When Arthur espied that, he thought that that knight
  • with the strange shield should not escape him. Then he called unto him
  • Sir Uwaine le Blanche Mains, and bade him arm him and make him ready.
  • So anon King Arthur and Sir Uwaine dressed them before Sir Tristram,
  • and required him to tell them where he had that shield. Sir, he said, I
  • had it of Queen Morgan le Fay, sister unto King Arthur.
  • So here endeth this history of this book, for it is the first book of
  • Sir Tristram de Liones and the second book of Sir Tristram followeth.
  • GLOSSARY
  • Abashed, abased, lowered,
  • Abate, depress, calm,
  • Abought, paid for,
  • Abraid, started,
  • Accompted, counted,
  • Accorded, agreed,
  • Accordment, agreement,
  • Acquit, repay,
  • Actually, actively,
  • Adoubted, afraid,
  • Advision, vision,
  • Afeard, afraid,
  • Afterdeal, disadvantage,
  • Againsay, retract,
  • Aknown, known,
  • Aligement, alleviation,
  • Allegeance, alleviation,
  • Allow, approve,
  • Almeries, chests,
  • Alther, gen. pl., of all,
  • Amounted, mounted,
  • Anealed, anointed,
  • Anguishly, in pain,
  • Anon, at once,
  • Apair, weaken,
  • Apparelled, fitted up,
  • Appeach, impeach,
  • Appealed, challenged, accused,
  • Appertices, displays,
  • Araged, enraged, ; confused,
  • Araised, raised,
  • Arase, obliterate,
  • Areared, reared,
  • Armyvestal, martial,
  • Array, plight, state of affairs,
  • Arrayed, situated,
  • Arson, saddle-bow,
  • Askance, casually,
  • Assoiled, absolved,
  • Assotted, infatuated,
  • Assummon, summon,
  • Astonied, amazed, stunned,
  • At, of, by,
  • At-after, after,
  • Attaint, overcome,
  • Aumbries, chests,
  • Avail (at), at an advantage,
  • Avaled, lowered,
  • Avaunt, boast,
  • Aventred, couched,
  • Avised, be advised, take thought,
  • Avision, vision,
  • Avoid, quit,
  • Avoided, got clear off,
  • Avow, vow,
  • Await of (in), in watch for,
  • Awayward, away,
  • Awke, sideways,
  • Bachelors, probationers for knighthood
  • Bain, bath,
  • Barbican, gate-tower,
  • Barget, little ship,
  • Battle, division of an army,
  • Bawdy, dirty,
  • Beams, trumpets,
  • Be-closed, enclosed,
  • Become, pp., befallen, gone to,
  • Bedashed, splashed,
  • Behests, promises,
  • Behight, promised,
  • Beholden (beholding) to, obliged to,
  • Behote, promised,
  • Benome, deprived, taken away,
  • Besants, gold coins,
  • Beseek, beseech,
  • Beseen, appointed, arrayed,
  • Beskift, shove off,
  • Bested, beset,
  • Betaken, entrusted,
  • Betaught, entrusted, recommended,
  • Betid, happened,
  • Betook, committed, entrusted,
  • Bevered, quivered,
  • Board, sb., deck,
  • Bobaunce, boasting, pride,
  • Boishe, bush, branch of a tree,
  • Boistous, rough,
  • Bole, trunk of a tree,
  • Boot, remedy,
  • Borrow out, redeem,
  • Borrows, pledges,
  • Bote, remedy,
  • Bound, ready,
  • Bourded, jested,
  • Bourder, jester,
  • Braced, embraced,
  • Brachet, little hound,
  • Braide, quick movement,
  • Brast, burst, break,
  • Breaths, breathing holes,
  • Brief, shorten,
  • Brim, fierce, furious,
  • Brised, broke,
  • Broached, pierced,
  • Broaches, spits,
  • Bur, hand-guard of a spear,
  • Burble, bubble,
  • Burbling, bubbling,
  • Burgenetts, buds, blossoms,
  • Bushment, ambush,
  • By and by, immediately,
  • Bywaryed, expended, bestowed,
  • Canel bone, collar bone,
  • Cankered, inveterate,
  • Cantel, slice, strip,
  • Careful, sorrowful, full of troubles,
  • Cast (of bread), loaves baked at the same time,
  • Cast, ref: v., propose,
  • Cedle, schedule, note,
  • Cere, wax over, embalm,; cerel,
  • Certes, certainly,
  • Chafe, heat, decompose,; chafed, heated,
  • Chaflet, platform, scaffold,
  • Champaign, open country,
  • Chariot (Fr charette), cart,
  • Cheer, countenance, entertainment,
  • Chierte, dearness,
  • Chrism, anointing oil,
  • Clatter, talk confusedly,
  • Cleight, clutched,
  • Cleped, called,
  • Clipping, embracing,
  • Cog, small boat,
  • Cognisance, badge, mark of distinction,
  • Coif, head-piece,
  • Comfort, strengthen, help,
  • Cominal, common,
  • Complished, complete,
  • Con, know, be able, ; con thanlt, be grateful,
  • Conserve, preserve,
  • Conversant, abiding in,
  • Cording, agreement,
  • Coronal, circlet,
  • Cost, side,
  • Costed, kept up with,
  • Couched, lay,
  • Courage, encourage,
  • Courtelage, courtyard,
  • Covert, sheltered,
  • Covetise, covetousness,
  • Covin, deceit,
  • Cream, oil,
  • Credence, faith,
  • Croup, crupper,
  • Curteist, most courteous,
  • Daffish, foolish,
  • Danger (in), under obligation to, in the power of,
  • Dawed, v tr., revived, intr. dawned,
  • Deadly, mortal, human,
  • Deal, part, portion,
  • Debate, quarrel, strife,
  • Debonair, courteous,
  • Deceivable, deceitful,
  • Defaded, faded,
  • Default, fault,
  • Defend, forbid,; defended,; forbidden,
  • Defoiled, trodden down, fouled, deflowered,
  • Degree (win the), rank, superiority,
  • Delibered, determined,
  • Deliverly, adroitly,
  • Departed, divided,
  • Departition, departure,
  • Dere, harm,
  • Descrive, describe,
  • Despoiled, stripped,
  • Detrenched, cut to pieces,
  • Devised, looked carefully at,
  • Devoir, duty, service,
  • Did off, doffed,
  • Dight, prepared,
  • Dindled, trembled,
  • Disadventure, misfortune,
  • Discover, reveal,
  • Disherited, disinherited,
  • Disparpled, scattered,
  • Dispenses, expenses,
  • Disperplyd, scattered,
  • Dispoiled, stripped,
  • Distained, sullied, dishonoured,
  • Disworship, shame,
  • Dole, gift of alms,
  • Dole, sorrow,
  • Domineth, dominates, rules,
  • Don, gift,
  • Doted, foolish,
  • Doubted, redoubtable,
  • Draughts, privities, secret interviews, recesses,
  • Drenched, drowned,
  • Dress, make ready,
  • Dressed up, raised,
  • Dretched, troubled in sleep,
  • Dretching, being troubled in sleep,
  • Dromounds, war vessels,
  • Dure, endure, last,; dured,; during,
  • Duresse, bondage, hardship,
  • Dwined, dwindled,
  • Eased, entertained,
  • Eft, after, again,
  • Eftures, passages,
  • Embattled, ranged for battle,
  • Embushed, concealed in the woods,
  • Eme, uncle,
  • Empoison, poison,
  • Emprised, undertook,
  • Enbraid,
  • Enchafe, heat,; enchafed, heated,
  • Enchieve, achieve,
  • Endlong, alongside of,
  • Enewed, painted,
  • Enforce, constrain,
  • Engine, device,
  • Enow, enough,
  • Enquest, enterprise,
  • Ensured, assured,
  • Entermete, intermeddle,
  • Errant, wandering,
  • Estates, ranks,
  • Even hand, at an equality,
  • Evenlong, along,
  • Everych, each, every one,
  • Faiter, vagabond,
  • Fare, sb., ado, commotion,
  • Faren, pp., treated,
  • Faute, lack,; fauted, lacked,
  • Fealty, oath of fidelity,
  • Fear, frighten,
  • Feute, trace, track,
  • Feuter, set in rest, couch,
  • Feutred, set in socket,
  • Fiaunce, affiance, promise,
  • Flang, flung,; rushed,
  • Flatling, prostrate,
  • Fleet, float,
  • Flemed, put to flight,
  • Flittered, fluttered,
  • Foiled, defeated, shamed,
  • Foined, thrust,
  • Foining, thrusting,
  • Foins, thrusts,
  • Foot-hot, hastily,
  • For-bled, spent with bleeding,
  • Force (no), no concern,
  • Fordeal, advantage,
  • Fordo, destroy,; fordid,
  • Forecast, preconcerted plot,
  • For-fared, worsted,
  • Forfend, forbid,
  • Forfoughten, weary with fighting,
  • Forhewn, hewn to pieces,
  • Forjousted, tired with jousting,
  • Forthinketh, repents,
  • Fortuned, happened,
  • Forward, vanguard,
  • Forwowmded, sorely wounded,
  • Free, noble,
  • Freshed,
  • Froward, away from,
  • Gad, wedge or spike of iron,
  • Gainest, readiest,
  • Gar, cause,
  • Gart, compelled,
  • Gentily, like a gentleman,
  • Gerfalcon, a fine hawk,
  • Germane, closely allied,
  • Gest, deed, story,
  • Gisarm, halberd, battle-axe,
  • Glaive, sword,
  • Glasting, barking,
  • Glatisant, barking, yelping,
  • Gobbets, lumps,
  • Graithed, made ready,
  • Gree, degree, superiority,
  • Greed, pp., pleased, content,
  • Grescs, steps,
  • Grimly, ugly,
  • Grovelling, on his face,
  • Guerdonless, without reward,
  • Guise, fashion,
  • Habergeon, hauberk with leggings attached,
  • Hair, a hair-shirt,
  • Hale and how, a sailor’s cry,
  • Halp, helped,
  • Halsed, embraced,
  • Halsing, embracing,
  • Handfast, betrothed,
  • Handsel, earnest-money,
  • Hangers, testicles,
  • Harbingers, messengers sent to prepare lodgings,
  • Harness, armour,
  • Hart of greese, fat deer,
  • Hauberk, coat of mail,
  • Haut, high, noble,
  • Hauteyn, haughty,
  • Heavy, sad,
  • Hete, command,
  • Hide, skin,
  • Hied, hurried,
  • High (on), aloud,
  • Higher hand, the uppermost,
  • Hight, called,
  • Hilled, covered, concealed,
  • Holden, held,
  • Holp, helped,
  • Holts, woods,
  • Hough-bone, back part of kneejoint,
  • Houselled, to be given the Eucharist,
  • Hoved, hovered, waited about,
  • Hurled, dashed, staggered,; hurling,
  • Hurtle, dash,
  • Incontinent, forthwith,
  • Ind, dark blue,
  • Infellowship, join in fellowship,
  • In like, alike,
  • Intermit, interpose,
  • Japer, jester,
  • Japes, jests,
  • Jesseraunt, a short cuirass,
  • Keep, sb., care,
  • Keep, s., care, reck,
  • Kemps, champions,
  • Kind, nature,
  • Kindly, natural,
  • Knights parters, marshals,
  • Know, acknowledge,
  • Knowledging, acknowledgment, confession,
  • Lain, conceal,
  • Langering, sauntering,
  • Lapped, took in her lap,
  • Large, generous,
  • Largeness, liberality,
  • Laton, latten, brass,
  • Laund, waste plain,
  • Layne, conceal,
  • Lazar-cot, leper-house,
  • Learn, teach,
  • Lears, cheeks,
  • Leaved, leafy,
  • Lecher, fornicator,
  • Leech, physician,
  • Leman, lover,
  • Let, caused to,
  • Let, hinder,
  • Lewdest, most ignorant,
  • Licours lecherous,
  • Lief, dear,
  • Liefer, more gladly,
  • Lieve, believe,
  • Limb-meal, limb from limb,
  • List, desire, pleasure,
  • Lithe, joint,
  • Longing unto, belonging to,
  • Long on (upon), because of,
  • Loos, praise,
  • Lotless, without a share,
  • Loveday, day for. settling disputes,
  • Loving, praising,
  • Lunes, leashes, strings,
  • Lusk, lubber,
  • Lusts, inclinations,
  • Maims, wounds,
  • Makeless, matchless,
  • Makers, authors, poets,
  • Mas,ease, discomfort,
  • Mal engine, evil design,
  • Mal-fortune, ill-luck, mishap,
  • Marches, borders,
  • Mass-penny, offering at mass for the dead,
  • Matche old, machicolated, with holes for defence,
  • Maugre, sb., despite,
  • Measle, disease,
  • Medled, mingled,
  • Medley, melee, general encounter,
  • Meiny, retinue,
  • Mickle, much,
  • Minever, ermine,
  • Mischieved, hurt,
  • Mischievous, painful,
  • Miscorr fort, discomfort,
  • Miscreature, unbeliever,
  • Missay, revile,; missaid,
  • Mo, more,
  • More and less, rich and poor,
  • Motes, notes on a horn,
  • Mount~ lance, amount of, extent,
  • Much, great,
  • Naked, unarmed,
  • Namely, especially,
  • Ne, nor,
  • Near-hand, nearly,; near,
  • Needly, needs, on your own compulsion,
  • Nesh, soft, tender,
  • Nigh-hand, nearly,
  • Nill, will not,
  • Nilt, will not,
  • Nis, ne is, is not,
  • Nist, ne wist, knew not,
  • Noblesse, nobleness,
  • Nobley, nobility, splendour,
  • Noised, reported,
  • Nold, would not,
  • Noseling, on his nose,
  • Not for then, nevertheless,
  • Notoyrly, notoriously,
  • Noyous, hurtful,
  • Obeissance, obedience,
  • Or, before,
  • Orgule, haughtiness,
  • Orgulist, haughtiest,
  • Orgulite, pride, arrogance,
  • Orgulous, proud,
  • Other, or,
  • Ouches, jewels,
  • Ought, owned,
  • Outcept, except,
  • Outher, or,
  • Out-taken, except,
  • Over-evening, last night,
  • Overget, overtake,
  • Overhylled, covered,
  • Over-led, domineered over,
  • Overlong, the length of,
  • Overslip, pass,
  • Overthwart, adj., cross,
  • Overthwart, sb., mischance,
  • Overthwart and endlong, by the breadth and length,
  • Painture, painting,
  • Paitrelles, breastplate of a horse,
  • Paltocks, short coats,
  • Parage, descent,
  • Pareil, like,
  • Passing, surpassingly,
  • Paynim, pagan,
  • Pensel, pennon,
  • Perclos, partition,
  • Perdy, par Dieu,
  • Perigot, falcon,
  • Perish, destroy,
  • Peron, tombstone,
  • Pight, pitched,
  • Pike, steal away,
  • Piked, stole,
  • Pillers, plunderers,
  • Pilling, plundering,
  • Pleasaunce, pleasure,
  • Plenour, complete,
  • Plump, sb., cluster,
  • Pointling, aiming,
  • Pont, bridge,
  • Port, gate,
  • Posseded, possessed,
  • Potestate, governor,
  • Precessours, predecessors,
  • Press, throng,
  • Pretendeth, belongs to,
  • Pricker, hard rider,
  • Pricking, spurring,
  • Prime, A.M.,
  • Prise, capture,
  • Puissance, power,
  • Purfle, trimming,
  • Purfled, embroidered,
  • Purvey, provide,
  • Quarrels, arrowheads,
  • Questing, barking,
  • Quick, alive,
  • Quit, repaid,; acquitted, behaved,
  • Raced (rased), tore,
  • Rack (of bulls), herd,
  • Raines, a town in Brittany famous for its cloth,
  • Ramping, raging,
  • Range, rank, station,
  • Ransacked, searched,
  • Rashed, fell headlong,
  • Rashing, rushing,
  • Rasing, rushing,
  • Rasure,
  • Raundon, impetuosity,
  • Rear, raise,
  • Rechate, note of recall,
  • Recomforted, comforted, cheered,
  • Recounter, rencontre, encounter,
  • Recover, rescue,
  • Rede, advise, ; sb., counsel,
  • Redounded, glanced back,
  • Religion, religious order,
  • Reneye, deny,
  • Report, refer,
  • Resemblaunt; semblance,
  • Retrayed, drew back,
  • Rightwise, rightly,
  • Rivage, shore,
  • Romed, roared,
  • Roted, practised,
  • Rove, cleft,
  • Rownsepyk, a branch,
  • Sacring, consecrating,
  • Sad, serious,
  • Sadly, heartily, earnestly,
  • Salle, room,
  • Samite, silk stuff with gold or silver
  • threads,
  • Sangreal, Holy Grail,
  • Sarps, girdles,
  • Saw, proverb,
  • Scathes, harms, hurts,
  • icripture, writing,
  • Search, probe wounds,
  • Selar, canopy,
  • Semblable, like,
  • Semblant, semblance,
  • Sendal, fine cloth,
  • Sennight, week,
  • Servage, slavery,
  • Sewer, officer who set on dishes and tasted them,
  • Shaft-mon, handbreadth,
  • Shaw, thicket,
  • Sheef, thrust,
  • Sheer-Thursday, Thursday in Holy Week,
  • Shend, harm,
  • Shenship, disgrace,
  • Shent, undone, blamed,
  • Shour, attack,
  • Shrew, rascal,
  • Shrewd, knavish,
  • Sib, akin to,
  • Sideling, sideways,
  • Siege, seat,
  • Signified, likened,
  • Siker, sure,
  • Sikerness, assurance,
  • Sith, since,
  • Sithen, afterwards, since,
  • Skift, changed,
  • Slade, valley,
  • Slake, glen,
  • Soil (to go to), hunting term for taking the water,
  • Sonds, messages,
  • Sort, company,
  • Sperd, bolted,
  • Spere, ask, inquire,
  • Spered, asked,
  • Sperhawk, sparrowhawk,
  • Sprent, sprinkled,
  • Stale, station,
  • Stark, thoroughly,
  • Stead, place,
  • Stert, started, rose quickly,
  • Steven, appointment,; steven ser. appointment made,
  • Steven, voice,
  • Stigh, path,
  • Stilly, silently,
  • Stint, fixed revenue,
  • Stonied, astonished,; became confused,
  • Stour, battle,
  • Strain, race, descent,
  • Strait, narrow,
  • Straked, blew a horn,
  • Sue, pursue,
  • Sued, pursued,
  • Surcingles, saddle girths,
  • Swang, swung,
  • Sweven, dream,
  • Swough, sound of wind,
  • Talent, desire,
  • Tallages, taxes,
  • Tallies, taxes,
  • Tamed, crushed,
  • Tatches, qualities,
  • Tene, sorrow,
  • Term, period of time,
  • Thilk, that same,
  • Tho, then,
  • Thrang, pushed,
  • Thrulled, pushed,
  • Till, to,
  • To-brast, burst,
  • To-fore, before,
  • To-morn, to-morrow,
  • Took, gave,
  • To-rove, broke up,
  • To-shivered, broken to pieces,
  • Traced, advanced and retreated,
  • Trains, devices, wiles,
  • Trasing, pressing forward,
  • Travers (met at), came across,
  • Traverse, slantwise,
  • Traversed, moved sideways,
  • Tray, grief,
  • Treatise, treaty,
  • Tree, timber,
  • Trenchant, cutting, sharp,
  • Tres:, hunting term,
  • Truage, tribute,
  • Trussed, packed,
  • Ubblie, wafer, Host,
  • Umbecast, cast about,
  • Umberere, the part of the helmet which shaded the eyes,
  • Umbre, shade,
  • Unavised, thoughtlessly,
  • Uncouth, strange,
  • Underne, - A.M.,
  • Ungoodly, rudely,
  • Unhappy, unlucky,
  • Unhilled, uncovered,
  • Unr the, scarcely,
  • Unsicker, unstable,
  • Unwimpled, uncovered,
  • Unwrast, untwisted, unbound,
  • Upright, flat on the back,
  • Up-so-down, upside down,
  • Ure, usage,
  • Utas, octave of a festival,
  • Utterance, uttermost,
  • Varlet, servant,
  • Venery, hunting,
  • Ven ails, breathing holes,
  • Villain, man of low birth,
  • Visors, the perforated parts of helmets,
  • Voided, slipped away from,
  • Wagging, shaking,
  • Waited, watched,
  • Waits, watches,
  • Wallop, gallop,
  • Wanhope, despair,
  • Wap, ripple,
  • Ware, aware,
  • Warison, reward,
  • Warn, forbid, refuse,
  • Weeds, garments,
  • Weltered, rolled about,
  • Wend, thought,
  • Wer-wolf, a man turned into a wolf by magic,
  • Where, whereas,
  • Wide-where, over wide space,
  • Wield, possess, have power over,
  • Wield himself, come to himself,
  • Wight, brave, strong,
  • Wightly, swiftly,
  • Wildsome, desolate,
  • Wimpled, with the head covered,
  • Win, make way,
  • Wite, v., blame,
  • Within-forth, on the inside,
  • Without-forth, on the outside,
  • Wittiest, cleverest,
  • Wittily, cleverly,
  • Witting, knowledge,
  • Wold or nold, would or would not,
  • Wonder, adj., wondrous,
  • Wonder, adv., wondrously,
  • Wonderly, wonderfully,
  • Wood, mad,
  • Woodness, madness,
  • Wood shaw, thicket of the wood,
  • Worship, honour,
  • Worshipped, cause to be honoured,
  • Worts, roots,
  • Wot, know,
  • Wrack, destruction,
  • Wroken, wreaked,
  • Wrothe, twisted,
  • Yede, ran,
  • Yelden, yielded,
  • Yerde, stick, stem,
  • Yode, went,
  • Yolden, yielded,
  • Y-wis, certainly,
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Le Morte D’Arthur, Volume I (of II),
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