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<FILEDESC><TITLESTMT><TITLE TYPE="245">Merlin : or, the early history of King Arthur :  a prose romance / edited ... by Henry B. Wheatley</TITLE><EDITOR>Wheatley, Henry Benjamin, 1838-1917 </EDITOR></TITLESTMT><EXTENT>ca. 1500 kb</EXTENT><PUBLICATIONSTMT><PUBLISHER>University of Michigan Humanities Text Initiative</PUBLISHER><PUBPLACE>Ann Arbor, Mich.</PUBPLACE><IDNO TYPE="dlps">Merlin</IDNO><AVAILABILITY>
<P>The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials in furtherance of its educational and research mission. This work has been identified as being in the public domain, free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. You may copy, modify, distribute and perform the work, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact Digital Content and Collections (mec-info@umich.edu). If you have concerns about the inclusion of an item in this collection, please contact Library Information Technology (LibraryIT-info@umich.edu).</P></AVAILABILITY><DATE>1997</DATE></PUBLICATIONSTMT><SOURCEDESC><BIBLFULL><TITLESTMT><TITLE>Merlin : or the early History of King Arthur : a prose romance</TITLE><EDITOR>Henry B. Wheatley</EDITOR></TITLESTMT><PUBLICATIONSTMT><DISTRIBUTOR>Early English Text Society</DISTRIBUTOR><PUBLISHER>Kegan, Paul, Trench, Trübner, &amp; Co.</PUBLISHER><PUBPLACE>London</PUBPLACE></PUBLICATIONSTMT><SERIESSTMT><TITLE>Early English Text Society (Series). Original series</TITLE><NUM>10, 112</NUM></SERIESSTMT><NOTESSTMT><NOTE>Call no.: 820.6 E13 no.10, 112 1969</NOTE><NOTE>Derived from: The unique MS. in The University Library, Cambridge</NOTE></NOTESSTMT></BIBLFULL></SOURCEDESC></FILEDESC>
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<P>Front matter from the printed edition as well as the editorial notes from print not included. The French text at the end of the manuscipt, pp. 700-701 (vol. 2) is also not included.</P>
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<TEXT>
<BODY><HEAD><PB REF="" N="1" ID="pb.1"/>
The Romance of Merlin.</HEAD>
<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.1">
<HEAD> CHAPTER I. 
<LB/> CONSULTATION OF DEVILS, AND BIRTH OF MERLIN.</HEAD><MILESTONE N="1a" UNIT="folio"/>
<P>Fvll wrothe and angry was the Deuell, whan that oure lorde
hadde ben in helle, and had take oute Adam and Eve, and
other at his plesier; and whan the fendes sien that, they hadden
right grete feer and gret merveile; thei assembleden to-gedir,
and seiden, "What is he this thus vs supprisith and
distroyeth, in so moche that our strengthes ne nought ellis that we
haue may nought with-holde hym, nor again hym stonde in no
diffence; but that he doth all that hym lyketh, we ne trowe not
that eny man myght be bore of woman, but that he sholde ben
oures, and he that thus vs distroyeth, how is he born in whom we
<UNCLEAR>did</UNCLEAR> knowe non erthely delyte."  Than ansuerde anothir fende
and seide, "He this hath distroyed that which we wende sholde
haue be mooste oure a-vaile.  Remembre ye not how the prophetes
seiden, how that god shulde come in to erthe for to saue the
synners of Adam and Eve, and we yeden bysily a-boute theym
that so seiden, and dide them moste turment of eny othir pepill,
and it semed by their <UNCLEAR>feire</UNCLEAR> semblant, that it greved hem but
litill or nought, but they comforted hem that weren synners, and
seide that oon sholde come, which sholde delyuer hem out of
tharldome and disese.


<PB REF="" N="2" ID="pb.2"/>
</P>
<P>  So longe haue thei spoken of hym, that now is he comen,
and hath taken from vs tham, that non othir ne myght us
bereve; ye knoweth well that he maketh hem to ben waisshen
in a water in the name of the fader, sone, and holy goste, and
after that have we no powre vpon them, but yef they do turne
<UNCLEAR>a-gain</UNCLEAR> to vs by their euell werkis.  In this wise hath he putt
down oure power, and yet more-ouer ffor hath his mynystres lefte
in erthe that dayly hem saueth from vs, thowȝ they haue don
neuer so many of oure werkes, yef they will repent and for-sake
their myslyvinge, and do as they teche hem that ben for the
grete loue he hadde to man and gret tendirnesse, whan for to
saue man he wolde come down in to erthe to be born of a
woman, and we yede and <UNCLEAR>assaied</UNCLEAR> hym in alle the maners that
we cowden, and when we hadde assaied hym, and we dyd that
<UNCLEAR>synne</UNCLEAR> nought fynde in hym, yet wolde he dye for to saue
man, fful moche lovede he man when he w<UNCLEAR>olde</UNCLEAR> suffer so
grete peyne for to haue hym a-gein, and to take hym from oure
power.  Thanne moche oughte we for to laboure with grete
besynesse to gete agayn that he hath us be-raffte in soche wyse,
that they may not repente ne speke with hem that myght gete
hem pardon, and turne hem agayn ffrom our power."  In this
maner the fendes helden a gret conseill, and seide that tho that
hadde greued hem moste that were they that tolde tydinges of
his comyng in to erthe, and they haue don vs gret damage and
hynderyng, and the more they tolde of his comyng, the more
we dide hem anger and disese, and as vs semeth he hasted hym
the <CHOICE><CORR>rather</CORR><SIC>raher</SIC></CHOICE> to come for to delyuer them from our daunger.  <UNCLEAR>But</UNCLEAR>  
how myght we haue a man of oure kynde that myght speke and
haue oure connynge and <UNCLEAR>maystrie</UNCLEAR> worke, and haue the
knowleche as we haue of thinges that be don and seide, and of
thynges that be past, and that he myght be in erthe conuersant
with these other, for witeth it wele that soche on myght moche
helpe us to be-gile his pepill, like as the prophetes be-giled us,
and tolden that we trowe neuer myght haue ben.  In the same


<PB REF="" N="3" ID="pb.3"/>

wise sholde sithe oon telle alle thynges that were don and
saide <MILESTONE N="1b" UNIT="folio"/>bothe of that is passed and of thynges that is to come,
and be that sholde he be bileved of moche peple.  Than thei
ansuerde alle and seiden, that wele hadde he sped that soche a
man myght gete, for he sholde be beleved of all thinges that
he seide.  Than ansuerde a-nothir fende and seide, "I have
power for to sowe seede in woman, and make her conceyve, and
I have oon that doth all that euer I wille; and thus vndirtoke he
this enterprise to gete a man that sholde do their werkes after
their alle entente.  Ffull grete foles were thei whan they wende
that oure lorde sholde haue no knowynge of their ordenaunce,
and enquire thus they departed from this conseille and were
assented to this conclusion, and this feende that toke this
enterprise ne taried not, but in al the haste that he myght, he come
ther, as this woman was that wrought all his wille; and when
he com their he fonde here at his likynge, whiche yaf to hym
all her part of that she hadde, and here lord was right a ryiche
man.</P>
<P>  This riche man hadde grete plente of bestes and of othir
richesse, and also he had thre doughters and a sone by
this woman in whom the deuell hadde so grete power.  This
feende ne forgat not as he that not elles desired but hir to
disceyve and to shame; and he axed of hir, "How myght I,"
quod he, "gete thy lord on my part;" and she ansuerde that in
no maner wise lesse than he were wratthed; "and," quod she,
"thow maist sone make hym wrothe, for he is right hasty."
Than wente this deuell to this gode mannes bestes, and kylled
of hem grete plente; and when the heirdes sye their bestes so
deyen in the feldes, thei merveyled gretly, and tolde their
maister the mervelle of the moreyn, that was fallen a-monge the
bestes.  Whan the gode man herde this he gan to wratthe, and
merveyled gretly what was cause of the moreyn; and axed of
the heirdes.  Quod he, "Know ye ought what thise bestes eiled
thus for to dye?"  And they ansuerde "Nay;" and so it passed
forth all that tyme, and anon as the feende sye that the gode
man was wroth for so litill, he dought that yef he dide hym


<PB REF="" N="4" ID="pb.4"/>

gretter damage, that he<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.1">The word "he" is inserted above the line.</NOTE> wolde be moche wrother, and so myght
he haue hym the more atte his wille, and so he yede to x gode
horse whiche that the gode man hadde, and slowe hem alle in a
nyght.  And when the gode man sye his gode go to so gret
myschef, he gan to be angry, and seide a worde of grete ire, for
he yaf to the deuell all the remenant that was lefte.</P>
<P>  And whan the deuell knewe that <ADD>he</ADD> hadde youed hym soche
a yefte, he was right glad, and hasted hym to do hym
more damage, for he spared nothynge that he myght devoure;
and than was the gode man sorowfull and angry, and fled
company of peple for hevynesse, that he was moche soell by hym
self; and than wiste the deuell wele that he shulde haue his will
fro thens-forth.  Thanne come this feende to a feire sone that
he hadde, and hym straungeled in his bedde slepynge, so that on
the morowe he was founden dede.  Than this gode man ferde
as a man out of reson for hevinesse and sorowe that he hadde
loste so his sone, and fill in dispeire; and when the feende sye
this he was glad, for than he hadde all his desier with-oute
recouerer.  <MILESTONE N="2a" UNIT="folio"/>Than wente he to the woman that hadde made hym
all to wynne, and made her go up on a grete huch and tye a
corde a-boute a perche, and knyt it a-boute her nekke, and made
her distende fro the huch, so that she henge her-self and was
strangelid to deth, and when the gode man saugh that he hadde
loste bothe his sone and his wif in soche manere, he made gret
doell, so that he dyed for gret sorowe and hevynesse, and thus
doth the deuell to them that he may ouercome, and soche as he
fyndeth at his wille; and when he hadde thus don he was right
glad, and devised how he myght best disceyve the thre doughtres
of this riche man whiche were lefte, and he vndir-stode wele that
he myght nat disceyve them in no manere, but yef it were with
som mans werke, where-in thei sholde haue delyte.  And he
hadde a yonge man in the town, whiche was moche disposed after
his entent, and redy to inclyne to his werkes; and so he stered
this man, that he come to the oon of these sustres, and thourgh


<PB REF="" N="5" ID="pb.5"/>

the deueles entysement, that he lay by hire.  And than was the
feende wele pleseth, and than wolde he neuer cesse till he hadde
made it openly knowen, for to make hir vtterly shamed and
stroied; ffor that tyme it was the lawe yef a woman myght be
founde in fornication that she sholde, by Iustice of the lawe, be
put to deth, but yef that she wolde abandone hir body to alle
men as a comen woman.</P>
<P>  The man fledde a-wey, and the woman was taken and ledde
be-fore the Iuges, where-of they hadde grete pite for
loue of hir fader, whiche was right a worthy man, to whom weren
falle many myshappes with-in shorte tyme, for he was oon of the
wurshipfullest men of all the contre.  Not-withstandynge they
moste do hir the lawe, and so they acorded that she shulde be
dolven in the erthe by nyght by cause of her frendes.  In the
contre was ther a gode holy man, that herde speke of this
merveyle, and he com for to speke with the tow sustres that were
lefte, and he comeforted hem gretely, and axed of hem this
aventure was be-fallen of their fadir and modir, and of hir suster,
and hire brother; and they ansuerde that thei wiste not, safe only
"that god hateth vs, and suffreth vs to have this turmente."
Quod the gode man, "Ye sey amysse, for god hateth no creature,
but is euell pleseth, whan that synners haten hym by thaire
werkes; and, ther-fore, wyte ye well that this is the
encombraunce of the deuell, and wyte ye ought, what dede your suster
hadde don, that ye haue hir loste in this wise."  And they seide,
"Nay."  Than this holy man counselled hem to be wele ware,
and kepe hem fro euell dedes, for synne draweth bothe man and
woman to myshevouse ende.  And so he taught and enformed
hem here creaunce and feith.  The elther suster vndirstode hym
wele, and gretly was plesed with his doctryne, and the holy
man lerned her to love god and drede god; and she peyned hir
gretly to do as he hir taughte, and to contynue in gode
lyvinge.  And he seide to hir, "Yef ye truste that I sey vnto yow, grete
gode and comfort ye shall fynde ther-<UNCLEAR>fro</UNCLEAR>, and ye shull be my
doughter in god, and in what nede that euer ye haue I will not


<PB REF="" N="6" ID="pb.6"/>

fayle, but I will be redy to helpe yow, and counseile yow with
helpe of our lord god; and dismaye yow not in no maner, but
trust verely in god, and often repeireth to me, for I duell not fer<MILESTONE N="2b" UNIT="folio"/>
hens."  Thus this holy man counselled these sustres, and set
hem in gode wey; the eldeste yaf gode credance to this holy man,
and loved wele his blissed techynge, and his gode tales that he
tolde hem euery day.  When the deuell sye this, he was euell
plesed ther-with, and hadde grete fere to lese his labour aboute
them, and he dought that he myght not wynne hem by felschip
of man, with-oute counseille of some woman; and he hadde oon in
the town that ofte hadde don his wille.  This woman the deuell
brought to these sustres, and she toke the yonger in counseill
and frayned her of many dyuerse thynges, and of the maner of
hir lyuynge.  Quod she, "How doth youre suster? loueth she
yow wele as she ought to do?"  Quod the mayden, "My suster
is so hevy and pensif of oure mys-happes that right seilden she
maketh eny mery chere to me, ne to noon other, and that maketh
an holy man that ofte speketh with hire, that she doth nothynge
but as he will."  "Ha!" quod she, "euell spende ye youre
tyme of that feire body that ye haue, that never shull haue ioye
while ye be in her company."  "Now, feire love," quod she,
"yef ye knewe what ioye other women haue ye sholde preyse
litill alle othir thynges; ffor we haue soche ioye when we be in
company of men that we loven, that yef we hadde but a mossell
brede, we haue more ioye and delyte than ye haue with alle the
delicatys of the worlde.  Fye! what ioye hath a woman
with-oute man?  Ffeire love, this I sey for yow that knowen not
what it is to be in mannes company, and I will telle you why:
youre suster is elder than ye, and so she wolde alwey holde yow
as her sogect, so that she myght have all, and so shold ye loose
youre tyme, and the ioye of youre feyre body."  And answerde,
"How shulde I be so hardy to do as ye telle me, ffor my suster
ther-fore was putte to deth."  Quod this othir, "Youre suster dede
like a fooll, and hadde but sympell counseill, but yef ye will do
after me, ye shall haue all the delyte of youre body with-oute
eny lettynge."  "I wote now," quod she, "ne I dar no more


<PB REF="" N="7" ID="pb.7"/>

speke with you at this tyme, for my suster; but go youre wey,
and anothir tyme, we shall speke more at leyser."  And when
the Deuell herde this he was glad, and wiste wele he sholde haue
alle his will.  And when this woman was goon, the mayden
be-thought her often-tymes of that she hadde <CHOICE><CORR>seyde</CORR><SIC>seyde seyde</SIC></CHOICE> vnto hire;
and when the deuell sye that she spak ofte sythes so to hir-self
a-lone, he put in hir mynde all that he myght, so that on
a nyght she be-heilde hir fayre body, and seyde to hir-self,
"Truly," quod she, "the gode woman that spake with me seyde
full trewe."</P>
<P>  Tho it happed on a day after that, she sente after this woman,
and she com.  "Truly," quod she, "ye seyde me soth
that my suster set but lytill prise of me."  And she ansuerde
that, "I wist it wele, and yef will she haue lesse, so she haue hir
owne delyte, and we be made for noon other cause, but for to
haue counfort and ioye of mannes felishep."  And the mayde
sede, "I wolde gladly, yef I sholde not be deed ther-fore."  And
the olde woman seyde to hir, "Yef ye do as folily, as your syster
dede, ye sholde be deed therfore, but I shall telle yow how ye
shull do."  Quod the mayden, "Telle on, and I will do after
techynge."  Quod this othir, "Ye shall abandon yow to alle men,
and sey ye will no longer a-byde with youre suster, and thus
shall ye haue all youre luste of youre body, ne neuer shul ye
here Iustice that will speke therof to let yow; <MILESTONE N="3a" UNIT="folio"/>and thus shall
ye be oute of all daunger, and euery worthy man will be glad to
haue you for youre grete herytage."  And the mayden graunted
to do in this manere, and thus she departed from hire suster, and
abandoned hire body to alle men, be the conseill of this olde
woman, where-of the devell was right gladde that he hadde
brought this a-bouten.</P>
<P>  And when the elder mayden sye that hir suster was thus gon,
she yede anoon to the holy man that hadde taught hir the
right creaunce, full hevy and pensif, makynge grete doell and sorow;
and when this godeman sye her so pensif he hadde grete pitee,


<PB REF="" N="8" ID="pb.8"/>

and seyde to hir, "Blesse the and comaunde the to god, for I se
the gretly affraied."  And she ansuerde, "I have grete cause,
for I haue loste my suster, that is be-come a comyn woman."
And when the gode man herde this he was gretly astonyd, and
seide, "The feende is full besy a-bowte yow, which will not
cesse till he have disseyved the; but god be thyn helpe!"
"A sir," quod she, "how may I kepe me from his disceytis?
for ther is no thynge that I have so grete feire of, as that he
sholde have ouer me eny power."  Quod the holy man, "Yef
thow wilte do after my counsell, he shall never disceyve the."
"Certeyn," quod she, "I will gladly do your counsell."
"Than," quod he, "belevest thow not in the fadir, sone, and holy
goste, and that these thre persones be oon god in trynite, and
that god com down in to erthe, and be-com man for the
redempcion of mannes sowle, of hem that in hym stadfastly beleve, and
kepe his comaundemente."  And she seide, "Right as ye sey, I
beleve; and so, veryly, I pray to god be my socoure and helpe."
"Now than," quod he, "I pray the, and comaunde that thow
kepe the fro fallynge in to grete ire or wrath, for in that the
feende repaireth moste, bothe in man and woman, namly, when
they be in grete ire and comberaunce; that thow haste yelde the
in the graces of oure lorde and alle seyntis; and at alle tymes
thow goist to bedde, or arysist, blisse the in the name of the
fader, sone, and holy goste, and make upon the in the name of
the crosse, on the which he suffred his passion to bye vs fro the
peynes of helle.  And yef thow do thus, thow shalt have no
drede of the feendes power.  And where that thow slepest on
nyght, loke that thow have lyght, ffor the deuell hatyth all
clerenesse and lyght, and gladly will not com there."</P>
<P>  Thus taught the holy man the mayden, which hadde grete
drede of the deueles engynes; and so she returned hom
a-geyn to her house, full stabill in the feith, and full humble to god,
and to the pore peple which comen vnto hir, and seiden, "Trewly,
it is no wonder though ye be gretely affraied of the turment, that
is falle of youre fader, and of youre moder, and youre broder and
sustres, that thus be myscheved; but now taketh gode counsell,

<PB REF="" N="9" ID="pb.9"/>

and be of gode comfort, for ye ar right ryche, and have grete
herytage; wherfore euery worthy man will be glad to have yow."
And she ansuerde a-geyn, and seide, "Oure lorde kepe me in his
servyse, as he knoweth it is grete nede."  Thus endured she
wele two yere, that the feende myght neuer be-gyle her, ne
neuer myght make her do euell werke; and he sye wele, that he
ne cowde nat make her lese that the holy man hadde hir lerned,
lesse than she were made wroth.  Than made he hir suster come
on a saterday, at even, to do hir more turment and anger, to loke
yef he might gete hir in that manere.  And when hir suster com,
it was fer with-ynne nyght; and she brought with her a grete
hepe of harlotys.  And when she sye her suster so come she was
angry, and seide vnto here, "Ffeire suster," quod she, "as longe
as ye caste yow to lede soche lyf, ye ought not to <MILESTONE N="3b" UNIT="folio"/>come in this
place, for ye make me haue grete blame, wherof I have lityll
nede."  And she ansuerde a-geyn, as a woman that the feende
was with-ynne, and seyde that she wolde yet do worse, and
seide that she was more euell than she, and bar hir on-honde
that she loved the holy man paramours, and yef it were knowen
the trouth that she worthy to be distroid.  And when her
suster herde this, she griped hir be the shulders, and put hir owt
at the dore; and the tother, to a-uenge hir, made the harlotys
that come with hir to kach her suster, and bete her right euell;
so with grete peyne she aschaped fro them, and fledde in to her
chamber, and shet her dore, and barred hit ffrom her, and the
harlottis that were come with her.  And she a-bode in her
chamber alone, and leyde her down on her bedde all clothed, and
wepte tendirly for sorowe; and when the deuell sye that she was
angry, and sole by her-self, and that it was derke, he was
gladde.  And she remembred the myschef of hir fader and moder, and
brother and susters, and sore wepte when she hadde thought on
all parteis; and so ther was grete sorowe and grete ire at hir
herte.  And when the feende sye that she hadde foryete that the
holy man hadde taught her, he thought that she stode owte of
goddes grace, and of her maister; "and now might I well put
oure man in hir."  And this feende, that hadde power to make


<PB REF="" N="10" ID="pb.10"/>

woman conceyve, was all redy, and lay by hir, while she was
slepynge; and when she hadde concayved, she awaked, and in
her wakyng, she thought on the holy man, and ther-with she
blissed here, and seide, "Seynt Mary, what is me be-falle, ffor I
am disceyved sith I leyde me here.  Now, gracyouse lady, pray
vnto <UNCLEAR>thi dere</UNCLEAR> sone that <UNCLEAR>he haue</UNCLEAR> mercy upon me, and diffende
my body fro turment of the enmy."  And than she <UNCLEAR>aros, and
sought aboute</UNCLEAR> after hym that sholde haue don that dede, for she
wende to haue founde hym <UNCLEAR> thar-ynne, and she</UNCLEAR> ran to the dore,
and fonde it shet in the same maner as she had barred it her self,
and than she sought ouer all in her <UNCLEAR> chamber</UNCLEAR>, but nought cowde
she fynde.  Than she demed that it was the enmy that so hadde
her begiled, and than she made full grete sorowe, and cryde
moche vpon oure lorde, prayinge hym, that he wolde not suffer
her to be shamed here in this w<UNCLEAR>orlde</UNCLEAR>.  And anoon as it was day,
the feende led a-way this othir suster, for she hadde fully espleyted
his purpos.  And when they were alle passed, she com owte of
hir chamber sorowfull and pensif, and called after her seruaunt
and a-noon sente after two women; and when they were come,
anoon she wente to hir confessour.  And the gode man sye her
comynge, he seide, "Thowe hest som grete nede, for I se the
gretly affraied."  And she answerde, "I ought wele to be
affrayed, for it betyde to me that neuer fill to <UNCLEAR>eny</UNCLEAR> woman
saf oonly to me; and therfore I come to seche youre counseill,
for I haue herde yow saye, that ther was neuere creature that
dede so grete offence that yef he were confessed and repentant,
and that he wolde resceyve penance for his trespasse, that he
sholde <UNCLEAR>haue</UNCLEAR> anoon foryevenesse.  Sir, I have synned, and wete
ye wele I am disceyved be the deuell."  <UNCLEAR>Than</UNCLEAR> she tolde how
hire <UNCLEAR>suster</UNCLEAR> com to hir howse, and all, gynnynge and ende as ye
haue herde, and how she fill on slepe <UNCLEAR>on her</UNCLEAR> bedde, and hir dore
shette and barred, and how hir grete <UNCLEAR>sorowe made hir</UNCLEAR> for-yete
to blisse hir; and, quod she, "When I a-woke I fonde me
diffoulde, and my maidenhede loste.  Sir, I sought thourgh my


<PB REF="" N="11" ID="pb.11"/>

chamber, and fonde my dor shet, ne I cowde fynde no lyvinge
creature, that eny suche thynge myght haue don to me; for in
<UNCLEAR>this</UNCLEAR> <MILESTONE N="4a" UNIT="folio"/>wyse I have synned, wherfore I crye god mercy, and yow,
and that I may have soche penance, that I lese not the lif
everlastynge."  The holy man lestned well to all hir confession, but
he yaf no grete credence to that she seide, for he herde neuer
be-fore of no soche thynge; and therfore he seyde unto hir, quod
he, "Thow art fulle of the deuell; how sholde I absoyle the, or
enioyne the penance for thynges which I wene thou lyest veryly,
for never was ther woman that loste her maiden-hede, but she
wiste by whom and how, or, at the leste, that she myght fele the
man that dide the dede; and thow woldiste make me bileve this
merveyle, that thow seyest in this wyse is the be-falle."  And
she ansuerde, "So, verily, god be my socoure in my moste nede
as I have seide trouth."  The holy man seide, "Yef it be so as
thow haste seyde unto me, it shall verily be knowe both to the,
and to me with-ynne shorte tyme.  Thow hast broken the
obedyence that I comaunded the, therfore I charge the in penaunce
that alle the saterdayes while thou lyvest, that thow ete no mete
but ones on the day.  And as touchynge the lecherye that thow
hast tolde, wher-of I can not leve the, thow oughtest to have
penaunce all thy lyf-time, yef thow wil take soche as I shall the
enioyne."  And she answerde, "Ye can not charge me with
noon but I will gladly <CHOICE><CORR>performe</CORR><SIC>perfome</SIC></CHOICE> it."  Than seyde the holy man,
"Thou comest to have counseill of holy cherche, and to the
mercy of oure lorde Jhesu Criste, that bought vs with his
precyouse blode, and with his bitter deth; and haste very
repentaunce of herte, like as thow seyest with thy mouth, and
forsakeste all lechery and synne, saf oonly that fill in thi slepynge,
fro the whiche no crature may kepe hym clene."  And she graunted
hym, with that he wolde be hir plegge be-fore god that she sholde
be saued, and that she were not dampned for that synne.</P>
<P>She toke hir penaunce soche as he enioyned her with gode
will, sore wepynge, as she that was very repentante; and
this gode man assoiled hir, and yaf hir his blissynge, and sette hir


<PB REF="" N="12" ID="pb.12"/>

ageyn in the loue of god in his beste manere, and brought her to
the haly water, and made her to drynke in the name of the
fader, sone, and holy goste, and caste of the same water vpon
her, and badde hir to thynke wele on that he hadde charged her
with.  "And alle tymes when thow haste eny nede, come to me
ageyn."  And than he be-taught hir to god; and so he put in
her penaunce, alle her gode dedes and almesse and prayers that
she sholde do.  And so returned this damsell in to her howse, and
ledde full holy lyf.  And when the deuell sye that he hadde
loste her in soche manere, that he wiste not what she dede, ne
what she seyde, he was wroth and angry.  Thus longe she abode
that the seed myght no lenger ben hid whiche she hadde in hir
body, so that her wombe gan to waxen grete, that the peple
aperceyved wele that she was with chylde, and they that were
hyr frendes, and axeden hir, be whom it was; and she
ansuerde, so god be hir helpe, she wiste not be whom it
was.  Quod they, "How may this be; have ye than hadde so many
men, that ye knowe not who is the fader?"  And she ansuerde,
"Gode lete me haue delyueraunce yef euer man, my witynge,
hadde to do with me in soche maner."  And they that this
herden blessed them for merveyle, and seyde that it myght
neuer be so, neythir of hir, ne of noon other, "but that ye hope
to excuse hym so, that hath don the dede; but truly great pite it
is of you, for as soone as the Iuges knowe ther-of, ye <MILESTONE N="4b" UNIT="folio"/>moste be
deed."  When she herde this she was sore abaisshed, and seyde,
"So veryly god make my soule safe, as I sawe hym neuer that
hath don me this, ne never I hym knewe."  And the womene
that her herde speke, helde her for a foole and vn-trewe, and
clatered it aboute, and seyden certeynly that hir lewte was foule
spente, seth it was loste in soche manere."  And when she herde
this she remembred on hir confessour, and com to hym, and tolde
as the wymen hadden seide.  The gode man sye that she was
grete with quyk childe, and merveiled gretly, and axed hir yef
she hadde wele holden hir penaunce.  "Sir," quod she, "ye,
with-oute fayle."  Quod he, "Be-fill yowe neuer this merveyle
saf ones?"  "Certes, sir," quod she, "neuer be-fore ne after."


<PB REF="" N="13" ID="pb.13"/>
</P>
<P>  And when the gode man herde this he merveyled
strongeleche, and sette the oure and the nyght in writynge,
like as she hadde tolde hym, and seide, "Be ye right syker, when
this chelde shalbe borne, I shall well knowe yef ye have made
eny gabbynge, and I have very trust in god, that yef it be as ye
have seide, ye shall not be deed ther-fore; but ye may wele haue
grete feer, for as soone as the Iuges knowe ther-of, they well
make yow to be take for couetyse of youre londes and herytage,
and do Iustice vpon yow; but when ye be taken, sende me worde,
and I shall come to helpe yow, and comforte in all that I may,
and wite well that god shall helpe yow, yef ye be soche as ye
sey."  And than he seide, "Goth hom to youre howse, and have
no drede; and, loke ye, be of gode counfort and good lyvynge,
for that ledith mane and woman to gode endynge."  And so she
departed and come to hir owne house, and ledde holyly hir lif,
til the Iuges made hir to be taken, and brought hir be-fore
them.  And anon<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.2">The word is written "a nonō."</NOTE> as she was a-rested, she lete sende after the gode
ermyte, that hadde alwey ben her counfort, and he cam in all the
haste that he myght; and when he was comene he fonde that the
Iuges hedde brought hir by-fore them.  The Iustyces clepid hym
to hem, and tolde hym the ansuere that she hadde seide hem, she
hadde never knowynge of mannes company; "and trowe ye,"
quod thei, "that eny woman myȝht haue childe with-oute
mannes company."  The gode man ansuerid and seide, I shell
not sey all that I thynke, but thus moche I sey vnto yow: yef
ye will do my counsell, ye shall not put hir to Iugement while
she is with childe, till that she be deliuerd, for the childe hath
no deth deserved."  The Iuges seiden, "We shall do as ye
counsele."  Quod the holy ermyte, "Yef ye do by my counsele
ye shall put hir in a stronge tour in gode warde, wher she shall
haue no power ouer hir-self; and with hir ye shall put two
women ffor to helpe hir at hir delyueraunce when tyme is, in
soche maner that thei may not com oute no more.  And thus
shell she be lefte tell she haue chelde, and lete hir aftar be kepte


<PB REF="" N="14" ID="pb.14"/>

tyll she be stronge to goo by her-self.  And then yef ye se none
other thyng be her then ye se now, than do the Iustice as ye
seme right.  Thus shall ye do now be my rede; <CHOICE><CORR>and yef</CORR><SIC>and yef and yef</SIC></CHOICE> ye do
othirwise I may no more."  And even as the gode man deuised,
they dede.  And so she was shet in a stronge tour, and with her
two women, the wiseste that they knewe of soche mystere, and
made hem a wyndowe to hale vpe, that hem owȝht to
have.  <MILESTONE N="5a" UNIT="folio"/>When this was don the gode man spake to hem be-nethe on the
grounde with-oute, and seyde to the damesell, "When thow haste
childe," quod he, "make it to be baptiseth as soone as thow
mayste; and when thow shalte be brought oute ageyn to
Iugement lete me have wetynge."  In this wyse abode they stille in
the tour a grete while, til that she was delyuered of a sone, as
god wolde.  And when he was born it hadde the engyne and the
witt of a feende, after the kynde of hym that be-gate hym.  But
the deuell wrought so folily, that oure lorde toke it to his owne
vse, be the very repentance of the modir, that hir put in the
mercy and ordenaunce of god and holicherche, and hilde wele the
doctryne of his mynystres; and, therfore oure lorde wolde not
lese that shulde be his.  And ther the deuell was disseyued of
his purpos, that he hadde ordeyned that childe to haue his arte
and witte to knowe alle thynges don, and seide, bothe that were
paste and that were to come.  And oure lorde, that alle thynges
knoweth, sye the repentaunce of the moder, and that it was not
her will that was so be-fellen, he wolde have hym on his parte;
neuertheles, he yaf hym fre choys to do what he wolde, for yef
he wolde he myght yelde god his parte, en to the feende his also.</P>
<P>  This was this childe born, of whom the wemen were sore
afeerde, for they sye hym more roughe than other childeren
that they had seyne, and so they shewed to the moder, and when
she it sough, she fayned her, and sayd, "This childe maketh
me to haue grete feer."  Quod the wemen, "So doth it to vs."
Quoth the moder, "Lete it be let don owte at the wyndowe that
it may be baptysed," and they dyd soo.  "What shalbe his


<PB REF="" N="15" ID="pb.15"/>

name?"  "I will," quod she, "that it haue name after my
fader."  Then they let it down by a corde owte at the wyndowe
of the tour, and cherged hem that weren be-nethe, that it shulde
be baptysed, and named after the gode man that was fader of the
modre, <CHOICE><CORR>and so it was</CORR><SIC>and so it was and so it was</SIC></CHOICE> cristened Merlyn, and was delyuered to
<CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>the the</SIC></CHOICE> women vpe to the wyndowe to the moder, and ther was
none othir women that durste norishe it but the modre, for it
was so grysly to syght, and therfore was the moder suffred to
norishe it tell it was x monthes of age, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE> than it semed
ij yere age or more; and whan it was xij monthes of age, the
women seide to the modre, "Dame, we will no lengar be here in
this case from oure frendes; we will gone owte, for we have be
here longe tyme."  Then quod she, "As sone as ye departe from
hens shall I be brought to Iugement."  Quod they, "We may
no more be here-ynne, and therefor we ne may no more do
therto."  Then she wepte and cryde hem mercy, praynge hem
to abyde a while, and they graunted hir; and as they lened
lokynge oute at the wyndowe ther as she satte sore wepynge,
toke the child in her armes, sayinge, "Feyre sone, for youre
sake shall I suffir the deth, and I haue it not deserued, for ther
is noon, saf oonly God, <CHOICE><CORR>that</CORR><SIC>that that</SIC></CHOICE> knowith the trowthe, and I may not
be byleved, wherfore I most with grete wronge be put to deth."
And as she made this lamentacion, the chede gan to be-holde hir,
and seyde, <MILESTONE N="5b" UNIT="folio"/>"Moder," quod he, "be not dismayed, for ye shull
neuer be Iuged to deth for my cause."  And when the moder
herde this ansuere she aferid, that as she sodenly made a sprynge,
the childe fill oute of hire arme and cryde.  The wemen that
were at the wyndowe wenden that she hadde ben a-boute to kylle
the childe, and sodeynly axed hir, "Whi made the childe this
shrike? wilt thow sleue it?"  And she ansuerde, "I thought it
neuer, but it was for a merveyle that it seide vnto me."  Quod
she, "It seyde I sholde neuer be deed for hym."  Than, quod
thei, "We shull heire hym sey othir thynges."  Than they toke


<PB REF="" N="16" ID="pb.16"/>

the childe and cherishid it, prayinge to speke to hem; but for
ought thei cowde do thei myght gete of hym no mo wordes,
till on a tyme the modir seyde to the wemen, quod she, "Manace
me, and sey I shalbe brente," for fayne wolde she that the wemen
herde it speke  The wemen seyde to the moder, "Truly it is
grete damage and pite that youre fayre body shalbe brent for so
foule a creature; better it were that he hadde neuer be borne."
"Certes," quod he, "falsly lyen, and that hath my moder made
yow to sey."  And when they herde this they were sore abaisshed,
and seiden, "Certes, this is no childe, but it is a deuell, who
myght this have knowen that he hath seide."  Than they axed
hym many demaundes, but he wolde speke no more, saf he seide,
"Let me be, and beth in pes, for ye ben more synfull than is my
moder."  And when they hadde herde this they hadden grete
merveyle, and seide, "This may not be kepte counseill, ne it
ought not not to be, and ther-fore we will telle it to the peple
be-nethe with-oute forth."  Tho wente they to the wyndowe and
clepeden to the peple, and tolde them this merveyle of the childe,
In so moche that these tydinges com to the Iuges, and thei hadde
ther-of grete merveile, and seide it was tyme to do Iustice vpon
the moder.  Thei sente to the baile that with-ynne xl dayes she
sholde be brought be-fore them to have her Iugement.  When
the moder of Merlin knewe that hir daye was come she hadde
grete feer, and sent worde to the gode hermyte, hir confessour.</P>
<P>  Thus she abode viij dayes or more, till the tyme com that she
sholde be brent.  Whan she remembred hir on hir deth she
made grete lamentacion for grete drede.  The childe wente
a-boute in the tour and sye his moder wepynge, and he lowgh
and was mery.  The wemen that this be-heilde seide, "Thow
thynkest full lityll on thi moders grete sorowe, that this weke
for the shall be brente."  To this worde ansuerde the childe,
"Feire moder, be not afeirde, for while I leue shall noon be so
hardy to putt yow to deth, saf oonly god that is Almyghty."
When the wemen herde this they seiden, "This childe shall ben
a wise man and a wonderfull."  And when the day com that
was sette, the wemen were taken oute of the tour, and she bar

<PB REF="" N="17" ID="pb.17"/>

hir sone in hir armes.  The Iuges were come, and toke the two
women in counseill, and axed yef it were trewe that the childe
hadde seyde soche wordes; and they seiden like as they hadden
herde.  And the Iuges seiden he moste be connynge of moche
thynge, yef he shulde saue his moder; and the gode hermyte was
come to conforte the moder; and oone of Iuges seide to hir,
"Dame, make yow redy, for ye moste suffir this martire of deth."
And she ansuerde prayinge she myght speke with hir confessour;
and they yaf hir lycence.  And they entred in to a chamber and
lefte hir childe with-oute, and the peple a-resoned it with many
questyons, but he yaf noon ansuere.  <MILESTONE N="6a" UNIT="folio"/>The moder spake with hir
confessour, pitofly wepynge; and when she hadde seyde all that
she wolde the gode man axed yef hir childe spake, and she
seide, "Ye."  "Certes," quod the gode man, "therof shall
come merveiles."  Than thei come oute be-fore the Iuges; the
damsell was in hir smok, with a mantill a-bouten hir, and fonde
hir son with-oute the chamber, and toke hym in her armes, and
stode still.  And the Iuges examyned hyr who was the fader of
the childe; and she ansuerde, "I knowe well I go to my deth,
and so god have mercy and pyte on my soule, as I never knewe
the fader, ne neuer hym saugh, ne neuer erthely man hadde I of
knowleche, wherthourgh I sholde have childe."  The Iuges seide,
"We may neuere bileve that this be trewe that thow seiste."
Than the Iuges drough hem apart, and cleped these other wemen,
and seide, "Dames, be-fill it euer to yow, or to eny othir woman
that ye herde of speke, that myght have childe with-owte carnall
knowynge of man."  And those seyde, "With-oute manes feliship
myght no woman have chylde."  Than the Iuge turned to this
damesell, and tolde how those wemen hadde seide, "and,
therfore, it is grete reson that we do Iustice vpon yow."  Then
Merlyn sprong oute of his mothers <CHOICE><CORR>arm</CORR><SIC>pnd</SIC></CHOICE> angrye, and saide <CHOICE><CORR>to</CORR><SIC>to to</SIC></CHOICE> the Iuge, "It is no right that she be deed, for she hath it not
deserued; and yf other shulde be don Iustice vpon all tho that don
avouterye be-syde ther housbands, many there were werthy to be


<PB REF="" N="18" ID="pb.18"/>

brent.  And as touchynge this that is putte on my moder, she is
nothynge gilty; reinde of that gode man yef ye charge hym to say
the trouthe."  Then the Iuges examyned the gode hermyte yef
it were so, and he seide, "Ye," as by his wetynge, and he told
hem how she was begiled in her slepe, and that she neuer sedd
hym that dide the deed, "ne I never hym sygh, wherfore al that
aperteyneth to god I take vpon me for hir; nevertheles, I herde
never of no soche merveyle, safe only of this."  Than seide the
child, "Ye have the houre and the tyme writen that I was
ynne conceyved, and ther-by may you knowe yef my mother sey
troath."  The gode man ansuerde, "Thow seist soth, ne I wot
not how thow myght knowe this."  Than were the women cleped
which tolde the hour of the childes berthe, and so was the gode
mannes writyng fonde trewe; and the Iuge seide, "For al that she
sholde not go quyte."</P>
<P>  Thane wrathed the childe, and saide, "I know better my
fader than thov doste thyne, and thy moder wiste beter
whom is thy fader, than my moder knoheth mynne."  Thane
wrathed the Iuge, and seide, "Yef thow censt ought say of my
moder, sey on."  Quoth the child, "I cowde sey so moche be
thy moder, that she hath beter deserved the deth then hath my
moder, therfore yef that thove me; leet my moder be in pese that
natht knoweth of that thow puttest on hir in thy Inngendure."
Tho gan the Iuge to be right wrath, and seyd, "Yef thow canste
do so, then haste reserwed thy moder fro brennynge; but, wyt
thow well, yef thow canste not prewe this vpon hir, I shall
brenne bothe the and thy moder to-gedere."  "That shall neuer
be while I lyfe," quoth Merlyn, "that thow shall have no
powre overene my moder."  This was Merlynes pletere for his
moder.</P>
<P>  <MILESTONE N="6b" UNIT="folio"/>Tho was respite take to the ve day, and the Iuge lete sende
after his moder; and of many folke was the childe
aresonde of diuirse thynge, and of his moder also; but in alle the
v. dayes myght ne creature gete of no worde.  And when the
Iuges moder was come, Merlyn and his moder were brought owte
of prison, and ledde be-fore peple.  Tho seide the Iuge to


<PB REF="" N="19" ID="pb.19"/>

Merlyn, "Lo, here is my moder on whom thow most sey that
that thow hast promysed."  Tho ansuerde, "Thow art not so
wyse as thow weneste; go, brynge thy moder in to a prevy
chamber, and take with yow of youre frendes that ye beste
truste.  And I shall the counseill of my moder, that is, god
almyghty and hir confessour."  Tho was the Iuge so a-baisshed
that vnethe cowde he ansuere eny worde; but he understode that
the chylde spake wisely.  And Merlyn axed alle the peple, "Yef
I delyuer my moder fro this Iuge, shall eny other do her
duresse?"  And they seiden all, "Nay."  When they weren in
the chamber the Iuge axed of Merlyn, "Now sey of my moder
that thow owest to sey, wherby thy moder may be quyte."  The
chylde ansuerde, "I shall neuer sey thynge of thy moder
wherefore my moder ought to be quyte, for she hath no thynge
aguylte, ne I will in no maner diffende my moder a-geyn right;
but I will saue goddis right and hirs; and yef thow do wisely
lete my moder be in pees, and reste with-oute more, <SUPPLIED>and</SUPPLIED> I shall
lete youres."  "So shalte thow nought escape," quod the
Iuge.  <CHOICE><CORR>Quod</CORR><SIC>Qnod</SIC></CHOICE> Merlyn, "Thow haste quyte clayned my moder, yef I may
hir deffende in this maner."  Quod the Iuge, "It is soth."
"Than accusest my moder," quod merlyn, "be-cause I am of
hir born, and she knoweth not who that me be-gat on hir; but
yef I wolde she shulde better be-knowe who be-gat me than
thow knowest who is thy fader, and thy moder can better telle the
whos sone thow art than my moder can telle me whos sone I am."
"Moder," quod the Iuge, "how is this; am I not the sone of
youre hosebonde."  "O feyre sone," quod she, "whos sone
shuldest thow be but my lordes, whiche is now deed."  "Dame,"
quod Merlyn, "thow muste sey trouthe, for elles thy sone
holdeth not my moder ne me yet quite."  Quod the Iuge, "I will
neuer entermete ther-in."  Quod Merlyn, "Thow shalt yet
fynde that thi fader is yet lyvinge by witnesse of thy moder."
The chylde be-heild the moder of the Iuge, and seyde, "Dame,
thow moste sey truthe.  Who is his fader, for it is not he that
he weneth."  The lady was al abaisshed, and axed hym "who
than?"  "Thow woste well," quod Merlyn, "that he is the

<PB REF="" N="20" ID="pb.20"/>

sone to person be this tokene, that a-noon as he hadde leye by
the, thow toldest hym thow were with childe, and he seyde
a-geyn that thow sholdest neuer be with childe by hym, and that
seyde he for feer, leste thow shuldest have leyen by eny other
man; and, therefore, lest he not, but he putte in writynge alle
the tymes that he lay by the.  And that tyme thyn hosbonde
and thow were at debate; and with-in shorte tyme thow toldest
the person that thow were euel ther-on, for thow wast with
childe with hym.  Is not this trewe? but yef thou knowliche
the soth I will other sey werse."  The Iuge axed of his moder
"Is this trewe?"  And she seide, "Feire sone, levest thou this
deuell."  Than seide <MILESTONE N="7a" UNIT="folio"/>Merlyn, "When thow knewe verily that
thow were with childe, thow purchacest a-corde be-twene the
and thi husbonde, by mene of the person hym-self, for to hyde
youre counseill; and this lif leddest longe after, and yet thow
doest.  And that same nyght, when thow sholde come
hiderwarde, layes thow by hym, and he brought the on wey
hiderwarde a grete part, and seide, 'Thynke to do and to sey as my
sone will.'"</P>
<P>  When the Iuges moder herde this that he so spake, and wiste
wele he seyde soth in all thinges, she was sore distraught,
and sye wele she moste be-knowe the trouthe; and hir sone be-heilde
hir and seide, "Feire moder, who-euer by my fader, I am youre sone,
and as youre sone I will do; sey me trouthe of that he this hath
seyde."  "Now, feire sone," quod she, "I cry yow mercy, for
that he hath seide it is trewe."  Quod the Iuge, "This childe
soth seide when he seyde that he knewe beter his fader than I
dede myn, and therefore it is no reson I do Iustise on his moder;
but for godes sake and for my worship," quo he to Merlyn, "telle
me who is thy fader."  And he ansuerde, "I shall rather telle
the for thy love than for thy force.  I will that thow wyte
verily that I am the sone of the enmy that begiled my moder
with engyn, and their repair is in the air.  And wite well that I
have their witte and connynge and mynde.  And by this I knowe
thi moders werkes, for I knowe alle thynges that be don or seyde
and tho be passed.  And oure lorde that wolde I sholde be saued,


<PB REF="" N="21" ID="pb.21"/>

and be on his part a-geyn my nature, for the love of my moder,
that bothe with body and herte dide trewe penaunce that this
gode man charged hir with, by vertu of the auctorite that he
hath of the chirche, so that I knowe thynges that be for to
come a grete partye, and that may ye knowe be that I shall sey
yow."  Than he toke the Iuge a-part, and said, "Thi moder will
a-noon go telle hym that the by-gat all that I have seide, and
when he hereth this he will fle for feer of the, and the deuell,
whom he hath euer servid, shall lede hym to a water ther to
drowne hym-self; and so mayste thow prove that I knowe thynges
that be to come."  "Yef this be so," quod the Iuge, "neuer
shall I mystrowe the."</P>
<P>Thus departed this counsell and come be-fore the peple, and
the Iuge seide well he hadde delyuered his moder fro
brennynge be gode reson.  And be it well knowe to yow alle that
neuer was seyen so wyse a man.  And they ansuerde, "Blessed
be oure lorde that she is quyt fro the deth."  Thus delyuerid
Merlyn his moder, and a-bode with the Iuge, and the Iuge sente
iij men with his moder to witte yef it were trewe that the childe
hadde seyde; and a-noon as the Iuges moder was com hom she tolde
the person the merveyle that she hadde herde.  And when herde
that, he was so astonyed that he kowde ansuere no worde,
supposynge that a-noon as the Iuge were come he wolde sle hym, and
so he spedde hym oute of the town till he com to a ryver, and
seyde to hym-self that better it were ther to drowne hym-self
than the Iuge sholde hym shamfully do hym to deth be-fore the
peple.  Thus ledde hym the devell that he hadde serued, that he
hadde lepte in to the ryver and drowned hym-self.  And that
saw they that were sent with the lady.  And when they were
returned they tolde the Iuge, and hadde grete merveyle, and
seyde vnto Merlyn this thynge, and Merlyn lowgh.  "I pray
the," quod he, "tellith to Blase my moders confessour."  The
Iuge tolde the gode man the merveyle that was be-falle of the
person.  Than wente Merlyn and his moder, <MILESTONE N="7b" UNIT="folio"/>and Blase and the
Iuge where as they liked.  This Blase was a nobill clerk and
subtile, and herde Merlyn speke sotilly as of his age, as he that


<PB REF="" N="22" ID="pb.22"/>

was but two yere olde and an half, and he merveylede gretely
where-of his grete wytte myght come, and he assaide Merlyn in
many maners; and Merlyn seyde, "The more thow assayest me
the more shalt thow fynde; but do and beleve that I shall sey,
and I shall lyghtly teche the to haue the love of Ihesu Cryste
and the lyf euer-lastynge."  Blase ansuerde, "I have herde the
sey, and I leve well that thow art the sone of the Deuell;
wherefore I doute the sore, lest thow me disceyve and be-gyle."  "Hit
is a custome," quod Merlyn, "that alle shrewed hertys gon in
alle their afferes, as well the euell as the gode, euen as thow
hast herde me sey that I was conceyved of the deuell, so haste
thow herde me sey that god hath yove me mynde to knowe
thynges that be to come; and wyte thow well that it is godes
will that I sholde knowe it, for he wolde that the deuell shold lese
his part in me; but I have not loste the knowynge of here engynes,
but I holde of hem that I ought to conne; but they ne shole
therby take profyte, for they haue fro henes-forth loste ther
trauayle, for they putt me in so digne a vessell, the whiche ne
ought not to be theirs; but yef they hadden putt me in an euell
woman I sholde haue hadde no power to have knowen what god
had I be; therfore leve that I sey vnto the.  And I shall telle
the soche thynges that thow woldest trowe no creature myght
sey vnto the; and therfore make a boke, and alle tho thate this
boke shul se, sholde the rather kepe hem from synne."  Blase
ansuerde and seide, "The boke I will gladly make; but I coniure
the in the name of the fader, sone, and holy goste that thow
have no power me to be-gyle, ne to make me do soche thynge
that god sholde with be displesed."  "Alle these thynges,"
quod Merlyn, "ne mowe the hynder in body, ne in sowle, for
never shall I make the do thynge that shalbe ageyn the volente
of oure lord Ihesu Cryste."  "Than sey what thow wilt, and fro
hens-forth I will do it gladly."  Quod he, "Gete ynke and
parchemyn, and all that longeth to writynge, and than I will
telle the."</P>
<P>  Blase sought all that hym mystered to write with, and when
he was all redy, Merlyn be-gan to telle the lovynge of Ihesu

<PB REF="" N="23" ID="pb.23"/>

Criste, and of Iosep Abaramathie, like as they hadden ben of the
slayn; and of Pieron, and of othir felowes like as they weren
departed, and the fynyshment of Ioseph and of alle other.  And
after he tolde hym that whan alle thise thynges were don, how
the deuelles toke theire counseile of that they hadde loste their
power that they were wonte to haue over man <SUPPLIED>and</SUPPLIED> woman, and
how the prophetes hadden hyndred here purpos, and how they
were acorded to purchase a man, that sholde have their witte
and mynde to disceyve the peple.  And thow hast herde be my
moder, and also be other, the trauayle that they hadden to
begete me; but through theire foly, they alle loste their trauayle."</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.2">
<HEAD> CHAPTER II. 
<LB/> KING VORTIGER AND HIS TOWER.</HEAD>
<P>  Thus devised Merlyn this boke, and made Blase to write it,
which hadde ther-of so grete merveile that he wolde not
telle it to no persone, and alwey hym thought that <MILESTONE N="8a" UNIT="folio"/>his tales weren gode, and therfore he herkened hem gladly.  In the
menetyme that they entended a-boute this mater, come Merlyn to
Blase, and seyde, "Thow moste have grete traueyle a-boute the
makynge, and so shall I have moche more."  And Blase axed,
"How?"  Merlyn seyde, "I shall be sente after to seche oute
of the weste, and they that shall come to seche me, have graunted
their lorde that they shull me sle, but whan thei come and here
me speke they shull have no will me to sle.  And I shall go
with hem; and thow shalt go in to that partyes, where they be
that have the holy vessell.  And euer here-after shall thy boke
gladly be herde, and he that will knowe the lyf of kynges
whiche were in the grete Bretayne be-fore that cristendom come,
be-holde the story of Bretons.  That is a boke that maister
Martyn traunslated oute of latyn, but heire rested this
matere.  And turneth to the storye of Loth, a crysten kynge in Bretayne,<PB REF="" N="24" ID="pb.24"/>
whos name was Constance.  This Constance regned a grete tyme,
and hadde thre sones, the first hight Moyne, and the other
Pendragon, and the thirde Vter.  This Constans hadde a man in his
realme that hight Vortiger; this Vortiger was a worldly wise
man, and Constance was a man of grete age, and ended his
lif.  Tho the pepill axed who sholde be her kynge and here lorde;
they acorded to make Moyne kynge, that was eldest, for it was not
right that noon other sholde be by-fore hym.  Heir-to accorded
Vortiger hym-self, and the barons chosen Vortiger to be
stwarde.  And the hethen peple that werreden on the kynge Moyne often
sithes foughten withe the crystene.  And Vortiger dide with all
the realme his wille, that the kynge that was yonge ne hadde but
the krowne.  So hadde Vortiger the hertys of the peple, and he
knewe well that thei heilde hym worthy and wise, and lyfte hym
to grete pride, for he sye ther was noon in the londe that myght
do so moche as he.  The hethen assembled a grete oste vpon
hem, and the kynge com to Vortiger, and seide, "Gode frende,
helpe to diffende the lande, for I and alle the peple be at thy
comaundement."  And Vortiger seyde, "Sir, ther is moche
peple in youre londe that me haten, therfore lete them helpe yow,
for I will not entermete me ther-of.</P>
<P>  When the kynge and thise other sye that ther was noon helpe
in hym, ne socour, they returned, and arayed hem, and
made hem redy to fyght, but they were disconfited of the hethen
peple; and than they returned, and complayned here grete losse,
and seyden yef Vortiger hadde be ther, they hadde not so
myshapped.  So be-gan the peple to hate the kynge.  Thus it indured
longe tyme, tyll that the kynge was holden a cowarde; and alle
the barons seiden thei wolde no longer suffer hym to be
kynge.  Than come they to Vortiger, and seide, "Sir, we ben kyngeles,
for he that we have is nought worth; for goddes sake take
it upon yow, and mayntene vs, for ther is noon in this londe
that may so well as ye."  And he ansuerde, "I may not, ne I
ought not to do while the kynge leveth."  "Truly," quod <MILESTONE N="8b" UNIT="folio"/>they,
"better it were for vs that he were ded that a-lyve."  "Yef he
were ded," quod Vortiger, "than yef ye and other wolde assent,


<PB REF="" N="25" ID="pb.25"/>

I wolde be youre kynge."  When thei herde these words,
supposed wele what he ment.  Thei toke leve of hym, and yede in
to their contreyes, and tolde their frendes the ansuere of Vortiger,
and thei seide, "It were beste for vs to sle hym, and than may
Vortiger knowe that he is kynge thourgh oure helpe, be that we
have slayn the kynge; and so shall he euer after do oure wille,
and be oure frende.  And so xij made hem redy, and wente in to
the halle ther the kynge was, and ran on hym with swerdes and
knyves, and slowe hym.  And thei fonde but ffewe that a-geyn
hem seide to make resistence.  Tho they com to Vortiger, and
seiden, "Now shalt thow be kynge, for we have slayn kynge
Moyne."  When Vortiger wiste he was ded, he made semblaunt
as he hadde be right wroth, and seide, "Full euell have ye
sped that thus have slayn youre kynge.  I rede you to fle out of
the londe for drede of the kynges peple, and me forthynketh that
ye be hider i-come."  And thei anoon departed thens, and thus was
kynge Moyn slayn.  After, the peple of the Contre assembleden,
and speken of Vortiger; and so thei acorded to haue Vortiger
kynge.  At this counseill were two noble men that kepten the
two childeren which were <CHOICE><CORR>bretheren</CORR><SIC>betheren</SIC></CHOICE> to kynge Moyn, that was
Pendragon and Vter.</P>
<P>  When these tow gode men wisten that Vortiger sholde be
kynge, thei denied wele that thourgh hym was kynge
Moyn slayne, thei toke consell be-twene hem bothe, and seide,
"Sithe that Vortiger hath do sle oure kynge, lete vs now
kepe the two children, for we loued moche the fader, that to
vs did many benefetes, and be hym haue we yet all that
we haue.  Gretly were we to blame yef we loste that we
haue so longe kepte.  Than the two gode men acorded that
they wolde fle in to a straunge contre towarde Gawle, and
lede with hem the two children that they hadde so longe tyme
kepte.  But at this tyme I will not sey where thei be come
till tyme of the tale come ther-to; but thus moche I sey yow,
that in a Citee that is called Ben-oyc,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.3">The MS. scratched here.</NOTE> that now is cleped



<PB REF="" N="26" ID="pb.26"/>

Bourges, were thei longe tyme norished.  And so may ye
vnderstande be this tale that he ought doth for a gode man,
lesith not his traueyle.</P>
<P>When Vortiger was chosen to be kynge, and he was sacred,
and lorde of londe, thei that hadde slayn the kynge
Moyne come be-fore hym.  And when he hem saugh, he made
semblaunt as he hadde neuer seye them be-fore.  And thei
reproved hym of vnkyndenesse, and seyde thourgh them he was
chosen to be kynge, for his love hadde thei slayn kynge
Moyn.  When Vortiger herde hem seye thei hadde slayn their lorde, he
comaunded to take them; and seide, "Ye have Iuged youre-self
that knowliche that ye have youre lorde slayn.  In the self
manere sholde ye do to me yef ye myght; but I shall make yow
well to be kepte."  And when thei vndirstode this, they were
sore abasshed, and seiden, "Sir, we trowed to deserue of yow
thanke."  Than Vortiger made hem to be bounde to horse tailes,
and made hem to be rente and drawen a-sonder, alle xij, while
eny hym wolde holde with other.  Thise that thus were
distrowed were come of grete lynage; they come to Vortiger, and
seide, "Thow hast don <MILESTONE N="9a" UNIT="folio"/>vs grete shame, that haste putte oure
frendes to so vileyns deth; we will never gladly do the servise."
When Vortiger herde their manasynge, he was wroth and angry,
and seide yef they spake eny more ther-of he sholde do the same
with hem.  And they hadde grete dispite of that worde, and
ansuerde as thei that litlll him douted.  "Thow manesest vs as
thow wilte, but while we have eny londe, or kyn, or frendes,
shalt thow neuer be with-oute werre; for thow art not oure lorde
be right, ne the londe is not thyn, but that thow haste a-geyn all
reson; and wite þou wele that thow shalt dye the same deth
that thow hast made hem."  And thus they departed with-oute
more at that tyme.  In this manere be-gan the euelwill be-twene
the kynge and the barons, so that thei assembled grete pepill
vpon the kynge, and did hym grete harme, and token often
prisoners, and many other prayes upon hym.  In this maner
hadde Vortiger werre longe tyme, and often tyme faught so with
them that he drof hem oute of hys londe.


<PB REF="" N="27" ID="pb.27"/>
</P>
<P>  And when he hadde dryuen hem oeut, he be-come so crewell to
his peple that thei myght no lenger hym suffer, but a-roos
a-geyn hym, and refte hym grete part of his londe, and stuffed
their forteresses.  When Vortiger sye that, he was ferde to lese his
londe.  Than he sente Messages to the Danes that were hethen peple,
and seide he wolde have pees with hem.  When thei wiste that
Vortiger disered the pees, they were gladde.  Than com Angier
to Vortiger, and serued hym trewly till he hadde made ende of
his werre.  Than Angiers spake so with Vortiger, that he toke
oone of Angiers doughters to his wyf.  Wher-thourgh the peple
seyde he loste grete parte of beleve for his wif that was not
crysten.  After all this Vortiger knewe wele that he hadde not
the hertys of the peple; and also the sones of Constance were
fledde in to straunge londes, and that thei wolde repeire as sone
as thei myght; and knewe well also yef they come a-geyn it
sholde be to hym grete damage; and therfore he thought to
make a Castell so stronge and so large, that he sholde not drede
no werre.  Tho lete he sende after alle the masons and
werkemen of his londe, and comaunded hem to make a tour, the
strengest that myght be devised in eny maner, and than did to
brynge ston and morter, and be-gan the werke.  And when thei
hadde wrought a iiij fadome of height, than it ouerthrewe, and
the mountayne that the werke was sette on gan to tremble, that
thei semed it wolde synke.  And he seide for that wolde he not
yet cesse, but make it vp a-geyn.  Thus thei wrought dyuerse
tymes, and euer it fill and trymbled.  When Vortiger sye his
werke myght not holde, he seide he sholde neuer have ioye till
he myght knowe what was the cause that it fill.  Than he sente
after alle the wisest men of his londe.  And when thei were
come he tolde hem the merveyle of his toure, and axed theyre
counseile.  And thei seide ther myght noon knowe the cause
why, but it were notable clerkes; "ffor thei can knowe many
thinges be force of clergie that we ne can no skyle on."  Than
seide Vortiger, "Me thinke ye sey soth."  He lete sende after
alle the wise clerkes of his londe, and tolde hem how his toure
fill, wher-of they gretly merveiled.  Than he toke oon of the

<PB REF="" N="28" ID="pb.28"/>

wisest of hem, and axed hym yef he trowed they cowde telle
why his werke myght not stonde.  <NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.4">Between the words <HI REND="I">stonde</HI> and <HI REND="I">Do</HI> are two marks, apparently to fill up the space of the line.</NOTE>

"Do me to wete that ye can
telle the cause why?"  And when thei herden this, they seide,
"Sir, <MILESTONE N="9b" UNIT="folio"/>we witeth not; but ther be somme that myght wele knowe
by astronomye."  "Than," quod he, " enquereth a-monge you
who will take the labour to serche oute the cause why, and lete me
wite."  Than enquered oon of a-nother yef ther were eny that
cowde of that art.  So ther were two that seide thei cowde
i-nough as hem semed.  Thise tweyne chosen to hem of hir othir
felischep, that thei were vij in nombre.  And they were brought
be-fore the kynge, and he axed, "Shull ye tell me thencheson
that my werke may not stonde, yef it may well be knowen by
eny man?"  Quod they, "We shall knewe it."  And the
kynge seyde he wolde yeve them what they wolde
desire.  Thus departed the counsell of the clerkes; and the vij a-biden
stille, that gretely payned hem to knowe how that toure myght
holde.  Gretly stodied euery clerke be hym-self, but for all their
labour thei cowde not fynde but oon thynge, and that thynge ne
heilde of nought as to the toure; till that the kynge comaunded
hem to sey that they hadde take in charge.  "Sir," quod thei,
"that ye vs axen is a grete thynge.  We moste yet haue viij
dayes of respyte."  Quod the kynge, "I will well that ye have so
longe terme; and be well ware that than ye sey me the trowthe."
Than wente the clerkes to counsell, and seide oon to anothir,
"What seme ye of this thynge that the kynge vs demaundeth."
Quod oon of hem, "Will ye do well? lete eche man by
hym-self telle me what hym semeth in this mater."  Ther-to they
accorded; than thei drowgh a-syde eche be hym-self; but thei
seiden of the tour they ne knewe nought, saf they sye a grete
merveyle, for thei saugh a childe of vij yere age, that was born
withouten fader erthly; and thus seide eche of hem.  Than seide this
other, "Cometh ageyn to-morowe alle to-geder."</P>
<P>  On the morowe, when thei were alle come be-fore hym, he
seide,  "Ye have alle seide to me oon thynge.  Ye seyen alle
<PB REF="" N="29" ID="pb.29"/>

that ye come nought se touchynge the tour, but ye syen a childe
of vij yere age, born with-oute erthely fader.  Ye seiden to me
no more, and ther is noon that ne seeth, that by that same childe
we shull alle be distroyed; and this have ye alle fro me
conseled.  Now," quod he, "yef ye will leve me, ye shal warant youre
owen lyves, and I will telle how we shull acorde alle to oon tale,
and seyn alle that this tour may not holde, but yef in the
foundacion be put the blode of this childe, and than the tour shall
stonde.  And thus lete eayche of vs sey by hym-self, so that the
kynge ne a-parceyve not; but let vs diffende the kynge, that he
se hym not quyk, but thei that shull go to seche hym brynge his
blode.  Thus may we kepe vs from him be whom we se that we
shull alle dye."  Thus ended their counseill; and come be-fore
the kynge, and seide that thei wolde not sey openly, but eche by
hym-self in counsell, "and so shull ye wite who seide beste
reson, and that the oon sholde not knowe the counsell of his
felowe."  And so the kynge examyned eche by hym-self.  When
the kynge and his <MILESTONE N="10a" UNIT="folio"/>counseill herde this merveile, thei seiden it
myght welbe yef they myght fynde a childe born that hadde no
fader, "ye have eche of yow tolde me oon tale."  "Sir," quod
thei, "yef it be not thus, doth with vs youre volente."  Than
seide the kynge that he wolde have hem well kepte till he knew
the trouthe.  And thei seide, "Sir, ne speketh nought with the
childe, but comaunde as soone as he is founden that he be slayn,
and that the bloode be brought to yow."  The kynge made hem
alle be shett in a stronge house, and made delyuere that hem
neded; and cleped certeyn gentilmen, and made hem to be
sworne to do truly his massage, and comaunded hem to seche after
a childe of the age of vij yere, whiche was born with-owte fader
erthely.  Of these gentilmen were xij; and also the kynge dide
hem to swere that whiche of hem sonneste myght fynde this
childe, a-noon with-oute tariynge he sholde it sle, and brynge
the blode of the chylde vn-to the kynge, and that thei sholde not
returne with-inne two yere, lesse than thei myght fynde the
seide childe.  Thus the kynge lete seche this childe.  The
messagers departeden two and two to-geder, and passed thourgh


<PB REF="" N="30" ID="pb.30"/>

many londes and contres in to a tyme that iiij of hem sodeynly
metten to-geder.</P>
<P>  Thus thei reden in oon company, alle iiij, till on a day that
thei passeden thourgh a feelde be-side a town where-in
were grete plente of children, that ther-in were pleyinge.  And
Merlyn, that knewe well that these iiij com to inquere after hym,
drough hym towarde oon of the richest of the company, for that
he wiste hym moste fell and hasty.  He hente his staf, and  yaf
this childe a grete buffet.  And a-noon this othir be-gan to crye
and wape, and to myssey Merlyn, and reproved hym with a lowde
voyce, and cleped hym "mys-begeten wreache and faderles."
When these messagers herden this, thei com toward the childe
that was wepynge, and axed hym whiche was he that hadde
smyten hym.  And he hem ansuerde, "It is the sone of a
woman whiche never knewe who hym be-gat, ne never man
cowde telle of his fader.  And when Merlyn herde this, he com
a-geyn them laughinge, and seide, "I am he that ye seche, and
he that ye be sworn ye sholden sle, and brynge my blode to
kynge Vortiger."  And thei herden hym thus sey, thei were sore
a-merveyled, and axeden hym, "Who hath tolde the this?"
Quod he, "I wiste it er ye were sworn."  Quod thei, "Than
moste thow come with vs."  "Nay," quod he, "I doute that ye
will me sle."  And yet he knewe well that thei hadde ther-to no
talant, but he seide that for to prove hem better.  Quod Merlyn,
"Yef ye will graunte me that ye shull not do me disese, I will
go with yow, and also telle why the tour may not stonde."  And
when thei herde that, thei were more a-baissed than
be-fore.  "Truly," quod thei, "this childe is merveilouse, and grete pite
it were hym to sle."  And eche of hem seyde that hem were
better to be forsworn than to sle this childe.  Than said Merlyn,
"Ye shull come herberewe ther as is my moder, for I may not
go with yow with-oute takynge leve of here, and also of a gode
man which is in the same place."  Thei seide, "We will go where
that thow wilte."  <MILESTONE N="10b" UNIT="folio"/>Thus brought merlyn the messagers of the
kynge to his moder place, and when Merlyn come in to the house
he comaunded that thei sholde have gode chere.  When thei were


<PB REF="" N="31" ID="pb.31"/>

alyght, he brought hem be-fore blase, and seide, "Se hem here
that I tolde sholde come to seche me to sle," and seide to them,
"I pray yow that ye sey the trouthe be-fore this gode man,
why that ye beth sente, and wite ye well yef ye gabbe
enythynge, I know it wele i-nough."  And thei ansuerde, "We
will no lesynge make."  Quod merlin to Blase, "Maister,
vnderstonde well what thei sey."  Quod the massanger, "We be with
kynge Vortiger, whiche hath be-gonne to make a stronge toure;
and when the werke of this tour is iij or iiij fadom of
height, it may not holde, but synketh in an hour all that
is wrought in iij monthis.  Wherefore the kynge is angry
and wroth, and he dide sende after clerkes to knowe the
cause that his werke may not holde."  "Ye," quod Merlin,
"but noon of the clerkes ne cowde se the cause that letted
the werke to holde; but thei sien how I was born, and how
that I myght hem distroie, and so thei dide acorde that I
sholde be slayn, and seide that the kynges werke sholde
stonde, yef he myght have the blode of the childe born
with-oute fader.  And when Vortiger herde this, he heilde this a
grete merveile, and trowed that that the clerkes seiden
trewe.  And the clerkes charged the kynge that in no manere he sholde
not se me a-lyve; but as sone as I were founde, that I sholde
with-oute respite be slain, and my blode to be brought to be
putte with the morter in the foundement of the tour, and by
that thei seiden it sholde holde.  Vortiger, by their techynge,
toke xij messagers, and made alle xij to swere that thei sholde me
sle, and bringe with hem my blode; and of these xij be heer iiij
whiche, when ye were met, passeden thourgh the feild where
childern were bourdinge, and I, that knewe ye come me for to
seche, smote oon of my felowes, for I wiste well he wolde sey of
me the werste that he knewe in his anger, and ther-fore I it
dide, that this gode man shulde fynde me trewe of that I hadde
seide."  "Now, maister," quod merlin to blase, "axe hem yef
it be so as I sey."  "Truly," seide blase, "it were grete pite
hym to sle, for yef he lyve he shalbe right wise."  "Certes,"
seide euereche of the messagers, "I hadde leuer be disherited

<PB REF="" N="32" ID="pb.32"/>

than he hadde resceyved deth thourgh me, and he hym-slef seth
that he knoweth all thynge, wote yef ther-to we have talent
or noon."</P>
<P>  Than thei cleped in a-geyn merlyn, that was gon oute at
dore; and Blase seide to hym how thei badde hym axe
yef he wiste that thei hadden talent hym to sle.  And merlyn
lowgh, and seide, "I wote well now thei be nothynge in will
ther-to."  Quod thei, "Wilt thow go with vs;" and merlin
seide, "Ye, with gode will, yef ye will promyse me truly to
brynge me be-fore the kynge, and that ye ne suffer noon other to
do me harme ne disese, er I have with hym spoken."  And thei
hym graunted.  Than seide Blase, "I se well that thow wilt
now leve me: what wilt thow that I shall do of this werke that
I haue be-gonne?"  "That shall I telle the," quod merlin;
"thow woste well that oure lorde hath yove me so moche witte
and memorye, that he that wende to be siker of me, hath failed
of his purpos, and I moste go in to that contre <MILESTONE N="11a" UNIT="folio"/>ffro whiche
these be come to fecche me.  And ther shall I be the beste
beleved man that euer was, <CHOICE><CORR>sef</CORR><SIC>ef</SIC></CHOICE> all only god that is Almyghty;
and thow shalt come thider, to make an ende of the werke.  But
thow ne shalt not come with me, but by thy self, and axe after a
londe that is cleped Northumbirlonde.  And that contre is full of
grete foreste, and full wylde to them of the selue contre.  Ther
thow shalt a-bide, and I shall come to the, and telle the all the
mater that longeth to thi werke.  And moche is thy trauayle,
and thow shalt have gode leyser, and as longe as the worlde
dureth shall thi boke gladly ben herde.  And wite thow well
that my grete traueill shall not be by-fore this kynges
courte.  This kynge, to whom all my grete traueill shall be, and the
traueile of grete Breteyne, his name shalbe Arthur.  Thow shalt
go thider, as I have told the, and I shall often come to the, and
brynge soche tidinges as thow shalt put in this boke.  And wite
it well, peple shulbe glad euer to heiren it; for shul but fewe
thinges be don but in no place, but ther in shalbe a partye.  And
thi boke shalbe cleped while the worlde endureth, the boke of the
seynt Graal."  Thus spake merlyn with his maister, and taught


<PB REF="" N="33" ID="pb.33"/>

hym how he sholde do.  He yeleped hym maister, for that he
was maister to his moder.  When the gode man herde merlin
thus speke, he was glad, and seide, "What thow wilte comaunde
me I am redy to do it."</P>
<P>  Thus Merlyn made hym redy to go, and seide to the
messengers, I will go take leve of my moder.  Tho he brought
hem ther as was his moder, and seide, "Feire moder, heire ben
come men of fer contrees, for to seche me, and I will go by youre
leve; ffor me houeth to yelde the to Ihesu Criste, of that he hath
yove me power, and that I may not do; but I go thider as thei
shullen lede me.  And Blase, youre maister, also shall go, and
moste we bothe departe fro yow at this tyme."  "Ffeire sone,"
quod she, "to god I comaunde yow, for I knowe not yef it were
wisdome to witholde yow, or noon; but yef it were youre plesier,
I wolde that Blase sholde a-bide."  "Dame," quod he, "it may
in no wise ben."</P>
<P>  Thus toke Merlyn leve of his moder and wente with the
massengers, and on the tother side Blase departed, and
yede in to <CHOICE><CORR>Northumberlond</CORR><SIC>Nothumberlond</SIC></CHOICE>, ther Merlin had hym comaunded,
and the massagiers rode forth till thei come thourgh a town in
whiche was a market, and when thei were passed thourgh thei
ouertoke a carl, that hadde bought a payre of stronge shone, and
also stronge lether to clowte hem with.  And when merlyn sye
the carle he be-gan to laughe.  The messagiers axed hym
wherfore he lough.  "I laugh," quod he, "at this cherl that hath
bought hym so stronge shoone, and also clowte lether, and I telle
yow certeynly that he shalbe dead before he come fully to his
howse."  <MILESTONE N="11b" UNIT="folio"/>  And when thei herde thes, thei heilde it a grete
merveile, and seide thei wolde wyte yef that were trewe.  Than
two of them sewed hym, and other two abode with
Merlyn.  They hadde not folowed the cherl half a myle, that thei fonde
hym deed, in myddell of the wey, and his shone a-boute his
nekke.  Than thei returned, and ouer-toke hir felowes, and
tolde hem the merveyle that thei hadde seien.  "Fforsothe,"
quod thei, "grete foles were the clerkes that so wise a man wolde
have slayn."  "In feith," qou the oon, "I sholde suffer grete


<PB REF="" N="34" ID="pb.34"/>

myschef er he had eny harm."  And so thei seiden alle iiij,
that Merlyn ne herde it not.  And when thei were come to
merlyn, he thanked hem of that thei hadde seide, and that wolde
hym so moche gode.  And thei were gretly abasshed, and
seiden, "We may nought sey, ne do, but this childe knowe it."
Thus thei riden forth her iourneis, till thei come with-inne
Vortigers power.  And as thei passed thourgh a town, they
saugh a deed childe on a beere, born to chirche, to be
beried.  And after the corse was made grete doel and wepynge.  And
when Merlyn saugh the wepynge, and sye the preste and the
clerkes wente synginge be-fore, he gan to laugh, and seide to his
felowes, "I se a merveile."  And thei axed, "What?"  Quod
merlyn, "Ye se that gode man that maketh this grete sorowe."
And thei seide, "Ye."  "And se ye not the preeste that singeth
all be-fore."  Quod thei, "We se hym well."  "Forsothe," quod
Merlin, "he ought to make the sorowe that the tother gode man
maketh, for wethet it well that the childe is the prestes sone;
and the other man wepeth, and hath more cause to laugh."
Quod thei, "How may we knowe that it be so?"  "Goth to
the moder, and axe whi she doth wepe; and she will sey for her
sone, that is deed.  And ye shall sey, it is not hir sone, but the
Prestes sone, that so hye singeth; and than shall ye heere what
she will sey."</P>
<P>  The massagers wente to the woman, and toke her in
counseill, and seide as Merlyn hadde hem taught.  And when
the woman herde hem so sey, she was abaisshed, and seide,
"Seres, for godes love, mercy!  I se wele I may not to yow
lye, thowgh I wolde, for that ye sey is trewe; but I be-seche
yow telle it not my housbonde, for than he wolde me sle."  And
when thei hadde herde this merveile, they turned, and ouertoke
her felishep, and seiden as thei herde.  And than thei reden
forth till they come a iourney fro thens ther Vortiger was.  Than
seide two of the messagers to Merlin, "We shall go be-fore to
the kynge, and telle hym þat we have founden; now yeve us
counseile how thow wilte we shall sey, for I trowe he will blame
us that we have not the slayn."  "Sirs," quod Merlyn, "sey as

<PB REF="" N="35" ID="pb.35"/>

I shall telle yow, and ye shalbe well excused.  Ye shull go to
Vortiger, and sey that ye have me founden, and sey I shall telle
hym truly the cause whi his tour may not stonde; with this
condicion: that the Clerkes haue the same Iuyse that thei hadde
ordeyned for me.  And also sey him, I can telle hym why the
clerkes wolde haue me deed.  And when ye have seide thus, doth
hardely that he yow comaundeth."  With that the messagers
departed, and come to Vortiger.  And when he sye them, he was
gladde, and axed a-noon how they hadde spedde.  <MILESTONE N="12a" UNIT="folio"/>"Sir," seide
thei, "in the beste wise <CHOICE><CORR>that</CORR><SIC>that that</SIC></CHOICE> we may."  Than they cleped
the kynge in counseile, and tolde how thei hadde founde Merlyn;
and also they seide, yef he hym-self ne wolde, they sholde hym
neuer have founden.  "Of whiche Merlyn," seide the kynge,
"speke ye? sholde ye not haue sought the fadirles childe, and
have brought me the blode of hym."  "Sir," thei seide, "that
same is Merlyn, that we of speke to yow.  And wetith it wele
that he is the wisest man, and the beste devynour that is, saf
only god.  And, sir," seide thei, "right as ye made vs to
swere to do youre comaundement, all that was don and seide he
cowde wele telle vs, at oure firste metynge, and he tolde vs also
that the clerkes ne knewe not the cause why that youre tour may
not stonde; but he shall telle yow apertly.  And many other
grete merveiles hath he vs shewed be the wey; and hath vs sente
for to wite yef ye will with hym speke.  And yef ye will we
shull sle hym, for two of oure felowes beth there as he is."  "Yef
ye," quod the kynge, "will take vpon youre lyves that he shall
telle me whi my toure fallith, I will not þat he be deed."  "We
will vndertake it,"  quod thei.  "Than, go fecche hym," quod
the kynge.</P>
<P>  The messagers yede their wey, and the kynge rode after
hem.  When Merlin saugh the messagers, he seide to them, "Ye
have plegged me vpon youre lyves that I shall have no drede of
deth," and thei ansuerde, "Thou seiste trewe, for hadde lever
a be in grete auenture than thow sholdest dye, and that oon


<PB REF="" N="36" ID="pb.36"/>

moste vs nedes do."  "I shall waraunte yow," quod merlin, "of
that ye have vndertake."  Thus thei rode forth till thei mette
with the kynge, and a-noon merlin hym salued, and seide, "Sir
kynge, lete me speke with yow in counseile."  Than the kynge
drough a-part, and called hem that he hadde brought with
hym.  "Sir," quod merlyn, "thow haste do seche me for thi toure that
may not stonde, and comaundeste me to sle be counseile of thy
Clerkes, þat seide the toure sholde holde by vertu of my
blode.  Thei have not seide the trouth; but yef thow wilte graunte me
to do to hem the same that thei wolde do to me, I will telle the
cause whi it falleth, and also I shall teche the how thow shalt
make it to stonde and endure."  And Vortiger ansuerde, "Yef
thow do as thou seiest I will do with hem as thow wilte."
"Than," quod Merlin, "go we thider as this toure is in makynge,
and make the Clerkes be brought theder, and I shall axe hem
whi the toure doth falle, and so mayste thow hiere ther
ansuere."  Than thei wente to the place <CHOICE><CORR>ther</CORR><SIC>ther ther</SIC></CHOICE> the toure
sholde be made, and the clerkes were sente fore, and come
be-fore the kynge.</P>
<P>  And whan thei were come, Merlyn made oon to axe of hem
whi that that toure fill, and thei ansuerde, "We knowe
no cause whi it fill, but we can telle what shall make it for to
holde."  And then seide the kynge, "Ye tolde me a merveillouse
thynge, that I sholde do seche a childe born with-outen fader,
and I wote not how he myght be founden."  Than spake Merlyn
and seide to the clerkes, "Sirs, ye holde the kynge a fole, that
thus make hym seche a man that is born with-outen fader, and
ye no do it nothynge for his profite; but ye dide it for this, that
ye fonde in youre sorte that ye shulde be deed thourgh hym, and
for <MILESTONE N="12b" UNIT="folio"/>drede ther-of haue ye do the kynge to vnderstonde that I
sholde be slayn, and my blode be putte in the foundement of
the toure, and that sholde make it to laste and holde; thus ye
thought to sle hym, be the whiche ye sholde be brought to the
deth as be youre sorte."  When thei herde the child telle hem


<PB REF="" N="37" ID="pb.37"/>

that thei supposid no creature hadde knowen, thei weren a-basshed,
and wiste wele that thei sholde dye.  Than Merlin seide to the
kynge, "Now may ye knowe whi these clerkes wolde have me
slayn: nought for to holde youre toure, but for theire sorte seyde
thei sholde dye for me.  Now axe hem yef this be true, for thei
sholde not be so hardy be-fore me to make yow no lesynge."
"Seith he trewe?" quod the kynge.  "Sir," said the clerkes,
"ye, truly; but we merveile wherby he myght this
knowe.  Wherfore we be-seke yow to graunte vs to live, that we may see
that he shewe the trowth whi the toure fallith, and yef he can
telle the remedye."  "Certes," quod Merlyn, "have ye no drede
to dye be-fore ye se the cause that the toure doth falle, and that
the werke may not laste?"  "Sir kynge," quod Merlin,
"vnderstonde, and I shall telle the.  Vnder this erthe is a grete water,
and vnder that water be two dragons that see no sight; so is that
oon reade and that other white, and a-bove them is two grete
flat stones, and when thei fele that the werke peyseth hevy upon
them, they turne hem, and the water maketh so grete bruyt that
all that is made a-boven it moste nede falle.  Now lete loke yef
this be trewe or no; and yef it be founde that this be cause
that the werke stondeth not, lete my plegges be quyte, and the
clerkes in blame, that of all this ne knewe nothinge."  "Certes,"
quod Vortiger, "yef this be as thow seist, than art thow the
wisest man of the worlde.  Now telle me how this erthe may be
hadde a-wey."  And Merlin seide, "In cartes and on mennes
nekkes."  A-noon the kynge made come laboreres, and Merlin
comaunded that the clerkes sholde be wele kepte, and so wrought
the laboreres, that thei hadde a-wey the erthe, and fonde the
water, and dede it to laden oute, and lete the kynge wite how
thei hadden don.  The kynge come thider gladly, and brought
with hym merlin.  When he com thider, he beheilde the water
that was grete, and cleped two of his counsellers, and seide,
"This childe is right wise that knewe this to ben heere, and yet
seith that ther ben two dragons vnder, and I will knowe the
soth, what-so-euer it coste."  Than the kynge cleped Merlyn,
and seide, "How shall we haue this water a-wey?"  Quod

<PB REF="" N="38" ID="pb.38"/>

Merlyn, "Lete make goteres in to the diches."  Than were the
diches made, and the water to renne oute.  And Merlyn come to
Vortiger, and seide, "As soone as these dragons felen to-geder thei
will fighten strongely, and that oon shall sle that other; therfore
send after alle the gode men of thi londe to se the bataile, for it
hath grete singnification."  Than sente Vortiger after alle the
worthy men of his londe, Clergie and other; and when thei were
alle comen, Vortiger tolde hem the merveiles that Merlin hadde
shewde, and of the two dragons how thei shulde fight.  Than
seide oon to a-nother, "It is gode to be seen;" and they axed the
kynge yef he knewe whiche sholde haue the better; and the
kynge seide he hadde not yet tolde.  Whan the water was all
voided thei saugh the two stones <MILESTONE N="13a" UNIT="folio"/>that were vpon the two
dragons.  The kynge axed how thei myght be hadde a-wey, and
Merlyn seide, "Full wele, for they will neuer meve till eche of
hem fele other, and than shull thei fight till that oon muste dye."
The kynge axed, "Whiche shall have the victorie?"  "In the
fightynge," quod Merlyn, "is grete signifiance, whiche I may
not telle, but gladly I will tele the be-fore three worthi men."
Than Vortiger cleped thre men that he moste truste inne, and
Merlyn axed, "Be these thre men wele of thi counseile?" and
he ansuewerde, "Ye."  "Than may I telle be-fore them that
thou demandest.  I do the to wete," quod he, "that the white
shall sle the reade; but first shall he have grete peyne, and in
that he shall sle hym is grete tokenynge to hym that can it
vnderstonde; but I will sey no more till the bataile is at an
ende."  Than yede the peple to oon of the stones, and leften it
up, and founde the white dragon.  When the peple saugh hym
so grete and hidouse thei hadde grete drede.  Than wente thei
to the tother ston, and drough it a-wey, and than thei were
more aferde than be-fore, for it was moche greter and semed
more feirce.  And as Vortiger semed he moste ouercome that
other.  And Merlin seide to the kynge, "Now lete my plegges
be quyte."  "So be thei," seide the kynge.  Tho spronge vp
the two dragons and foughten to-geder with teeth and feet, and
neuer herde ye of so stronge bataile be-twene two bestes, ne so


<PB REF="" N="39" ID="pb.39"/>

crewell fight.  And so thei foughten to mydday, and the peple
semed that the reade sholde ouercome the white, till that the
white threwe so moche fiere and flame that he brente vp the
reade, and so was he deed.  Than the white leide hym down to
reste for werynesse, and ne lived after but thre dayes.  And
thei that this syen seyde that neuer so grete merveile hadde be
seyn be-forn.  And Merlin seide to the kynge, "Now mayste
thow make thi toure as grete and large as thow wilte, for it
shall no more falle."  Than comaunded Vortiger the werkemen
to make vp the toure the strongest that myght be devised; and
often axed Vortiger of Merlyn the significance of the two
dragons.  And he seid, "It was the tokenynge of thinges that were don
and also of thinges that were to come, and yef thow wilte ensure
me that thow shalt do me noon harme heere in audience of this
peple, ne suffer noon other to do me harme in thy reame, I will
telle the significacion."  And Vortiger made hym soche suerte
as he wolde.  Quod Merlin, "Bringe hethir thy counsell, and
the clerkes that sorted of this toure."  The kynge dide as he
comaunded.  When thei were come Merlyn spake to the clerkes,
and seide, "Ye were foles in youre art, that wolde not a-quite
yow as trewe men, and therfore ye be worthi to haue as ye
haue deserved.  And ye sawgh wele how I was bore.  And he
that shewed yow that, made yow semblance that ye sholde be
deed for me, and that dide he for sorowe that he hadde loste me,
and therfore he wolde that ye hadde me putte to deth; but I
haue soche a goode lorde, that he shall me deffende yef it be
his plesier, and I shall make hym a lyer, for ye shull neuer
for me be deed, yef ye will me graunte to do that I shall
yow sey."  And when they herde hym sey that thei sholbe
respited fro deth thei were gladde, and seiden, "What that
thow comaundest we shall do it, for we se well that thow
arte the wisest man that liveth."  Quod Merlin, "Ye shull
swere neuer to entermete of that arte, <MILESTONE N="13b" UNIT="folio"/>and I will that ye be
confessed and take youre penaunce so that youre soules be not
dampned."  And thei hym thankeden, and seide thei sholde
do his comaundement.


<PB REF="" N="40" ID="pb.40"/>
</P>
<P>  Thus delyuered Merlin the Clerkes, whiche made hym to be
sought for to be putte to deth.  Vortiger com to hym, and
seide, "Telle me the significaunce of the two dragons."  "The
reade dragon," quod Merlin, "be-tokeneth the, and the white
dragon signifieth the sones of Constance."  When Vortiger
herde this, he was a-shamed.  And merlin seide, "Yef thow
wilte, I will sey more; with that thow conne me no
magre."  Vortiger seide, "Here ne is no man, but of my prive counsell; and
therfore I will thow telle me alle the trouthe."  "I tolde the,"
quod Merlin, "that the reade signifieth the, and I shall telle the
how the children of Constance were yonge and tender, after the
deth of their fader; and yef thow were soche as thow oughteste
to have ben, thow sholdeste have kepte hem, and yeven hem
counseile a-geins alle erthly men.  And well thow knowest that
thow haste theire heritage wrongfully; for when thow knewest
the peple loved the, thow drowest the a-bakke, for to helpe them
in their nedes.  And when eny of the londe complayneth to the
for the kynges Innocence, and seiden thei wolden thow sholde
take vpon the to be kynge, to defende the reame fro their
enmyes, thow ansueredest couertly, and seidest thow myghtest
not while kynge Moyne was livinge.  And thei that thow seidest
this to, vndirstoden wele that thow woldest haue hym deed; and
and ther-fore thei slowen their kynge.  But thei leften two
brethern, the whiche fledde in to straunge londe, for drede of
the.  And so were thow made kynge; and yet thow holdest
their heritage with wronge.  And when thei had kylde the
kynge Moyne, thei come be-fore the; thow madest hem to be
distrowied, to shewe semblaunce as thow hadde for-thought the
kynges deth."  Vortiger vndirstode wele that Merlyn hym tolde,
and wiste wele that he tolde hym the trouth; and seide, "I se well
that thow art oon of the wisest men of the worlde.  Wherfore,
I pray the to yeve me counseill in this cas, and also telle me on
what deth I shall dye."  Quod he, "Yef I telle the that I wilnot
sey the betokenyng of the two dragons.  I do the to wite that
the reade Dragon signifieth the, in that he was so grete and
hidouse, be-tokeneth the, and thy grete power.  And the white

<PB REF="" N="41" ID="pb.41"/>

dragon be-tokeneth the two childeren that be fledde for drede of
the.  And that thei foughten so longe to-geder, be-tokeneth that
thow haste so longe kepte their herytage with wronge.  And
that the white dragon brente the redde dragon, betokeneth that
the two brethern shull brenne the with theire power.  And
therfore I ne trowe not that this toure shalbe thy warante, but that
thow shalt dye by hem."  When Vortiger vndirstode this, he gan
to wrathe, and axed hym, "Where ben these children?"  Quod
Merlyn, "Thei be in the see, with grete strengthe of peple; and
come into heir londe, to take vengaunce on the; ffor thei seyn
thow dedist their brother to be slain.  And wite it wele that
thei shall a-ryve with-inne thre Monthes with-oute eny faile."


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.3">
<HEAD> CHAPTER III. 
<LB/>  THE DEFEAT OF VORTIGER BY PENDRAGON AND UTER; THEIR SEARCH AFTER MERLIN;  THE BATTLE OF SALISBURY AND DEATH OF PENDRAGON; AND THE FOUNDATION OF THE TABLE AT CARDOELL, IN WALES.</HEAD>
<P>  Full sorowfull was Vortiger of these tidinges, and axed of
Merlin yef it myght be eny other maner.  And he seide,
"Nay."  And when Vortiger knewe that the children come
with so grete power, he somowned his peple a-geyn the tierme
that Merlyn hadde seide.  Vortiger com to Wynchester <MILESTONE N="14a" UNIT="folio"/>with
all his oste, but no man ne wiste the cause whi, saf thei that
weren of his counseile.  And as soone as Merlin hadde seid the
kynge, alle the tokenynges of the two dragons, he toke leve,
and wente to Blase, and tolde hym alle thynges like as were
beffalle; and he wrote it in his boke.  And ther was Merlyn longe
tyme, till that the sones of Constance lete seche hym in many
contrees.  Vortiger a-bode to the day that Merlin hadde rehersed;
the same day saugh thei of Wynchester the shippes comynge by
the see; where-in weren the two sones of Constance.  And than
Vortiger comaunded his peple to armes, and to deffende the


<PB REF="" N="42" ID="pb.42"/>

portes.  And when thei of the portes saugh the baners roiall of
kynge Constance, thei hadde grete merveile, till that the vessell
that the two brethern were inne come in to the havene.  And
thei that kepte the porte axed to whom longed that vessell; and
they ansuerde it was the vessell of Pendragon and Vter, whiche
were come in to their owne londe, to take vengaunce on Vortiger,
that as a fals traytour longe tyme hade them disherited.  When
the peple of the contre saugh their lorde haddde brought so grete
power, thei seide they wolde no longer hoilde with
Vortiger.  And when he saugh the moste parte of his peple him failled, he
hadde grete drede, and seide to them that he trusted that thei
sholde stuffe the Castell; and thei dide so.  The shippes weren
a-rived, and the knyghtes isseden owte, and alle the other
peple.  And the peple of the contre wente a-geyn hem; and them
resceved as they sholde do her lorde.  Vortiger and his mayne
weren in the Castell, and the two brethern assailled hym
vigorously, till that Pendragon caste in fier, and brente vp Vortiger,
and alle that were in the castell with hym.  And thus toke they
vengaunce on their enmy.  Aurelius Ambrose made Pendragon
kynge, whiche was a Iuste man and a trewe.  And the Danoys,
that Vortiger hadde brought in to the londe, werred sore vpon
the cristen peple.  And pendragon be-seged Aungier in the
castell of the Vysee.  And ther thei token counsell how thei
myght beste take the Castell.  At this counseill were v barons,
that hadde herde the significance of the two dragons, that Merlin
hadde expowned to Vortiger.  And so thei cleped Pendragon and
his counseill a-part, and tolde hem the merveile that thei hadde
herde of Merlyn.  And, "wite ye well," seide thei, "that he is
the beste devynour that is, saf god oonly."  And Pendragon
axed where he myght be founden.  And thei seide, "We knowe
not in what contree."  Quod Pendragon, "Yef he be in this
londe, he shall welbe founden."  Than sente Pendragon thourgh
his londe, to seche Merlyn.  And Merlin, that knewe all this,
tolde it to Blase, and departed fro hym, and com in to a town
where as the messagers were that soughten after hym.  He
come to hem like a begger, with boustouse shone on his feet, and

<PB REF="" N="43" ID="pb.43"/>

in a cote al to rente, and hadde a grym berde and steirne
loke.  He come in to the house that they were inne, and seide, "Ye do
symply youre mayster erende, as he yow comaunded for to seche
Merlin."  And thei ansuerde, "What deuell who hath tolde this
cherl, wher-of entermeteth he?"  Quod the cherl, "Yef I
wolde, I sholde fynde hym <MILESTONE N="14b" UNIT="folio"/>moche sonner than ye."  Than they
turned towarde hym, and axed hym yef he hadde euer hym
sien.  "Ye," quod he, "I have sein hym, and I knowe his repaire;
but he tolde me that ye labour a-boute nought ffor to seche hym,
for though he mette with yow, he wil not go with yow.  But go
to youre prynce, and telle hym that he shall neuer wynne the
Castell till Aungier be slain.  And wete ye wel that of the v
that tolde the kynge tidinges of Merlin, ye shall fynde but two
livinge.  And telle youre lorde, yef he will fynde Merlin, lete
hym seche hym in the forestes of this contree."</P>
<P>  The messagers vndirstod wele that Merlyn hem tolde, and
that oon be-heilde that other, and a-noon he was oute of
ther sight; and than they seide to hem-self, "We have spoken
with the devell.  What shull we do of that he hath vs seide?"
"Forsothe," quod that oon of hem, "we shull go telle oure
lorde like as he hath vs seide."  And than thei riden forth till
they come in to the oste ther as the kynge was; and a-noon as
the kynge hem sygh, he axed, "Have ye founde hym that ye
wente for to seche?"  "Sir," they seide, "we shall telle yow
like as we have founden."  Than thei tolde the kynge of all that
the cherl hadde seide vn-to hem all as it was.  And when the
kynge herde this he merveiled, and so dide thei that hadden first
enformed the kynge of Merlyn, for that the messagers spoken of
so grym and hidouse man, for supposid that Merlin myght not
take noon other shapte but his owne; netherdeles, thei knewe
wele ther cowde no man have seide thise wordes but it hadde a
be Merlin, and axed of the messagers in what place it was that
thei founde this cherl.  "Truly," seide thei, "he come in to
oure loigginge in Northumberlonde while we satte at oure
mete."  Than seiden thei that it was Merlyn with-outen faile, and that
he wolde the kynge hym-self sholde come seche hym.  Quod the


<PB REF="" N="44" ID="pb.44"/>

kynge, "I shall leve the reame to my brother Vter, and I will
go my self to speke with hym."  And they come in
Northumberlonde, they enquered tidinges of Merlin, but thei founde noon
that ought of hym cowde sey.  And as the kynge rode thourgh
the foreste it fill that a man of his fonde grete plente of bestes,
and a man that hem kepte whiche was of a counterfete shapte
and of a grym chere, and they axed hym of whens he was, and he
ansuerde, "Of Northumberlonde, a seruaunt of a worthi man;
but yesterday," quod he, "I saugh a man that tolde me that the
kynge Pendragon come for to seche Merlin in this
contre."  Quod that other, "It is soth that the kynge doth hym
seken.  Canst thow ought telle where he is?"  And the cherl ansuerde
and seide, "Yef I saugh the kynge, I wolde sey to hym that I
wolde not telle the."  "Than com with me," quod he, "and I
will shewe the kynge."  Than seide the cherl, "I sholde kepe
my bestes; but yef he come heder I will telle hym gode tydinges
of that he goth sechinge."  Than he departed and come to the
kynge, and seide as he herde the cherl say; and the kynge badde
"Bringe me ther."  Than he ledde the kynge to the same place,
and seide to the cherl, "Lo, her is the kynge; now sey to hym
what thow wilt."  Quod he to the kynge, "Thow goist sechinge
Merlyn, but thow shalt not fynde hym till he will
hym-self.  Therfore go to a gode town and take thy logginge, and he shall
sone come to the when he wote thow doiste a-bide hym."  "How
may I knowe that?" seide the kynge.  Than the kynge <MILESTONE N="15a" UNIT="folio"/><SURPLUS>than the kynge</SURPLUS> rode
to the nexte town that he fonde in the forest, and thider come
to hym a comely man wele araied, and seide to the kynge, "Sir,
Merlin sente me hider to the, and sente the worde that it was
he, that thow mette with-inne the wode kepynge bestes.  Be
this token that he seide he will come to the when thow haste of
hym myster, but now thow haste of hym no nede, and by me he
sente the gode tidinges.  Wite thow wele that Aungier is ded,
for thy brother Vter hath hath hym slayn."  And tho the kynge
hadde grete merveile, and seide, "May this be true that thow


<PB REF="" N="45" ID="pb.45"/>

seist."  "He seide to me no more," quod he; "but and thow
mystruste hym thou art a foole."</P>
<P>  Than the kynge made two messagers to ryde in all haste, to
wite yef it were true.  And thei rode forth till thei
metten the messagers of Vter, that come to telle the kynge of
Aungers deth.  And when thei weren mette, thei returned
a-geyn to the kynge, and tolde how Vter hadde slain
Aungier.  And the kynge comaunded hem to kepe counseile, for he
merveyled gretly how merlin myght have witinge ther-of, and
thought in his herte that he wolde axe hym how Aungier was
deed.  And as the kynge come fro chirche on a day, ther mette
hym a comly man, well araied, and clenly, that seide to hym,
"Sir kynge, what a-bideste thow in this town?"  Quod the
kynge, "I a-bide after Merlin, that sholde come heder to speke
with me."  "Sir," quod he, "though ye mete hym, ye can not
knowe hym; but clepe to yow soche men as ought for to knowe
hym, and axe them yef I may be Merlin."  And they come
be-fore hym, and he hem frayned what was here
a-bidinge.  Quod they, "We a-byde the gode devynour."  "Sirs," seide the
kynge, "yef ye myght se Merlin, cowde ye hym knowen?"
"Sire," seide thei, "it myght not be but that we sholde hym
kenne wele, yef we myght him se."  "Sirs," quod he that
was be-fore the kynge, "may eny man knowe a-nother when he
knowith not hym-self."  And thei seiden, "We may not wele
knowe all his werkinge, but yef we myghten sen his semblaunce,
we sholden knowe hym wele."  And than ansuerde the man, and
seide, "Ther is no man that can at alle tymes knowe his
semblaunce."  And than he toke the kynge in counseile, and seide,
"Sir, I will be with yow, and with youre brother.  And I do yow
to wete that I am he that ye have sought.  Now, go ye oute, and
clepe hem that sey thei knowen Merlin; and as sone as they come,
thei shull sey ye haue me founden."  Than was the kynge right
gladde, and in all haste cleped hem that cowden knowe
Merlin.  And Merlin toke the semblaunce that thei hadde sein hym
be-fore.  And a-noon thei seiden, "Lo, here is Merlin."  Quod the kynge,
"Be well a-vised that ye knowe it is he."  And thei seide, "We

<PB REF="" N="46" ID="pb.46"/>

knowe verely it is he."  Than seide the kynge, "I wolde fayn
knowe yef euer I spake with yow be-fore, sith I come in to this
contre."  "Sir,"  quod Merlyn, "I am the man that ye fonde
kepinge the bestes, and also I am the man that tolde yow
that Aungier was deed."  Than seyde the kynge, "Sirs, ye
knewe Merlin full euell."  And thei seide, "Sir, we sye hym <MILESTONE N="15b" UNIT="folio"/>neuer do thus be-forn."  And than the kynge axed of Merlyn,
"How knewe ye the deth of Aungiers."  Quod Merlyn, "A-noon
as ye were departed fro youre oste, to come hider, Aungiers wolde
haue morderid thi brother in his teinte.  And I wente to thi
brother, and warned hym of Aungiers purpos, and of his strengthe,
and how he wolde come be nyght hym-self to his teynte, formeste
of his company.  And thi brother dide not mystruste me, but
made good waicche all that nyght, sole be hym-self, till that
Aungiers com with a knyf in his honde, to sle thi brother.  And
Vter lete hym entre in to his teynte, and serched a-boute; but
he fonde not Vter ther-in, wherfore he was sory.  And at the
comynge owte, thi broþer faught with hym, and slowe hym his
owne handes."  Than the kynge axed hym in what semblaunce
he hadde spoken with his brother.  "Sir," quod he, "I was like
a sadde olde man."  Quod the kynge, "Tolde ye hym what ye
were?"  And Merlyn seide, "Nay; ne he ne shall not wite till
ye telle hym youre self."  Than seide the kynge, "I pray yow
right, deere frende, that ye will come with me, for I have grete
nede of youre counseile."  "Sir," quod Merlin, "the sonner I
come ther, the wrother shull be youre meyne."  Quod the kynge,
"Thow hast seyde so moche, that thow hast saued my brother fro
the deth, that I shall neuer the mystruste."  Quod Merlyn,
"I shall speke with thi brother in the same forme that I warned
hym of his deth, and shalbe with-inne this xj dayes."  And the
kynge seide, "And it plese yow, lete me wite when ye shull
speke with hym."  "Ye shull wite it well," quod Merlin, "but,
loke ye, discure it not to noon creature, as ye will haue my love."</P>
<P>  Thus was Pendragon and Merlin first a-queynted.  And
Merlin toke his leve, and wente to Blase, his maister, and
tolde hym alle thinges.  And he wrote hem in his boke.  Pendragon


<PB REF="" N="47" ID="pb.47"/>

 taried not till he come to his brother Vter.  Wher-of
Vter was ioyfull, and toke the kynge in counseile, and tolde hym
of the deth of Aungiers, in the same wise as Merlin hadde
tolde.  Quod the kynge, "I pray yow telle me what man that was that
warned yow of Aungiers."  "Be the feith that I owe to yow,"
quod Vter, "I can not sei what he is, but wele he semed a wise
man, and therfore I yaf to his counseile credence."  "Brother,"
quod Pendragon, "kowde ye ought knowe hym, and ye myght se
hym agein?"  "Sir," seide Vter, "ye, right wele."  And
Pendragon seide, "I do yow to wete he will speke with yow
withinne these xj dayes; but I pray yow that ye be euer in my
presence, that I may se alle tho that come to speke with yow,
that I may wite whether I may knowe hym sonner than ye."
And Vter ther-to graunted.  And Merlin tolde all this to Blase:
how the two brethern hadde spoke to-geder, and how thei were
acorded of hym, and how Pendragon wolde assaie hym in all the
maner that he myght.  Than Blase axed what he dought to
do.  And Merlyn seide, "Thei be yonge men and Iolye, and have
grete nede of counseile, and I knowe a faire lady that Vter
paramours.  And I will go, and bringe hym a letter, as it were from
her, for I knowe alle the prevy wordes that have ben be-twene <MILESTONE N="16a" UNIT="folio"/>hem two.  The xj<HI REND="sup">e</HI> day come Merlin to courte, like a boy that
hadde ben a messager from Vters love, and seyde, "My lady
sente me to yow, and sendeth yow gretinge, and sente yow this
letter."  And Vter toke it with grete ioye, for he wende his
lady hadde sent hym that letter, and seide he sholde yeve
credence to the bringer ther-of, and of all that he sholde sey.  And
Merlin tolde hym many tidinges, soche as he wiste wele that he
wolde gladly listen.  Thus a-bode Merlin with hym, till it was ny
even; and grete merveile hadde Pendragon that Merlin com not
as he hadde made promyse, till that merlin drow hym a-syde, and
toke the same semblaunce that he spake with Vter the firste
tyme that he warned hym of his deth.  And a-noon, as Vter
hym saugh, he knewe hym wele, and praide hym that he wolde
tarie a-while, till he hadde spoke with the kynge, his
brother.  And Vter tolde Pendragon how the gode man was come that


<PB REF="" N="48" ID="pb.48"/>

warned hym of the treson of Aungiers.  And than come the
bothe to-geder to that man.  And whan the kynge sye hym, he
made grete ioye, and seide he was welcome.  And than the
kynge seide, "Will ye that I telle my brother who ye ben, and
what youre name is?"  And Merlin ansuerde, "I will wele that
he knowe what I am."  Than seide the kynge, "Feire brother,
ye knowe not who this worthi man is.  I will that ye wete he is
the wisest man that leveth, and moste may vs profite and
helpe.  And I do yow to wite that ther come noon other boy in message
be-fore yow this day, saf this worthy man.  And he hym-self
toke yow the letter fro youre souereine lady."  When Vter herde
this, he was astoned sore, and seyde to hym-self, "How myght I
this knowe, or be-leve, for it were the most merveile of the
worlde."  Quod he, "Wite it wele ye may it als truly be-leve as
eny thinge that ye beste knowe."  "In feith," quod Vter, "I
may not leve it, but I myght it other-wise prove."  Than the
kynge prayde Merlyn that he wolde shewe some maner
demonstraunce."  "Than," quod Merlyn, "go ye a litell oute, and
shall shewe the same boy that brought the letter."  And thei
yede oute of the chamber, and Merlin toke a-gein the semblaunce
of a boy, and come to Vter, and seide, "Sir, I will go; is ther
eny thinge that ye will comaunde me?"  And than seide the
kynge, "Brother, be thow right sure that this is the same man
that warned you of Aungys treson; and I lete yow wite that he
hath power to knowe alle thinges that beth do or spoken, and of
thinges that be to come grete partie.  Wherfore I wolde hertely
pray hym to be with vs of oure counseile; and by hym shall we
be rulid of alle oure gouernaunce, for, trnly, brother, we have
grete nede therto, and it were his plesier."  Than bothe the
brethern be-sought hym full lowly to a-bide with hem, and thei to
be gouerned by hym as he wolde.  And than Merlyn seide, "I lete
yow wite that I knowe alle thinges, that me leste to wite."  Quod
Vter, "Haue to me seide so moche, that neuer shall I mys-trowe
the fro hens all my live.  And for youre grete wisdome, and it
like yow, I wolde ye were lorde and gouernour of my brother and
me."  And Merlin ansuerde, "I will be with yow many tymes,

<PB REF="" N="49" ID="pb.49"/>

and I will also that ye tweyn prively in counseile knowe my
condicions and my behavynge; but I moste be ofte tymes in the forestes,
the chief of grete Bretaigne.  And knoweth wele, in what place that
euer I be, in the moste remembraunce that I shall haue, shall be
vpon yow, and on yowre nedes, more than eny others.  And in
what maner nede that ye <MILESTONE N="16b" UNIT="folio"/><SURPLUS>that ye</SURPLUS> have in eny encombraunce, I will
euer redily come to yow, and helpe yow, and counseile.  And
therfore recched neuer when I go or come; and at alle tymes,
when I come, make grete gladnesse of me be-fore youre peple, in
youre howsolde."  In this maner was Merlin witholden with
Pendragon and his brother Vter.  And he toke his leve of hem, and
seide he wolde shewe hym in the same semblaunce that the peple
of the contre were wonte to knowe hym inne.  And when he
come a-monge them, thei that knewe hym made grete ioye, and
runne to telle the kynge that Merlin was comen.  And a-noon the
kynge wente a-geins hym; and grete was the ioye that the kynge
mad of Merlin.  And when he was ther-inne, thei that hadde
knowinge of hym toke the kynge in counseile, and seide, "Sir, lo,
heir is Merlin, whiche is the wysest man that is in all the worlde,
saf god al only.  Therfore, pray hym to teche you how ye shull
do in getynge of this castell, and how that this werre shall ende."
The kynge seyde he wolde gladly of hym enquere, as thei
desired.  And so at that thei sesid, for the kynge wolde hym
wurship and honoure in all that he myght.  And on the thirde
day the kynge made alle his counseile a-semble, and than the
kynge demaunded Merlin of that his barons hadden desired to
knowe, and seide, "Dere frende, I have herde moche spek of
yow, that ye be oon the wisest man that is in the
worlde.  Wherfore, I pray and requere yow in this wise, that I shall euer be at
youre wille, that ye will lete wite how I myght haue this castell."
And Merlin ansuerde, and seide, "I do yow to wite as sone as
the sarazins have loste Aungys, thei desire nought ellis but
forsake the londe.  And to-morow sende to hem to wite what thei
will do; and thei will desire the londe that thei were wonte to


<PB REF="" N="50" ID="pb.50"/>

holde of youre fader; but ye ne shull not agre ther-to, but when
ye knewe their ansuere, ye shall offer them to condite oute of the
londe, and shippes to their passage."  Than sente the kynge,
Vlfyn and thre other knyghtes, and Merlin yaf hem the message.</P>
<P>  These messagers wente towarde the castell, and when the
sarazins sye hem comynge thei yede hem a-geins, and
freyned yef thei were come in message fro the kynge; and
Vlfyn seide, "Ye."  Quod Vlfin, "The kynge sente yow trewis
for thre wokes."  And thei ansuerde, "We will take
counseile."  Than thei yede to-geder a-parte, and seiden, "We beth
gretly hyndred be the deth of Aungys, and we haue heere no
vitaile to abide after socour of oure frendes, and heere is profered
vs trewis to passe, and with-oute vitaile we may not longe
endure; but lete vs sende to hym to suffer vs to haue the castell
and the londe that longeth ther-to for to be holden of hym and
of his heyres, and that we have xxx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> knyghtes on horse to yeve
hym to trewage, a C stedes, a C palfrayes, and a hundred
faucons."  And to this thei acorded alle, and come to the
messagers and tole as thei were acorded, and thei returned and tolde
the kynge their ansuere, and the kynge axed Merlyn his advise,
and Merlin seide, "This shall ye not do, for therof sholde come
grete harmes; but I shall telle yow how ye shall do.  Sende to
hem a-noon with oute tariynge that thei yelde yow the castell,
and thei shall do it gladly, <MILESTONE N="17a" UNIT="folio"/>ffor thei have no vitaile; and profer
hem to go saf with their lyves, and I do yow to wite they had
neuer gretter gladnesse."  And as Merlin devised, the kynge
dide, and sente his message with this requeste.  When thei of
the Castell herde thei myght go saf with thier lyves, thei hadde
grete ioye, and that was cried thourgh the londe.  And the
kynge lete condite hem to the portes, and deliuered hem the
navie in to passe.  Thus were alle put oute of the londe, be
counseile of Merlyn, and so was Merlyn all gouernoure of the kynge
and his counseile longe tyme; till on a day that he spake with
the kynge of a great matire, wherof oon of the barons hadde grete
envye, and come to the kynge, and seide, "Sir, it is a grete
merveile that ye have so grete bileve to this man, for wite it verily,


<PB REF="" N="51" ID="pb.51"/>

all that he can cometh by the devell.  And yef it plese yow, I
shall a-say hym, so that ye shall se it aptly."  Quod the kynge,
"I will well that ye assay hym in soche maner that he ne be not
wroth."  "Sir," quod he, "I shall not do nothinge that sholde
cause hym to be angry."  And the kynge hym graunted.  This
baron was right wise, and full of euell vyces.  And on a day he
come to court, and made Merlin grete chere, and called hym
be-fore the kynge in counseile, and wele xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> knyghtes.  And
than he seide to kinge, "Sir, here is Merlin, which is þe
wisest man of the worlde, and he tolde Vortiger of his deth, and
how ye sholde do hym be brent.  I pray yow for that ye knowe
wele that I have grete sekenesse, that he will telle yow what
deth I shall deye, yef he knowe it."</P>
<P>  Than ansuerde Merlin, that wele knewe his fell herte, and
seide, "Sire, ye have me praide to telle of youre deth,
and I shall sey the soth; ffor that day thow shalt dye, thow
shalt falle of an horse, and breke thy nekke."  And seide he to
the kynge, "Sir, ye have herde how he hath seide; and god
defende me ther-fro."  Than he wente hom to his contre as
soone as he myght, and after com to courte a-gein to the kynge,
and made hym right seke; and sente to the kynge in counseill,
that he sholde come se hym, and that he sholde bringe with hym
Merlin in soche wise that Merlin sholde not knowe the cause
why.  And the kynge assented.  And the kynge come to Merlin, and
seide, "There is a seke man, lete vs go se how it is with hym."
And Merlin seide, "Sir, a kynge ought not to go so prevely, but
to <CHOICE><CORR>haue</CORR><SIC>haue haue</SIC></CHOICE> his meyne a-boute hym."  And the kynge cleped
soche as he wolde, and wente to the seke man.  And when thei
come ther, he seide to the kynge, "Sir, I pray yow that ye will
axe youre devynour yef I shall dye on this sekeness."  And
Merlin seide, "He shall not dye on this maladye."  Tho enforced
he to speke, and seide, "Sir, on what deth than shall I dye?"
And Merlin ansuerde, and seide, "Thow shalt be hanged, and so
shalt thow dye hanginge."  And than made Merlin semblaunce


<PB REF="" N="52" ID="pb.52"/>

as he hadde be wroth.  And when he wiste that Merlin was gon,
he seide to the kynge, "Sir, now wite ye verily that he is but a
fole, that hath tolde these two dethes, whiche may not be
acordinge; and yet I shall assay hym the thirde tyme.  I will
tomorowe go to an Abbey, and feyne me stronge sike, and I shall
sende to yow that a monke of his is so sike that he is in doute of
his lif, and pray yow to brynge with yow Merlin."  And the
kynge it graunted.  And than wente this baron to an abbey, and
dide all in like wyse <MILESTONE N="17b" UNIT="folio"/>as he hadde devised to the kynge.  And
than he sente for the kynge, and he come, and brought Merlyn;
and so thei come ridynge to the abbey, and herde messe.  After
masse, come the Abbot, be-sechynge the kynge to come se a
Monke whiche was sore seke, and that it plesed hym to bringe
with hym the wise man Merlin.  And the kynge axed of Merlin
yef he wolde go thider with hym.  And Merlyn seide, "Ye;
but first I will speke with yow and with Vter."  And than he
toke hem a-part, and seide,</P>
<P>  "Sirs, the more that I am with yow a-queynted, the more
foles I fynde yow.  Wene ye that I knowe not what
deth this fole shall on dye; and ye shull haue now more
merveile than of all that I haue seide be-forn."  And the kynge
ansuerde, "May this be true that he shall dye in soche wise?"
"Yef it be not so," quod Merlin, "leve me neuer of nothynge
that I shall sey; and thus moche I sey to Vter: that I shall se
his deth, er he departe his companye."  Than thei wente thider,
as the abbot hem ledde; and the abbot seide to the kynge, "Sir,
plese it yow to axe of youre devynour, yef this seke shall euer be
hoill of this sekenesse."  And Merlin made semblaunt as he hadde
ben wroth, and seide, "He myght wele a-rise, for hym eyleth
noon evell.  And lete hym knowe verily that day he shall on dye
he shall breke his nekke, and be hanged, and also be
drowned.  And ther-fore lete hym no more feyne, for I knowe wele his
corage, and that his false herte thynketh."  And he a-ros vp
sittynge, and seide to the kynge, "Sir, now may ye wele knowe
his folye; how myght this be, that the day I shall on dye, I
sholde breke my nekke, and be hanged, and also to be drowned;


<PB REF="" N="53" ID="pb.53"/>

ffor I knowe wele that may not be, nother of me, ne of noon
other.  Now loke yef ye be a wise man to yeve so grete credence
to soche a man."  And thus thei departed, and all aboute it was
knowen how Merlin hadde thus seide of this mannes deth.  After
it fill on a day, that this man that thus sholde dye, rode with
moche peple, and come to a river, wher ouer was a bregge of
of tymber.  And his palfrey stombled on his knees, and he
ouerthrew, and brakke hys neke, and he rolled don of the bregge in
to the water, that a sharp planke of the brigge caught thourgh
his garment, so that his legges and his reynes hengen above the
water.  And many of them that were in his company were there
as Merlin tolde of his deth.  The cry was grete that thei made
to drawe hym oute of the water; and than thei seide, "A grete
fole he is that will not leve that Merlyn seith."  Thei diden
with the body as was right; and merlyn, that all this knewe
wele, seide to the kynge and Vter how it was be-tid of this
man.  And the kynge axed when this myght be, and he seide,
"Yesterday; and they that were with hym that tyme sholde come
withinne these vj dayes to bringe the tidynges.  And therfore I will
go, for I will not be here when thei come, for thei will demaunde
me of many questions, wherof I will not ansuere, ne I ne will speke
but litill be-fore the peple, but so derkly that they shul not
vndirstonde what I sey."  Thus seide Merlyn to the kynge and to Vter;
wher-fore the kynge thought he hadde be wroth, and was
therfore full sory and hevy.  And so wente Merlyn to his maister Blase,
and tolde hym of alle thynges, and many other that were be-falle.</P>
<P>  <MILESTONE N="18a" UNIT="folio"/>On the vj<HI REND="sup">e</HI> day come thei to the kynge that hadde sein the
deth of this baron; and when they were come they
tolde the kynge the merveile.  And than seide the kynge, and
alle that herden ther-of, that ther was no-where so wise a man
as Merlyn, and seiden fro thens-forth all that they myght
hier hym speke or sey they wolde lete it be wreten.  And so
be-gan the boke of prophesies of Merlin, that spake of the
kynges that sholde be in Engelonde, and of alle other thinges
that he spake of, and he knewe that alle his wordes sholde
be wreten.  He tolde to Blase, and Blase axed Merlin yef thei


<PB REF="" N="54" ID="pb.54"/>

sholde make soche a-nother boke as he dide.  And he seide,
"Nay; for they shull write not elles but soche thinges as no
man shall vndirstonde till it be fallen and passed."  And than
come Merlyn a-geyn to courte, and thei hym tolde the tydinges
as he hadde not knowe ther-of.</P>
<P>  Than be-gan Merlin to speke so mystily, wher-of the boke
of prophesyes is made.  And after come Merlin to the
kynge and to Vter his brother, and seide to hem pitously, "I love
moche yow and youre wurship; haue ye no mynde of the sarazins
that ye drive oute of the londe after the deth of Aungis?"  And
thei seide, "Yesse, full wele; but why sey ye?"  Quod Merlin,
"I sey for this: that they sey thei shull neuer fenisshe till thei
have a-vengid the deth of Aungis.  And thei have assembled a
grete power, and wele to conquere this londe be force."  When
the kinge and his brother herde this, thei merveiled gretly, and
axed of Merlin, "Haue thei so grete power to holde party a-geyn
oures?"  And he ansuerde a-geyn, "Euery man that ye haue
defensable, they have tweyne; therfore, but ye be wisly ruled,
ye shull be distroied, and lese youre reame."  Quod the kynge,
"We wilbe ruled be youre counseile."  And than he axed,
"When trowe ye that they shull come?"  And Merlin seide,
"The xj day of Iuyne; and noon ne shall this knowe, saf ye
two; and I deffende yow to speke ther-of, but do as I shall yow
counseile.  Sende after alle youre peple, and make hem the
grettest ioye and feste that ye may, and comaunde hem to be the
laste day of Iuyn, on the playn of Salisburye."  Than seide the
kynge, "Shall we suffer hem to aryve with-oute deffence?"  And
Merlyn seide, "Ye; yef ye will do my counseile, and suffer hem
to come as fer as ye may fro theire a-rivage; and so shall ye
kepe hem two dayes, and thei shull haue grete dissese for lakke
of water.  And the thirde day ye shull with hem fighten; and
yef ye do thus, ye shull haue the victorye."  Than seide the
two brethern, "I pray yow telle vs yef eny of us shall dye in
that bataile."  And Merlin ansuerde, "Ther is no-thynge that
hath be-gynnynge, but it moste have endynge, ne no man ought
to be dismayed of deth, to resceyve it as he oweth to do; and

<PB REF="" N="55" ID="pb.55"/>

therfore I will that ye bringe the hiest reliques that ye haue,
and ye shull bothe swere to do as I shall sey yow, for yowre
profite and youre worship, and than shall I boldely telle yow
how ye shulbe gouerned."  And thei swore as Merlin dide
devise.  And when thei were sworn, Merlin seide vnto hem,
"Ye haue sworne that in this bataile ye shull be gode men and
true, a-gein god and youre-self.  Ne noon may be trewe to
hymself but he first be trewe to god; and, loke ye, be trewly
confessed, for that ye shull fight a-geyn yowre enmyes; and <MILESTONE N="18b" UNIT="folio"/>after
haue no doute to ouercome theym, for thei have no bileve in the
trinite.  And wite ye wele that seth cristendom come first in to
this Ile, was neuer so grete bataile, ne neuer shall in youre
tyme.  And also knoweth wele that the oon of yow two moste nede
passe in this bataile; therfore eche man ordeyne for his moste
worship that he can, a-geins that he cometh be-fore his
lorde.  And that oon of yow most go to hym; and therfore goth in soche
wise that ye may haue his love when ye come to his presence."</P>
<P>  Thus ended the counseile of Merlyn.  And the two <CHOICE><CORR>brethern</CORR><SIC>bethern</SIC></CHOICE>
vnderstode what he hadde seyde, and sente after alle the
estates of theire londe.  And when thei weren alle come, thei yaf
hem grete yeftes.  And the kynge hem praide to make hem
garnysshed of their armes, and of horse; and also the laste woke
of Iuyn to be redy, in the entre of the playnes of Salisbury,
vpon the river of Tamyse, to diffende the reame.  And thus it
lefte till the day that was somowned.  And the two brethern
a-geyn their burghes and townes made gode ordenaunce, as
Merlin dide hem counseile.  And at Pentecoste thei heilde courte
vpon the rivere, and there were many riche yestes.  Ther thei
were so longe, till thei herden that the Danoyse weren
a-rived.  Than the kynge sente to prelates of the chirche, that euery man
of the oste sholde be confessed, and euery man to foryeven other,
and be in charite and clene lyf.  Than seide Pendragon to
merlin that tydinges were come; the Sarazins weren
a-rived.  And Merlin seide it was trewe.  Than the kynge axed what was
his counseile to do.  And Merlin seide, "Ye shall to-morowe
sende thedir that oon half of youre peple; and when they be


<PB REF="" N="56" ID="pb.56"/>

come from their a-rivage, than go be-twene hem and the aryvage;
and youre peple shulde holde hem so shorte, that there ne shal
be noon of hem, but thei wolde fayn be ther as thei come
fro.  And thus shull ye do two dayes, and the thirde day, whan ye se
a dragon all reade fleynge vp in the ayre, than boldly fight with
hem, for ye shall haue the vyctorye."</P>
<P>  At this counseile were no mo but Pendragon and Vter.  And
when thei hadde herde this thei were gladde.  And than
seide Merlin, "I will go; and be ye right sure of this that I haue
yow seide, and thenke to be gode men and gode knyghtes."  Thus
thei departed, and Vter made redy his felishep to go be-twene
hem and the ryver.  And Merlyn come to hym, and seide,
"Thenke to do wele, and haue no drede, for thow shalt not dye
in this bataile."  When Vter herde þis he was gladde in
herte.  Than Merlin wente to his maister Blase in Northumbirlonde, and
<CHOICE><CORR>tolde</CORR><SIC>tolde tolde</SIC></CHOICE> hym many thinges that he wrote in his boke.  Vter and
his peple rode till thei come be-twene the Danes and theire
shippes, and kepte hem two dayes, that thei myght neuer
ryde.  The thirde day the kynge come so nygh that thet oon myght se
that other.  Whan the sarazins saugh the two hostes, thei were
gretly dismayed, and sye wele that thei myght not repaire to their
shippes with-oute grete bataile.  Than shewde the signe in the
ayre that Merlin hadde seide, and than the Danes hadden grete
drede.  And the kynge seide to his peple, "Now vpon hem in
all that we may."  And whan Vter saugh the kynges bataile,
and the Danes assembled, <MILESTONE N="19a" UNIT="folio"/>he sette vpon hem as vigorously or
more.  In that bataile was grete mortalite on bothe parties, but
the hethen peple hadde moche the werse.  And ther Pendragon
dide merveloise knyghthode a-monge his enmyes, and so dide
Vter; but I may not telle alle they well dedis.  But Pendragon
was ther deed, and many a-nother gode baron, wher-of was grete
pite and losse to the cristen partye.  And as the boke witnessith,
Vter venquysshed the bataille, and ther ne ascaped noon of the
sarazins but that thei weren deed or taken.  And thus ended the


<PB REF="" N="57" ID="pb.57"/>

bataile of Salisbury, wher-as Pendragon was deed.  And so all
the londe left hoill to Vter his brother.  He made geder alle the
cristen that weren deed, and made hem to be beried in a place bi
them-self, and a-reised his brothers tombe moche hier than eny
of the tother, and lete write vpon eche beryinge place his name
that lay vnder; but on his brother wolde he nought write, for he
seide who that them be-heilde myght wele vndirstonde that he
was chief lorde.  Than Vter went to logres, and alle the prelates
of the cherche, and ther was he sacred and crowned.  And thus
was Vter kynge of the londe after the deth of his brother
Pendragon.  And the quynsynne after that Merlyn come to courte,
and grete was the ioye the kynge made to hym.  And than seide
Merlyn to Vter, "I will that thow haue surnonn of thi brother
name; and for love of the dragon that appered in the ayre, make
a dragon of goolde of the same semblaunce."  And the kynge
dide do make this dragon in all the haste he myght, like to the
dragon that sewde in the ayre.  Than he lete sette it on a shafte
in stede of a baner, and lete it be born be-fore hym in euery
bataile at alle tymes when he sholde fight.  And thus was euer
after he cleped Vterpendragon.  And Merlyn a-bode with hym
longe tyme after, till on a day that Merlyn hym axed, "Ne shall
thow do no more to the place in the playn of Salesbury, wher-as
thy brother is buried?"  And the kynge ansuerde, "What wilt
thow that I do, for I will do euen as thow wilte devise?"  Quod
Merlin, "I will that thow ordeyne ther soche a þinge as shall
endure to the <CHOICE><CORR>worldes</CORR><SIC>worles</SIC></CHOICE> ende."  And the kynge seide, "Telle me
in what wise, and I will do it with gode will."  Than quod
Merlin, "Sende after the grete stones that ben in Irlonde, and
make hem to be brought in thy shippes, and I shall go to shewe
them which I will haue that thei shull brynge."  Than
Vterpendragon sente vesselles grete plente, and Merlin hem shewde the
stones that were grete and longe, and seide, "Lo, these ben the
stones whiche ye ben come fore."  And when they hem saugh,
they it helde for a grete merveile, and seide it was a thynge
unpossible to charge, they were of soche gretnesse and wight; and
in their vessellis they seiden sholde they not come, yef god

<PB REF="" N="58" ID="pb.58"/>

wolde.  And so thei returned to the kynge, and tolde the
merveile, and the kynge than seide, "Suffer till Merlyn come."</P>
<P>  And when Merlyn was come, the kynge hym tolde like as his
men hadden seide, and Merlin seide, "Sith it is so that
they may not hem hider bringe, I shall a-quyte me of my
promyse."  And than Merlin made by crafte of his arte to bringe
the stones that weren in Irlonde to the playn of
Salesbury.  And the kynge and moche peple wente to se the merveile; <MILESTONE N="19b" UNIT="folio"/>and
when thei saugh the grete stones, thei seden that all the worlde
ne myght not hem remeve.  And Merlin badde they sholde be
dressed vp-right, for thei sholde seme feyrer so than
liggynge.  And the kynge seide that myght no man do, saf only god.  Than
seide Merlyn, "Let me worthen ther-with, and I shall a-quyte
me of the <CHOICE><CORR>couenaunt</CORR><SIC>comenaunt</SIC></CHOICE> that I made."  And so all the labour lefte to
Merlyn; and he dressed as thei be yet ouer the beryinge place of
Pendragon, and ben yet cleped the stonehenges.  And than come
Merlin to Vterpendragon, and hym serued longe tyme and moche
hym loved.  And so on a tyme he toke the kynge in counseile,
and seide, "Sir, I moste discure to yow the hiest counseile that
ye herde euer, and that thinge that I shall of speke shall be
right straunge; and I requyre yow that ye it not discure to no
man lyvynge."  And the kynge graunted his requeste.  Than
seide Merlin, "I will that ye wite that the knowinge that I
haue cometh be the enmy by nature; and oure lorde that is
almyghty a-bove alle thynge hath a-bove, that yove me witte and
memorye to knowe grete partye of thynges that be to come, and
by this souereyn vertu the enmye hath me lorn that with the
plesaunce of god they shull neuer haue power over me at her
volunte.  And sir, now ye knowe fro whens I haue this
power.  And I will telle yow a thinge that god will that thow shalt
do.  And whan ye knowe what it is, loke ye, performe it to his
plesier.  Sir, ye ought well to knowe that god come in to erthe to saue
man-kynde, and also, as ye well knowe, he made a soper, and
seide to hys apposteles, `Oon of yow shall me be-trayen.'  Sir,


<PB REF="" N="59" ID="pb.59"/>

many provertees and grete suffraites suffred oure lorde her in
erthe for oure sake, and many shames that the Iues hym diden;
and after that he suffred bitter deth for vs upon the crosse; and
a knyght axed his body when he was deed vpon the seide crosse,
and it was graunted hym of Pilate in lower of his servyse."</P>
<P>  "Sir, it fill after that, this knyght whiche hadde taken oure
lorde down of the crosse, that he was in a waste
contree full of diserte, and moche of his lynage.  And, sir, vpon
hem fill a grete famyne and hunger, and thei complayned to the
knyght that was thier maister.  And he prayde oure lorde to
shewe his mercy to hem, and to shewe some demonstraunce, that
they myght be conforted of their grete disese.  And oure lorde
hym comaunded to make a table, in the name of that table at the
whiche he was sette in the house of Symond leprouse, and bad hym
take the vessell whiche that he hadde, and sette it vpon the
table, and couer the table with white cloth, and also the vessell,
all saue the parte toward hym.  Sir, this vessell was brought to
this seide knyght, by oure lorde Jhesu criste, whyle he was in
prixon xl wynter, hym for to comforte.  And, sir, by this holy
vessell were departed the company of gode and euell.  And also
at this table was euer a voyde place, that betokeneth the place of
Iudas, ther as he satte at the soper, whiche he lefte whan herde
that oure lorde seide that worde for hym, whan he seyde that he
that ete with hym sholde hym be-trayen.  Thus lefte Iudas the
place voyde till that oure lorde set ther a-nother, that hight
Matheu.  This Matheu was sette in that place to fille vp the
nombre of xij apostles.  <MILESTONE N="20a" UNIT="folio"/>Sir, this place that was voyde at the
table of Ioseph be-tokeneth the place that Matheu fulfilde; and,
sir, thus be these two tables convenable.  And thus hath oure
lorde filled the werke of man.  And, sir, the peple that were
ther-at cleped this vessell that thei hadden in so grete grace, the
Graal; and yef ye do my counseile, ye shall stablisshe the thirde
table in the name of the trinite.  And I be-hote yow, yef ye do
this, ther-by shall come to yow grete honour and grete profite of
youre soule; and also it shalbe a thynge that moste shall be
spoken of thourgh the worlde."  Thus seide Merlyn to Vterpendragon,


<PB REF="" N="60" ID="pb.60"/>

wher-of he was well plesed, and seide to Merlin, "I will
that oure lordes wille be performed in all that is in me, in all
thinge that be to his wille; and all I putte in youre ordenaunce."
And than was Merlyn gladde, and seide, "Sir, loke where ye
plese beste that it be sette."  "Certes," quod the kynge, "where
as thow wilte, and ther as thow trowest it be moste oure lordes
wille."  And Merlyn seide, "It shall be at Cardoll, in Walys,
and make ther thy feest at Pentecoste.  And array the to make
gode chere, and to yeve grete yeftes; and I shall go be-fore, and
make the table, and whan thow arte come, I shall setten them
that owen ther-at to sitten."


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.4">
<HEAD> CHAPTER IV. 
<LB/>THE FEASTS AT CARDOELL; UTER-PENDRAGON'S LOVE FOR YGERNE, AND HIS WAR WITH HER HUSBAND, THE DUKE OF TINTAGEL.

</HEAD>
<P>  All as Merlyn devised dide the kynge, and warned thourgh all
his reame to be at Cardoell, in Walys, at the
Pentecoste.  And thus he lete crye thourgh all his reame, and Merlyn dide
ordeyne all that longed to the table.  The weke afore witsontyde
come the kynge to Cardoell, and when he was come he axed
Merlin how he hadde spedde, and he seide, "Wele."  Quod the
kynge, "What men shull ye chese to sitte at this table?"  And
Merlyn seide, "Ye shull se to-morou that ye wende neuer to
seen, that I shall chese fyfty of the beste knyghtes of this
londe.  And whan thei be ones sette, thei will haue no grete desire to
returne in to their contrees.  And thus ye may knowe whiche
were gode men and worthy, whan ye se the signifiaunce of the
voyde place."  Thus Merlyn, on the witsonday, chese fifty
knyghtes, and comaunded hem to be sette at that table to mete;
and thei so diden with gode chere.  And Merlyn that full of
stronge arte, was yede hem aboute, and cleped the kynge as they
weren sette, and shewed hym the voyde place.  And many othir it
syen, but they ne knewe not the tokenynge, ne why it was voyde.

<PB REF="" N="61" ID="pb.61"/>
</P>
<P>  When Merlyn hadde don all thus, he badde the kynge that
he sholde go sitte; and thus they diden alle viij
dayes.  And the kynge yaf grete yeftes to lordes, and to ladyes, and to
dameseles.  And when they departed, the kynge come to the
fyfty knyghtes, and axed how hem lyked.  And thei seyde,
"Sir, we haue no talent to remeve fro hens, and ther-of we haue
merveile what it maketh, for we be entred as <CHOICE><CORR>brethern</CORR><SIC>bethern</SIC></CHOICE>; and
therfore we will neuer departe till deth vs departe."  When the
kynge herde hem thus sey, he hadde grete merveile, and
comaunded hem to be serued, and kepte as his owne
body.  And thus departed the grete prese.  And than the kynge come
to Merlyn, and seide, "Truly thow seidest me soth that oure
lorde wolde that this table sholde be stablisshed; but I wolde
praye the to telle me <MILESTONE N="20b" UNIT="folio"/>yef thow knowe who shall fulfille the
place that is voyde."  And Merlyn ansuerde, "Wite thow right
wele that it shall not be in thy tyme; ne he that shall
a-complesshen, it is not yet be-geten.  But it shall be in the kynges
tyme that shall come next after the; ne he that shall hym
engendere shall not knowe that he shall hym engendere; and he that
shall a-complysshe that sete must also complysshe the voyde
place at the table that Ioseph made.  And I pray yow therfore,
that euer hens-forth that ye hoilde alle youre grete festes in this
town."  "Certes," quod the kynge, "I will gladly."  And than
seide Merlyn, "Sir, I moste go, and of longe tyme ye shull not
se me a-geyn."  And the kynge hym axed whider he sholde go;
quod he, "Shall ye not be here at alle tymes when I holde my
grete courte?"  And Merlyn seyde, "No."</P>
<P>  Than departed the kynge, and Merlyn yede to Blase, and
tolde hym the stablisshement of this table, and many
other thynges.  And thus a-bode Merlyn thre yere that he come
not to courte.  They that loved not Merlyn, but by semblaunce,
come to the kynge on a day as he was at Cardoell, and axeden
hym of this voide place, and why there was not sette some
worthy man, that the table myght be full.  And the kynge
seide, "Merlin tolde me a grete merveile, that seide noon myght it
a-complisshe in my tyme, ne yet ne ys he born, that shall


<PB REF="" N="62" ID="pb.62"/>

engendre hym that shall it complesshen."  And thei lough ther-at,
as they that weren full of envye, and seide, "Sir, trowe ye that
ther shalbe better peple after youre tyme than beth now, and
that ther ne be now, as gode men in youre londe as thei shull be."
"Truly," seide the kynge, "I wote neuer."  And thei seide,
"Ye do not wele but ye assaye."  "Certes," quod the kynge,
"I will it not assaie, for I doute that Merlin wolde be wroth."
And than they ansuerde, "Yef ye wele yeve vs leve, we will
assaye it, and for to preve the grete lesynge."  And the kynge
seide, "Ne were the drede I haue of the wrath of Merlyn, ther
is nothynge that I desire so moche to assayen."  And they seide,
"Yef Merlyn be livynge, and he knowe that we will it assayen,
he will come with-oute faile, er eny man shall it assayen; but
suffre that we may it assaien at Pentecoste."  And the kynge
hem graunted, wher-fore they weren gladde.  Thus it lefte till at
witsontyde, that the kynge hadde do warne alle his barons to be
at his feste at Cardoell.  And Merlyn, that all thys wiste wele,
tolde vn-to Blase the euell thoughtes that they hadden, that
hadde take this enprise, and seide he wolde not go till he knewe
who sholde assaye to preve that place, for he hadde leuer haue it
preve by a shrewe than a gode man.  Thus suffred Merlyn to the
quynsyne of Pentecoste.</P>
<P>  Vterpendragon the kynge come to Cardoel, and brought with
hym grete plente of peple.  And thei that were come
for to assaie the place made it to be seide that Merlyn was deed,
and that he was founden in a wildernesse madde, and cherles
hym kylde.  And so moche peple spake ther-of, that the kynge
hym-self it leved; and more for that, he was so longe a-wey,
than for eny thinge elles, and, namely, he wende in no wyse he
wolde not have suffred that eny man sholde haue assaide the
voyde place yef he were lyvynge.  <MILESTONE N="21a" UNIT="folio"/>Thus was the kynge on
witson-even at Cardoel, and axed of hem that sholde it assaie,
whiche of hem sholde it do.  And he that all this hadde
ordeyned, seide, "Sir, I will that ye wete ther shall noon
assaie it but I."  Than he com to the table where as the
fifty knyghtes weren sette, and seide, "I am come to sitte


<PB REF="" N="63" ID="pb.63"/>

with yow, and for to holde yow company."  And they ansuerde
no worde, but full mekely be-helde what he wolde do.  And the
kynge and grete partye of the barons weren ther
assembled.  This sette hym down in the voyde place, and a-noon as he was
sette, he sanke down as it hadde be leed, so that noon wiste
where he was be-come.  Than the kynge comaunded alle the
other gode men to aryse, and they so diden.  And than a-noon
be-gan so grete a noyse and sorowfull crye, that all the court
was trowbled; and the kynge hym-self was gretely
a-baisshed.  Thus they a-biden to the quynsyne after Pentecoste, that Merlin
come to courte.  And whan the kynge wiste of hys comynge, he
was right ioyfull, and wente hym a-geins to mete with
hym.  And a-noon, whan Merlyn saugh the kynge, he seide he had euell
spedde, to suffre eny man to sytte in that place.  "Trewly,"
seide the kynge, "I was disceyved thourgh here wordes."  "In
feith," seide Merlyn, "it falleth often to hem that wolden
begile, that thei be-giled hem-self; and that maist thow wele
proven be this."  After the kynge axed, "Yef he wiste where he
was be-comen that set hym in the sege?"  And Merlin ansuerde,
"Therof no force is for to enquere, ne nought it sholde a-vayle
for to wite, but thenke on them that in þe other places sitten,
and to mayntene that thow haste be-gonne; and alle thy festes
and alle thy courtes, come holde hem heir in this town, for to
wurship this table, for thow knowest by the assay that thow
haste seyen that it is of grete dignite.  And now I go; now, loke
thow do as thow haste seyde."  And thus departed the kynge;
and Merlin comaunded the kynge to beilde feire howsynge, where
he sholde euer after holde his courte and his hye festes.  Than
the kynge lete it be knowen thourgh his reame that all high
festes, as Pasch and Pentecoste, and yole and halowmesse, sholde
be holden at Cardoel; and a-geyn the feste of yole, he somowned
alle his barons, in soche maner that euerich of hem shulde brynge
with hem their wyves and doughtres, and her neces or
susteres.  And the knyghtes so diden alle.  I may not telle yow of alle tho
that ther weren, sef of hem that the tale reherses, oon after
a-nother.  Ther was the Duke of Tintagel, and Ygrine his wif;

<PB REF="" N="64" ID="pb.64"/>

and hir the kynge loved gretly, but ther-of he made no
semblaunce, saf that often he be-heilde her more than a-nother;
in-so-moche that hir-self it perceyved, and knewe that the kynge
be-helde her often.  And whan she it perceyved, she eschewed to
come in his presence, for she was right a gode lady, and full of
grete bewte, and right trewe a-geins hir lorde.  And the kynge
for her love, and for he sigh she hadde taken hede of his lokynges,
he sente Iuwelles to euery lady that was at the feste.  And to
Ygerne he sente as he trowed sholde beste hir plese, and she
knewe and sigh wele that he hadde sente to alle other ladies, and
ther-fore she durste not refuse hirs, but receyved hem, and
thought wele in her herte, that the kynge ne hadde not yeven to
other ladyes, but for she sholde not refusen hirs.</P>
<P>  <MILESTONE N="21b" UNIT="folio"/>Thus hilde the kynge that feeste, that yet is with-outen wif,
and was so supprised with the love of Ygerne, that he
wiste not how to do, and thus departed the court; but firste the
kynge praide alle the barons to be at Cardoel at Pasch, and so he
prayed alle the ladies, and thei graunted to be ther.  Whan the
Duke of Tintagel departed fro courte, the kynge hym conveyed
and gretly hym honoured at theyr departynge; and whan he
hadde hym a while conveied, he toke leve, and yede thourgh the
courte in his othir necessitees till that the tyme of Pasch, and
than gan to assemble alle the barons and all the ladyes at
Cardoel, and grete was the ioye that the kynge made, till it come to
the mete tyme that the kynge made the Duke of Tintagel to be
set be-fore hym-self, and also his wif Ygerne, so that Ygerne ne
myght not eschewe but to resceve his yeftes, so that she it
aparceyved verily that the kynge hir loved, wherof she was
right hevy, but ne she mot it suffer.  Thus was this feeste
holden in grete ioye, and the kynge hem prayde to come at alle
tymes whan he hem comaunded, and thei seiden so thei wolden
as to theire souereyn lorde.  And thus departed the courte; and
so endured the kynge in grete mysese for love of Ygerne, and at
laste he complayned hym-self to tweyne that he moche trusted
of grete angwysshe that he suffred for the love of Ygerne, and
they seiden, "What will ye that we shull do?"  Quod the


<PB REF="" N="65" ID="pb.65"/>

kynge, "I wolde haue youre counseile, how I myght have her
company."  And they seide, "Yef ye go in to the courte ther as
she is, the peple shull it a-perceyve, and so myght ye be in
blame."  And he seyde, "What counseile yeve ye me thanne?"
"The beste counseile," seide thei, "that we se ther-inne is that
ye somowne a grete courte to be at Cardoel, and that ye make
hem all to wite that it shall holde to the quynsine, and that eche
come araide to a-bide xv dayes, and eueriche man to brynge with
hym his wyf.  And thus may ye have longe the company of
Ygerne, and haue grete counfort of youre love."  And the kynge
was plesed wele with her counseile, and sente to alle the barons
to be at Pentecoste at Cardoel, and euery baron to brynge with
hym his wif.  And as the kynge hem comaunded thei diden, and
at that feeste the kynge bar crowne, and yaf grete yeftes to alle
astates as hym semed beste sittynge.</P>
<P>  Gretly was the kynge at that feeste, and ioyfull and
mery.  And he spake to oon of his counseile to whom he hadde
moste truste of eny other, and his name was Vlfyn.  And the
kynge hym tolde of the grete peyne that he was Inne for the
love of Ygerne, that so hym constrayned that he myght nother
ete ne slepe, ne go, ne ride, and that he wende verily to dye whan
he was oute of her sight, and that he myght not longe lyve but
he hadde oþer counseile of her love.  And Vlfyn seide, "Sir, it is
a wonder thynge that for the delyte of a woman ye wene to
dye.  And I am but a pore man, and yef I loved a woman so strongly
as ye, I sholde not wene therfore to dyen.  Who herde euer
speke of eny woman, yef she were wele requereth, but ye sholde
haue of her youre volente; with that to yeve her gret yeftis <NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.5">Folio 22 is misplaced, and follows folio 23.</NOTE><MILESTONE N="22a" UNIT="folio"/>and Juwels, and to hem that ben a-bouten hir.  I ne herde
neuer speke of woman that cowde hir diffende a-geyn this; and
thow that arte a kynge dismayest the so of feynt herte!"  And
the kynge seide, "Vlfyn, thow seyst right wele, and thow
knowest wele what longeth to soche mystere; I pray the helpe
me in alle maners that thow can or may, and take of my cofres


<PB REF="" N="66" ID="pb.66"/>

what thow wilte, to yeve to alle that ben hir a-bouten, and speke
so to hir as thow knowest is for my spede."  Quod Vlfyn, "Be
of gode counfort, for I shall do all my power."  And thus
vndirtoke Vlfin to helpe the kynge.  And so all the xv dayes hilde the
kynge grete feste, and euery day hadde the Duke in his company,
and yaf hym a grete Iuwell, and also to his compers.  And
Vlfyn spake with Ygerne, and tolde hir many thinges that he
myght, as he trowed beste her plese; and many tymes he brought
her a preciouse Iuwell; but Ygerne wolde noon <UNCLEAR>of hem</UNCLEAR>,   till
on a tyme that Ygerne hilde Vlfyn in counseile, and seide,
"Vlfin, wherefore is it that ye wolde me yeve alle these
Iuwelles and these riche yeftes?"  And Vlfin seide, "Madame,
for youre grete wisdome, and youre grete beaute and faire
contenaunce, I may noght yeve yow, for all erthely gode is yours, and
alle the londe of logres, and alle the mennes bodyes at youre
plesier to do youre volente."  And she ansuerde, "How?"
"How?" quod he, "for ye haue the herte of hym to whom alle
moste obbeye."  Quod she, "Whos herte is that ye of speken?"
And Vlfyn seide, "Of the kynge."  And she lifte vp hir hande,
and hir fayned, and seide, "A mercy god! sholde eny knyge be
traytour, so as he maketh semblaunce to myn husbonde of love,
and so shamefully wolde me diffoule!  Vlfin, now be right well
ware that thow neuer speke to me more of these wordes, ffor,
wite thow wele, I shall telle my lorde, and yef he it knowe
thow moste dye."  And Vlfyn ansuerde, "That were to me
grete wurship, yef I sholde dye for my lorde; ne neuer lady
that refused a kynge in soche wyse as do ye, that loveth yow
more than eny other thynge.  And I trowe ye do but iape; but
for goddes love haveth pite of the kynge that is youre lorde, and
also vpon youre self, for yef ye haue no mercy of this thynge,
witeth wele that ther-of may come grete harme, ne ye ne youre
lorde may not yow diffende a-geyn the kynges wille."  And
Ygerne ansuerde, wepynge, "I shall therfore me right wele
diffende, for I will neuer come in place wheras he may me
seen."


<PB REF="" N="67" ID="pb.67"/>
</P>
<P>  And so departed Ygerne; and Vlfin come to the kynge, and
tolde hym like as she hadde seide.  And the kynge
seyde so sholde a gode lady ansuere, for ther was neuer gode
lady that lightly wolde be ouercome; and therfore he ne cessed
not of prayinge.  And on the xi<HI REND="sup">e</HI> iour of Pentecoste, the kynge
satte at mete, and with hym te Duke of Tintagel.  And the
kynge hadde a riche cowpe of goolde; and Vlfyn kneled be-fore
the kynge, and seide, "Sir, sende this cuppe to Ygerne, and
praye the Duke to bidde hir to take it, and drynke for youre
love."  And the kynge cleped the Duke, and badde hym sende
that cuppe to Ygerne, his wif, and sende hir worde to drynke
for his love.  And the Duke ansuerde as he that thought noon
euell, and seyde, "Sir, gramercy."  The Duke cleped a knyght
of his owne that he loved well, "Bertel, take this cuppe, and
bere to thy lady, and sey her that she drynke for the kynges
love."  And Bretel cam in to the <MILESTONE N="22b" UNIT="folio"/>chamber where Ygerne sat at
mete amonge othir ladyes, and kneled be-fore hir, and seide,
"Madam, the kynge sente yow this cuppe, and my lorde
comaundeth that ye sholde it take, and also to drynke for the kynges
sake."</P>
<P>  Whan the lady vndirstode these wordes, she wax all reade
for shame, but she durste not refuse the comaundement
of hir lorde, but toke the cuppe, and dranke, and wolde have
sente it a-geyn be the same knyght.  And he seide, "My lorde
sente yow worde ye sholde it kepe, for so the kynge hym prayde."
When she sye that, she sigh wele that nedes she muste kepe the
cuppe.  And Bretell come a-gein, and thanked the kynge on
Ygernes be-halfe, that ther-of hadde seide no worde.  And glad
was the kynge that she hadde resceyved his yefte.  And Vlfin
wente in to the chamber, to se what semblaunce she made, and
he fonde hir pensif and angry.  And whan she saugh Vlfin, she
cleped hym to hir, for the bourdes weren vp, and seide, "Vlfyn,
thourgh grete treson thy lorde hath here sente me a cuppe, but
therby shall he gete litill wurschip er to-morow day, for I will
telle my lorde of the treson that ye be-twene yow two haue
purposed."  And Vlfyn ansuerde, "Be-war ther-of, that it yow


<PB REF="" N="68" ID="pb.68"/>

neuer passe."  And she seide, "Mysauenture have that it kepeth
eny counseile."  With that departed Vlfyn from hir.  And be
than the kynge hadde waisshe, and was right mery and gladde,
and toke the Duke be the hande, and seide, gowe, se these
ladyes.  Than they yede to the chamber wher as Ygerne hadde
eten; and she knewe wele that he come for noon othir cause but
for hir.  And so she suffred all the day till the nyght, and
than she wente hom to hir loigynge.  And when the Duke come
he fonde hir wepynge and makynge grete sorow; wherfore he
was right hevy, and toke hir in his armes, as he that moche hir
loved, and axed whi she made soche sorowe.  "Trewly," quod
she, "ther nothynge that I will kepe from yow counseile, for
ther is nothynge that I love so moche as yow.  The kynge that
is my lorde and yowres seith that he loueth me, and alle these
courtes that ye se hym holde, and alle these ladyes that he
sendith fore, it is nought elles but for me, and that ye sholde
brynge me with yow.  And these othir tymes I parceyved it wele
I-nough, and I me kepte bothe fro hym and from his
yeftes.  And so hiderto I haue me wele deffended, that I haue nought
taken of his.  And now haue ye made me to take a cuppe, and
sente me that I sholde drynke for his love.  And therfore I
wolde I were deed, for I may neuer haue reste for hym, and
Vlfyn hys counseiller.  And now I haue tolde yow all as it is;
I knowe wele that ther-of muste come more anger, wherfore I
beseke yow, as I ought to do my lorde, that ye brynge me to
Tintagel, for I will no lenger a-bide in this town."  Whan the Duke,
that moche loved his wif, herde this, he was als wroth as eny
man myght be.  Than he sente after his men thourgh the town,
and when they were come, he seide to hem prevely, "Make yow
redy for to ride in all haste, so that no man of the town it wyte, <MILESTONE N="23a" UNIT="folio"/>and axed not the cause why till I telle yow."  And thus the
Duke and his knyghtes lepe to horse, and rode home to his contre,
and ledde with hym his wyf.</P>
<P>  On the morowe, whan the kynge wiste the Duke was thus
i-gon, he was hevy and sorowfull for that he hadde ledde
a-wey Ygerne, and sente after his counseile, and shewde hem the


<PB REF="" N="69" ID="pb.69"/>

shame and the dispite the Duke hadde hym don.  And they seide
they merveyled ther gretly, and that hadde don grete
folye.  Thus seide they that wiste not why he was gon.  And the kynge
seide, "As ye haue sen alle, I haue do to hym more wurship
than to eny othir."  And they seiden, "It was soth; wherfore
we gretly merveyle why he hath don so grete outerage."  And
the kynge seide, "Yef it be youre rede I will sende after hym
that he come a-geyn and a-mende this forfet, and that in the same
wise as he is gon that he come a-gein, for that me semeth is
right."  And the counseile ther-to assented.  On this massage
was sente two worthy men fro the kynge, and rode till they
come to Tintagell, and ther they fonde the Duke, and tolde hym
their message as they weren charged.  Whan the Duke herde
that in the same forme he moste come a-geyn, he vndirstode
wele he sholde bringe with hym Ygerne, and than he seide to
the messagers, "I ne will not come at his courte, for he hath
so don to me and to myne that I owe hym neyther to truste ne
to love."  And thus departed the messagers with-outen other
ansuere.  And than the Duke sente after alle the worthy men of
his counseile, and seide hem the cause why he was come fro
Cardoel, and the vntrouthe and the shame that the kynge hadde
hym purposed.  And they ther-of merveileden gretly, and seide
that sholde neuer be-tyden with goddes grace, and wele oughten
he to haue shame that this shame hath purposed to his liege
man.  Thanne seide the Duke, "I pray yow, and requyre be the
feith that ye me owen, that ye helpe me to diffende my londe
yef he me assawte with werre."  And thei ansuerde that so
wolde they do to put alle ther lyves and gods in
Iepardye.  Thus the Duke counseiled with his men.  And the messagers
come to Cardoel and fonde the kynge and his barons, and tolde
as the Duke hadde yeve hem ansuere; and they seiden alle, thei
merveiled of the Duke, that was wonte to be so wise a man, and
so had him ruled.  The kynge praide his barons, and hem
requyred as his liege men, that thei wolde hym helpe to redresse
that forfet, and a-venge the shame that he hadde hym don; and
they seiden that they myght not that refusen; but thei seiden

<PB REF="" N="70" ID="pb.70"/>

yef it were hys plesier to sende, knowynge that he hym diffied,
xl dayes be-fore er he hym assailed.  And the kynge seide that
wolde he do; but the kynge hem praide that at the ende of xl
dayes they be redy assembled ther he hem assigned arayed for to
osteye.  The kynge sente his messagers for to diffie the Duke of
Tintagel; and when the Duke herde that he hym diffied at the
ende of xl dayes, he seide he sholde hym diffende yef he
myght.  And than he sente to his peple, and shewde hem the diffiaunce of
the kynge, prayinge hem to helpe hym in that grete
mister.  And they seide thei sholde hym helpe with all their
power.  And than the Duke counseiled with his peple, <MILESTONE N="23b" UNIT="folio"/>and seide, "I
have but two castelles that a-gein the kynge may holde; but tho
tweyne wolde he holde as longe as he hadde lyf."  And he
devised to leve his wif at Tintagel, and with hir x knyghtes, for
he knewe that castell hadde no doute of no man, and hym-self
wente to a-nother castell that was of lesse strengthe, and it stuffed
in the beste wise that he myght, and seide that he myght not his
other londes agein hym diffende.  The messagers that hadde the
Duke diffied come to the kynge, and seide how the Duke wolde
hym diffende.  Thanne the kynge sente to somowne his barons
and his peple, and made hem alle to assemble in the Dukes londe
in a grete medowe vpon a rivere.  Whan the barons were
assembled, the kynge to hem rehersed the grete dispyte of brekynge of
his courte, and the barons seiden it was reson that the forfet
were redressed.  Thus the kynge lefte in the Dukes londes, and
toke his castelles and his townes, and distroyed all the contre,
and than the kynge herde sey that Ygerne was at Tintagel, and
the Duke in a-nother castell, and than the kynge axed of his
counseile whiche castell he sholde firste assaile; and the barons
yaf hym counseile firste to assaile the Duke, and therto the
kynge graunted.  And so thei rode to the castell that the Duke
was ynne; and than the kynge seide to Vlfin, "What may I do
whan I ne may not se Ygerne?"  And Vlfyn seide, "The
thinges that a man may not haue, he muste nede suffer; and
therfore ye must put to grete besynesse to take the Duke, for
after that ye shall well to purpos bringe the remenaunt."


<PB REF="" N="71" ID="pb.71"/>
</P>
<P>  Many assaute made the kynge at the Castell, but he cowde
it in no wise gete, wher-fore he was full of sorowe, and
right Irouse.  And on the tother side he was sore distreined
with the love of Ygerne, that on a tyme, as he was in his
pavilyon, he gan to wepe.  Whanne his peple saugh hym wepe, they
weren hevy, and hem with-drowen, and leften hym a-lone.  And
whan Vlfin it wiste ther-of, he come anoon, and axed the kynge
why he wepte.  And the kynge seide, "Thow knowest wele
wherfore, for thow woste wele that I dye full of loue of Ygerne,
for I have loste bothe mete and drynke, and all reste that a man
ought to have."  And whan Vlfyn this vndirstode, he seide,
"Ye be of ful febill herte whan ye thynke to dye for oon sole
woman; but I shall sey yow gode counseile."  "What is that?"
seide the kynge.  "That ye wolde sende to seche Merlin, that he
myght come to yow, and it myght noon other-wise be, but that he
sholde yeve yow some gode counseile that sholde yow
profite.  And ye shull hym yeve what he will desire."  And than seide
the kynge, "Ther is no thynge that is possible to a man but that
he can it do; but I wote wele Merlin of my distresse knoweth,
and so I am in drede that he be wroth for the voide place of the
table, that I suffred to be assaide.  And longe tyme it is passed
sethe he was in place, where-as I myght hym se.  And also I
trowe he is not well plesed that I love the wif of my liege man;
but trewly I may not do ther-to, ne I ne may not therfro me
deffende.  But I have well in mynde that he badde I sholde not
sende hym for to seche."  And Vlfin ansuerde, "I am in certeyn
of oon thynge, that he farith well and is in hele.  Yef he love
yow as he was wonte to do, he knoweth what distresse that ye
beth ynne, and it shal <MILESTONE N="24a" UNIT="folio"/>not be longe er ye here of hym
tydynges."</P>
<P>  Thus Vlfyn counforted the kynge, and counseiled hym to
sende for his meyne to hym, and that sholde cause hym
to foryete a grete partie of his sorowe.  And the kynge seyde
so he wolde do; but his love myght he, ne his sorow in no maner
wise for-gete.  Thus the kynge peyned to conforte hym-self
and his peple, and made the castell to be assailed; but take


<PB REF="" N="72" ID="pb.72"/>

it they myght not in no wise.  And on a day, as Vlfin rode
thourgh the oste, he mette with a man that he nothinge
kenned.  And he seide, "Vlfin, I wolde fain <CHOICE><CORR>speke</CORR><SIC>spke</SIC></CHOICE> with the."  And
thanne they yede oute of the hoste, the man on his fete, and
Vlfyn on horsebak.  And Vlfin light down on foote to <CHOICE><CORR>speke</CORR><SIC>spke</SIC></CHOICE>
with this man, and hym axed what he was.  And he seide,
"I am an olde man, as thow maist se, and som tyme in my
yowthe I was holden wise; and now of moche thinge that I sey
men sein that I dote; but I sey to yow in counseile that I was
at Tintagel not longe sithe, and ther I was a-queynted with a
gode man, that tolde me that youre kynge loueth the Dukes wif,
and that is the cause that the kynge distroyeth his contre, for
he brought his wif fro Cardoel.  And yef ye and the kynge
will wele quyte my nede, I shall make yow a-queynte with a
gode man that shall make yow speke mith Ygerne, and that shall
wele counseile the kynge of his desir."  When Vlfyn herde
this man so say, he merveled who that hym sholde haue tolde,
and prayde him that he wolde teche hym to that man that
cowde counseile the kynge of his desires.  And the olde man
seide, "I will first here what rewarde the kinge will yeve."
Quod Vlfin, "Where shall I yow fynde when I haue spoke with
the kynge?"  The olde man seide, "Ye shull finde me or my
message be-twene this and the hoste."  And so he hym
comaunded to god, and bad hym come on the morowe, and hym
wolde telle soche tydinges as sholde hym plese.  And Vlfin com
to the kynge as hastely as he myght, and tolde how the olde
man hadde seide.  And whan the kynge hadde herde these
wordes, he lowgh and made feire semblaunce, and seide to Vlfin,
"Knowest thow ought the man that thow spake with?"  And
he ansuerde, "It is a man right olde and feble."  And the kynge
seide, "Whan shull ye mete este to-geder?"  And Vlfyn seide,
"In the morowe, for he badde me wite of yow what he shulde
haue to rewarde."  And the kynge seide, "Lede me thider as
thow shalt mete with hym."  And Vlfin seide, "With gode
will; and yef thow speke with hym with-oute me, profer hym
what he will desire of myn."  Thus thei leften till on the

<PB REF="" N="73" ID="pb.73"/>

morowe; but that nyght was the kynge merier than he hadde
ben eny tyme be-fore.</P>
<P>  The morowe after masse the kynge and Vlfyn rode forth as
Vlfin wolde hym guyde; and as thei issued oute of the
hoste thei sye a crepell that semed blinde; and as thei passed
forth by hym, he cried with an high voyce, "Sir kynge, so god
a-complesshe thyn hertys desire of that thow desirest moste to haue,
so yeve me som thynge that I may conne the thanke fore."  <MILESTONE N="24b" UNIT="folio"/>And
the kynge be-heilde Vlfyn, and seide lawghinge, and seide, "Vlfyn,
"Do that I shall comaunde the for my grete profite, and for my
love, and for to compleisshe my grete desire."  And Vlfyn seide,
"Ther is nothinge that I desire so moche, as for to do that myght
a-complisshe youre desire."  And the kynge seide, "Hast thow
nought herde what the Crepell axed, that I sholde remembre
the thinge that I beste loved in this worlde, and that I am moste
desiraunte.  Go and sette the a-down by hym, and sey þat I
haue sente the to hym, and ther is nothinge in this worlde that I
haue in possession, but that I wolde come to yeve it hym, yef I
durste come to se hym."  And Vlfin, with-oute eny grucchynge,
yede and yaf hym-self to the Crepill, and sette hym down by
hym.  And whan the crepill felte Vlfyn, he axed what he was,
and what he was come for to seche.  And he ansuerde, "The
kynge hath sente me to yow, and that I sholde euer be youres."
And whan the crepill that herde, he lowgh, and seide to Vlfyn,
"The kynge is sone perceyvinge, and me knoweth better than do
ye.  I will that thow wite that the olde man that thow spake
with yesterday sente me to the; but I will not telle the what he
seyde.  Go to the kynge, and sey he wolde do a grete thynge for
to haue his desire, and that I sende hym worde that sone he is
parceyvinge, and he shall spede the better."  And Vlfin seide,
"I dar nought aske what ye ben."  "Aske the kynge," quod
the crepill, "and he shall telle the wele i-nough."  And Vlfyn
lepe on horse, and priked after the kynge.  And whan the kynge
saugh hym come, he drough a-side, and seide, "Vlfyn, is it that
thow art come after me; ne have I not yove the to the Crepill?"
Quod Vlfin, "He seith that ye be sone aperceyvaunte of hym, and


<PB REF="" N="74" ID="pb.74"/>

that ye sholde telle me what he is, for he wolde not telle me, but
seide ye sholde telle wele i-nough."  Than seide the kynge,
"Wost thow what olde man that was that spake with the
yesterday?  that same is this that thow haste seyn a crepill."  And
Vlfyn seide, "May this be true, that <CHOICE><CORR>oon</CORR><SIC>oo</SIC></CHOICE> man may hym-self thus
disfigure?  And what is he than that thus hym disfigureth?"
And the kynge ansuerde, "Knowe it verily it is Merlin, that
thus hym kepeth fro yow.  And whan he will, he will make yow
wele to knowe that it is thus."  Thus they passed forth thourgh
the feilde; and Merlin come in his right semblaunce in to the
kynges teynte, and asked where was the kynge.  And a
messanger come to the kynge, and seide Merlin was come; and than was
the kynge so gladde that he myght not ansuere, but in all haste
returned, and cleped Vlfyn, and seide, "Now shalt thow knowe
yef it be so as I haue seide, for Merlyn is comen, and I knowe
wele that he doth not seke me for nought."  And than seide
Vlfyn, "Now shall it be sene yef euer ye were ought wroth, and
yef ye can other do well or sey to his plesire of alle thinges; for
ther is no man that may yow helpe so wele to haue the love of
Ygerne."  And the kynge seide, "Thow seiste soth, and ther is
no thynge that he doth comaunde me but I shall it gladly
performe."</P>
<P>  Thus thei rode till thei come to the teynte where as thei
fonde Merlin, and the kynge hym made grete ioye and
mery chere, and ran hym a-gein with armes spred a-brode, and
hym halsed and seide he was the man in all the worlde that was
moste to hym welcome; <MILESTONE N="25a" UNIT="folio"/>and than he seide, "Wherto sholde
I me complayne vn-to yow, for as ye it knowe as my-self, and
ther was neuer man that I longed so sore after, and I pray yow
and requyre telle me of that ye knowe my herte desireth so."
And Merlin seide, "Of that ye me asken I shall not speke
with-oute Vlfyn."  Than made the kynge to clepe after Vlfin, and
droughen hem a-side in counseile.  Than seide the kynge to
Merlin, "I haue tolde Vlfin of that ye comaunded, and that ye
were the olde man that he sigh yesterday, and also the crepill
this day."  And Vlfyn be-heilde hym strongely, and seide, "May


<PB REF="" N="75" ID="pb.75"/>

this be trewe that the kynge seith?"  And Merlin seide, "Ye,
it is trewe with-outen faile; and as sone as I saugh he sente the
to me I wiste well he hadde me perceyved."  And than Vlfyn
seide to the kynge, "Sir, now sholde ye speke of youre gref, and
not wepe whan ye ben soill."  And the kynge seide, "I wote
not what to sey ne preyen:  he knoweth well my corage, and I
may not make hym no lesynge, but he it knowe as wele <CHOICE><CORR>as</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> I;
but I pray hym hertely to helpe me to haue the love of Ygerne,
and he ne shall devise nothinge that is to me possible but that I
shall it gladly don."  And Merlin seide, "Yef ye will graunte
me that I shall aske, I shall purchace yow hir love, and make
yow to ly in here chamber and in hir bedde, bothe naked."  And
Vlfyn that herde, he lough and seide, "Now shall I se what a
mannes herte is worth."  And the kynge seide to Merlin, "Ye
can not aske me nothinge that be founden in this worlde, but I
sholde it yow yeven."  And Merlin ansuerde, "How may I
here-of be sure, but yef ye be sworn, and also lete Vlfyn swere,
that I shall haue that I aske on the morn that ye haue leye with
Ygerne, and don with hir youre beste?"  And the kynge seide,
"That wolde he do with gode will."  And Merlin asked Vlfyn
yef he wolde swere, and Vlfyn seide, "That me for-thinketh, for
I was neuer yet sworn in no tyme."</P>
<P>  When Merlin herde that worde, he lough and seide, "Whan
youre othes be made, I shall telle yow how it shall be."
Than the kynge made be brought the hiest seintewaries that he
hadde, and the beste relikes, and ther-on they dide swere as
Merlin dide hem devyse, and thei seiden thei sholde it feithfully
holde with-outen fraude or mal engyn.  After the kynge swore
Vlfyn, and thus hath Merlin taken their othes.  And than seide
the kynge, "Merlin, now I requere yow sone to helpe myn
hertes desire, as the man of all the worlde that moste ther-after
longeth to haue it complisshed."  And than seide Merlyn, "Ye
muste be wisely demened, for she is a trewe lady and full wise,
and trewe to god and to hir lorde; but now shall ye se what
power I haue hir to be-gile, for I shall make yow semblaunce of
the Duke so wele, that ther is no man that yow doth sen but he

<PB REF="" N="76" ID="pb.76"/>

shall wene it be the Duke.  And two knyghtes that ben moste
privy with hym, that noon ne knoweth so moche of his counseile,
not Ygerne her-silf; and that oon hight Bretell, and that other
Iordan; and I shall haue the semblaunce of Bretel, and Vlfin
shall be like Iordan, and so shall I make hem to open the gates
of the castell, and we shull alle thre ly with-Inne; but full erly
on the morow we moste gon oute, for er we departe thens we
shall here straunge tidinges, and therfore a-ray youre oste and
your barons, and comaunde hem to make gode wacche to
diffende hem-self, and that noon of hem ne go towarde <MILESTONE N="25b" UNIT="folio"/>the castell
till that ye be come a-geyn, and be well ware that ye telle no
creature wheder that ye shall go."  And Vterpendragon dide as
Merlin hadde devised, and a-noon com agein, and seide that he
was redy, and Merlin seide how he was also redy, "there is not
ellis but to spede vs forward," and so thei wenten forth alle thre
till thei com ner at Tintagell, and than seide Merlyn to the
kynge, "A-byde ye here, and I and Vlfyn shall go this wey."
And than eche drough a-side by hym-self; and whan thei were
disseuered, and Merlin hadde don his art, he toke an herbe, and
brought it to the kynge, and seide, "Frote youre visage with this
herbe, and youre handes."  And the kynge toke the herbe, and
rubbid his handes, and his visage, and his feet; and anoon, as he
hadde thus I-don, he hadde aperteliche the semblaunce of the
Duke.  And than seide, Merlyn, "Haue ye eny mynde that euer
ye saugh Iordan?"  And the kynge seide, "Ye, I knowe hym
wele."  And Merlyn com to Vlfyn, and transfigured hym to the
semblaunce of Iurdan, and than sente hym to the kynge.  And
whan the kynge saugh Vlfyn, he hym blissed, and seide, "Mercy
god!  how may eny man make oon man so like a-nother?"  And
than he seide to Vlfyn, "How semeth the be me?"  And Vlfyn
seide, "I knowe yow nought but for the Duke."  And the kynge
seide, he was verily like vn-to Iurdan.  And as thei stoden, so
thei be-heilde Merlyn, and thei semed verily it was Bretel.  And
thus thei speken to-geder, and taried till it was nyght, and in the
evenynge thei come to the Castell gate.  And Merlyn, that wele
resembled to bretel, cleped the porter, and the peple com to the


<PB REF="" N="77" ID="pb.77"/>

gate, and saugh apertly the Duke, as hem semed; and thei seide,
"Open: lo, here the duke."  And thei dought it was Bretel and
Iurdan, and whan thei weren entred, Bretel diffended, "that no
man in the place sholde not wite that the Duke was comen."
I-nowe ther were that yede to telle the Duchesse.  And Merlyn
toke the kynge in counseile, and seide that he sholde contene
hym-self myrily.  And a-noon alle thre thei come be-fore the
chambir where Ygerne that yet was in her bedde; and in all haste
that thei myght, thei mad their lorde redy.  And so he yede to
bedde to Ygerne; and that nyght he gat vpon hir the gode kynge
that after was cleped Arthur.  The lady made grete ioye of the
kynge, for she wende verily it hadde ben the Duke hir lorde,
that she loved moche with a trewe herte.  Thus thei lay to-geder,
till on the morowe, in the dawenynge, the tidinges com in to
the town that the Duke was dede, and also his stewarde
I-take.  And than thei com full previly in; and when these other tweyn
that tho were a-risen, herde these tidynges, thei ran ther as their
lorde lay, and seide, "A-ryse vp, and go to youre castell, for
ther be soche tydinges come hider, that oure peple wene that
ye be deed."  And he lepe vp, and seide, "It is no merveyle
though they wene so; ffor I yede oute of the castell that no man
knewe ther-of no worde."  A-noon he toke leve of Ygerne, and
hir kiste, seynge hem alle at her departynge.  And thus they
departed oute of the castell in all the haste they myght, that
neuer oon ne knewe but <CHOICE><CORR>it</CORR><SIC>is</SIC></CHOICE> was the Duke.  And whan they
weren oute, thei weren right gladde.  And Merlyn seide to the
kynge, "Sir, haue ye kept wele the <CHOICE><CORR>couenaunte</CORR><SIC>comenñt</SIC></CHOICE>  now, loke thow
kepe as wele myne."  And the kynge seide, "Ye sey trewe, for
ye haue don me the beste servise that euer man dide to a-nother;
and <MILESTONE N="26a" UNIT="folio"/>therfore youre couenauntes shall I well holde."  And Merlyn
seide, "I hem aske now, and will that they be holden."  And the
kynge seide, "I am redy hem to performe."  And than seide
Merlyn, "I will that thow knowe that thow haste engendred an
heyre male on Ygerne, and that hast thow me yoven; and


<PB REF="" N="78" ID="pb.78"/>

therfore I shall write the houre and the day in the whiche it is
begeten, and so shalt thow knowe yef I sey soth."  Quod the
kynge, "As thow hast seide, I haue sworn, and I yeve it the
with gode will."</P>
<P>  Thus they rode till they come to a rivere, and ther Merlyn
did hem waisshen, and than hadde thei semblaunce as
that thei hadden be-fore.  And than the kynge rode forth as faste
as he myght; and as sone as he was come his barons and his
peple gedered a-boute hym.  And he hem asked how the Duke
was deed.  And thei hym tolden, "The day when ye were
departed the oste was stille and koye; and therby the duke
vndirstode that ye were not in the oste, and dide his peple to
arme, and come vpon vs, and dide vs grete damage er we
myghten ben armed.  The cry a-rose and the noyse, and oure
meynee hem arayde, and set on hem, and drof hem a-geyn, even
be-fore the yate.  And ther the duke a-bode, and dide many
maistries in armes.  And ther was his horse slayn and the Duke
ouerthrowe, and ther was he deed amonge oure peple on foote,
that hym nought knewen.  And we driven the remenaunt in at
the yates, that sympilly hem deffended whan they hadde loste
their lorde."  And the kynge seide he was right sory for the
deth of the Duke.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.5">
<HEAD> CHAPTER V. 
<LB/>MARRIAGE OF THE KING WITH YGERNE; BIRTH OF ARTHUR; AND DEATH OF THE KING.</HEAD>
<P>  Thus was the Duke of Tintagel deed, and the castell
loste.  The kynge spake to his barons, and seide that sore hym
for thought the myschaunce of the Duke.  And the kynge toke
a-visement of his counseile how he myght this thinge
a-mende.  And his barons ne blamede hym nought, though he did not hate
the duke dedly, and that he were hevy for the
mysauenture.  "Truly," seide the kynge, "to my power I wolde fain make the

<PB REF="" N="79" ID="pb.79"/>

a-mendes."  Than spake Vlfyn, and seide, "Sir, seth this
a-venture is thus be-fallen, it moste be a-mended in the beste wise it
may."  Than Vlfyn toke a-part the barons, and seide, "How
seme ye that this myght be amended a-geyn the lady and a-geyn
the Dukes frendes, wherof the kynge asketh yow counseile.  And
ye moste counseile hym the beste to youre power as youre lorde."
And thei seiden, "We wolde gladly rede hym the beste, and
therfore we pray yow to yeve vs counseile for oure moste
wurschip how we myght beste be demened in this matere, that the
kynge forsake not oure counseile; for we knowe wele that ye are
well in his grace."  And Vlfyn seide, "Yef I be wele in his
grace, trow ye that I sholde counseile a thynge be-hynde hym
that I sholde not sey be-fore hym; than holde ye me for a
tray-tour yef I sholde be soche.  And yef the pees and the
a-mendement to the lady lay in me, I wolde rede hym soche thinges that
ye ne durste not thynken."  And they seide, "We trowe yow
wele, and wele we knowe that ye be wise and trewe, and of
gode counseile; and therfore we pray yow to connseile vs what
were beste to requere the kynge ynne, after that we have sein
and knowe verily."  And Vlfin seide, "I shall sey yow myn
avise, and yef ye can better, sey it ye.  I rede the kynge sende
after alle the Dukes frendes, and that <MILESTONE N="26b" UNIT="folio"/>the kynge go to Tintagel,
and make alle the ladies frendes to come also be-fore hym.  And
whan they beth come be-fore hym, that he profer for the pees
and a-mendes for the Dukes deth, that yef they it refusen, that
thei be holde for foles, and he for a wise man and a trewe.  In
this wise, he that wele haue pees, it moste be made."  And thei
that were wise seide, "We holde vs to youre counseile, ne neuer
for vs shall he haue other."  Than they come be-fore the kynge,
and seiden the counseile that thei hadde founden; but thei ne
seide not that Vlfyn hadde it hem yoven, for so he hem hadde
praide and required.  And þus as he hadde hem enformed they
seide be-fore the kynge.  And the kynge seide to this, "I a-corde
me well, and will that it be so as ye haue devised."  And than
the kynge sente to alle the Dukes kenrede, and alle by letteres,
that thei sholde come to hym to Cardoel, and yaf gode <CHOICE><CORR>trewys</CORR><SIC>trwys</SIC></CHOICE>,


<PB REF="" N="80" ID="pb.80"/>

and that he sholde a-mende alle the fautes wherof thei cowde hem
complayne.  Thus seide the kynge be-fore alle his barons, and so
departed fro the castell.  And Merlin com to the kynge, and seide,
"Wite ye who hath yove this counseile that ye haue
comaunded."  And the kynge seide, "Nay, but that the nobill men and wise
me dide reden."  And Merlyn seide, "Amonge hem alle thei
cowde nought haue dought this rede, but Vlfyn that is wise and
a trewe knyght hath ordeyned all this pees, and the beste
ordenaunce that eny can thynke.  And wite it wele that no man
knoweth it, saue he and ye and I that he hath it seide."  And
than seide the kynge to Merlyn, "And how rede ye of this
thinge?"  Quod Merlin, "I knowe no better counseile, ne more
trewe; and so shalt thow a-complisshe thy desere of thyn herte
that thow art moste desiraunt.  And now I muste go, but first I
shall speke with the be-fore Vlfyn.  And whan I am go, thow
maiste aske Vlfin how he hath dought in makynge of this
pees."  And the kynge seide so wolde he don.</P>
<P>  Than was Vlfin cleped; and whan he was come be-fore them
two, Merlyn seide to the kynge, "Ye haue yove me be
your power the heyer that ye haue be-geten, and therfore it is no
reson that ye kepe hym to youre vse.  And ye haue also the hour
and the tyme I-writen that was in engendred.  And ye knowe
also that it was do be me, and so sholde myn be the synne; but
I dede it helpe, for I trowe the moder ther-of sholde be sore
a-schamed yef she her-silf dide it norish; and a woman hath no
witte ageins that she may not hiden, and a-gein the worlde.  And
therfore I will that Vlfyn make a letter of recorde that I shall
hym haue, and the houre and the nyght that he was in
engendred.  And ye shull no more se me be-fore that day that he
shalbe born, the nexte nyght after.  And I pray yow, as my lorde,
that ye truste well to Vlfyn, of that he shall sey vnto yow, for
he loveth yow full trewly, ne he shall not rede yow no-thynge
but for youre profite and grete wurship.  And I shall no more
speke with yow these vj monethes, but I shall speke to Vlfyn,
and therfore do be hys counseile, yef thow wilt holde trouth,
and haue my love fro hens-forth."

<PB REF="" N="81" ID="pb.81"/>
</P>
<P>  In this maner kepte Vlfyn the recorde of the engenderinge of
the childe.  And Merlin toke the kynge in counseile, and
seide, "Sir, thow shalt haue Ygerne in mariage; but be wel
ware that she ne knowe not that thow leyn by her, and that is a
thinge that moste shall make hir<MILESTONE N="27a" UNIT="folio"/>in thy mercy, ffor yef thow
aske hir be whom that she is grete, she can not telle the who is
the fader, and so shall she haue of the grete shame; and also
that is a thinge that may beste helpe me to haue the childe."
And than Merlin toke leve of the kynge, and the kynge rode
forth his iourneyes till he come to a Cardoel.  And Merlin wente to
Blase, and tolde hym alle these thinges, and many other, and alle
he wrote in his boke.  And whan the kynge was come to Cardoel,
he sente after the men of hys counseile, and asked what was theire
rede in this thinge.  And thei seide, "We rede that ye make
pees with the duchesse, and with the frendes of the Duke; and
thei may well lete hir knowe that she may not hir diffende agein
yow, and that ye will do hem grete wurship to have pees with
hem; and also comaunde to go to Tintagel, to speke with the
duchesse, and with the Dukes frendes, and loke yef thei will
haue this pees; and yef youre counseilers a-corden, ye shull do
as thei desire."  Thus wente the barons to Tintagel; and the
kynge a-bode at Cardoel, and toke Vlfin in counseile, and asked
asked hym what he redde in this mater.  And he seide his rede
was to haue pees.  And the kynge seide, "Vlfin, thow haste
this pees ordeyned in thyn herte, and I wote well what."  And
Vlfin seide, "Yef I haue it purposed, and ye it knowen, than
wite ye whether it plese yow or no?"  And the kynge seide,
"It plesith me wele, and wolde fain it were don as thow haste it
devised in thy herte."  And Vlfyn seide, "Ne entermete not
yow to profer, ne to sone to graunten, for I shall it wele bringe
to gode ende."  And the kynge prayed ther-to hertely.  Thus
haue thei endid theire counseile.  And the kynges massagers
come to Tintagel, and fonde the duchesse and the frendes of the
duke.  And ther thei shewde their massage, and how that the
duke was deed thourgh hys owne outerage, and seide also how
the kynge was therfore right sory, and gladly wolde make


<PB REF="" N="82" ID="pb.82"/>

a-mendement to the lady, and to alle his frendes.  And thei
saugh wele that thei myght not deffende hem agein the kynges
wratth, and therfore thei counseiled the lady and the frendes of
the Duke to haue pees with the kynge.  And the lady seide, and
hir frendes, thei wolde take counseile.  And so they wente
togeder; and the ladyes frendes counseiled the frendes of the duke
to haue pees with the kynge, and that he was slayn also by his
owne outrage.  "And also, ye knowe wele, we may not vs
defende agein the kynge; but lete vs here thise worthi men what
pees that the kynge will make with vs.  And in soche maner it
may be that it ought not to be refused, for of two euelles it is
gode to take the lesse; and this is oure counseile."  And the
duchesse seide, "I will not refuse the rede of yow that beth the
frendes of my gode lorde; ne I ne knowen not whom I sholde so
wele love and truste."  And thus thei com oute from this
counseile."</P>
<P>  And than spake oon of the worthiest and moste wise that
was on the ladies side to the kynges messagers, and seide
these wordes, "Sirs, my ladyes counseile and she wolde gladly
witen what a-mendes the kynge wolde do of hir lorde that is
deed?"  And the messagers seyden a-noon, "Lordinges, we
knowe not the will of the kynge, but thus moche he hath seide,
that he will a-mende it be the a-vise and counseile of his
barons."  And than seide they, "He shall it a-menden wele, yef god
will."  Than toke they day till the quynsyne that the lady and hir
frendes <MILESTONE N="27b" UNIT="folio"/>sholde come be-fore the kynge, for to haue right, and
to here what the kynge wolde sey, and yef the kynges profer
myght not agre the lady, and also hir frendes, thei hadde saf
condite to returne to Tintagel.  Thus was take the day of
a-mendement.  And messagers com to the kynge, and seide as thei hadde
founden, and the counseile that the lady hadde.  And the kynge
seide thei sholde haue conduyte with gode will, yef thei aske
reson.  In this manere soiourned the kynge all that woke at
Cardoel, and spake be-twene hym and Vlfyn of many thinges.  And
at the quynsyne, be counseile of his barons, he sente to the
duchesse conduyte.  And whan she was come, the kynge made


<PB REF="" N="83" ID="pb.83"/>

aske <CHOICE><CORR>of the lady</CORR><SIC>of the lady of the lady</SIC></CHOICE> and hir counseile, what a-mendes she required
for the deth of hir lorde.  The ladyes counseile ansuerde and
seide, "Sir, my lady is not comen to aske a-mendes, but for to
here what shall be don to hir for the deth of hir lorde."  And
thei that the kynge hadde made aske this demande, come to the
kynge, and seide as thei hadden herde.  And than the kynge
prased gretly theire wise ansuere; and than the kynge asked his
barons and his counseile, "What is youre rede in this mater?"
And thei seide, "That many no man knowe, saf youre-self, what
pees ye will make with hem, ne what ye will hem offre."  And
the kynge seide, "I shall sone haue tolde yow the thought of
myn herte; ye be alle my men and of my counseile, and
therfore I put it all vpon yow, and kepe ye myn honoure as ye owe to
do.  And what ye ordeyne I shall it not denye."  And they
seide, "More may we not asken; but this is yet a grete thinge
that we dar it not vndirtake; but we be right sure that ye shull
vs come no magre."  And Vlfin seide, "It semeth that ye holde
the kynge a fole, whan ye leve no thinge that he seith vnto
yow."  And thei seide, "Yesse, we trow hym wele; but we
beseche the kynge that he comaunde yow to ben oon of vs, and to
helpe vs to counseile by yowre advyse in the beste wyse that ye
can."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge herde hem desire Vlfyn to be of here
counseile, he made semblaunce as he hadde be gladde, and
seide to Vlfyn, "I have norshid the, and made the a riche man,
and I knowe wele thow art wise; go forth and counseile hem
the beste that thow canste or mayste."  And he ansuerde, "So
shall I do, seth ye me comaunden; but this I will that ye knowe,
that ther is no kynge ne prince that may be to moche be-loved of
his peple, ne he may not to moche obbeye hym-self for to haue
theire hertes."  Thus wente Vlfin to counseile a-monge the barons
and the worthy men.  And whan thei were come to-geder they
asked the best rede in this cas.  And Vlfin seide, "Ye haue wele
herde how the kynge hath put hym vpon yow; now lete vs go to


<PB REF="" N="84" ID="pb.84"/>

the lady and hir frendes, and wete yef they will holde the
same."  And thei ansuerde that he had wele seide and wisely.  And so
they yede to the lady and hir frendes, to knowe theire will.  And
whan thei were come be-fore hir, of her wordes this was the
somme.  Thei seiden how the kynge hadde a-greed hym-self all to
theire ordenaunce; "and thei we come for to knowe, yef she and
hir frendes wolde assente to the ende and a-mendes that they
wolde ordeyne in the same wise as did the kynge."  And her
frendes seide of this thei wolde take counseile.  And she toke
hir counseile to-geder what was beste to do ther-inne.  And thei
seide the kynge myght no more profer than to put hym-self in the
ordenaunce of his barons.  To this thei acorded, bothe the kynge
and the lady and her frendes, and the <CHOICE><CORR>parentes</CORR><SIC>parentee</SIC></CHOICE> of the Duke, and
maden gode suertee, bothe on that oon <MILESTONE N="28a" UNIT="folio"/>part and the tother.  And
than the barons wente to-geder, and asked oon of a-nother what
was beste rede in this mater.  And whan euery man hadde seide
his advise, thei asked Vlfin what was his rede in that cas.  And
Vlfyn seide, "I shall sey myn avise, and that I say I will sey in
all places.  Ye knowe well," quod Vlfyn, "that the Duke was
deed by the kynge and by his force, and that he hadde not forfet
for to dye.  And, wite ye wele, the lady is lefte charged with
childe; and ye knowe well the kynge hath hir londe wasted
and distroyed.  And ye knowe wele also that she is oon of the
beste ladies of the worlde, and oon of the wisest; and ye knowe
also that the parentes of the Duke haue grete losse by thys deth,
and therfore it is right that the kynge restore hem agein her
londes, after that thei ben; and that he haue here hertes and hir
love.  And on the tother part, ye knowe that the kinge is
withoute wif; and I sey as be myn avise, the kynge ne may a-mende
this damage, but yef he take hir to his wif; and this me semeth
he ought wele to do for hir and for oure love, and for them of
the reeme that of this a-mendes shull heren.  And whan he hath
all thus do, and graunded that, than he first of all mary the
Dukes eldest doughter to kynge loth of Orcanye, whiche is here


<PB REF="" N="85" ID="pb.85"/>

presente, and to his other frendens, that he do so, that they holde
hym here gode lorde and trewe kynge."</P>
<P>  "Now haue ye herde," quod Vlfin, "my counseile; now
may ye sey what ye semeth yef this be not to yow
a-greable."  And thei ansuerde alle with oon assent, and seide,
"Thow hast seide the beste counseile of the worlde, and the
hiest that euer man durste thynke.  And yef ye dur sey so to
the kynge as ye haue seide here, and that we may se he therto
a-corde, and we shull yow helpe ther-to right gladly."  And Vlfin
ansuerde, "Ye ne sey not i-nough, but yef ye will ther-to a-corde
playnly, I shall reherse the wordes to the kynges presence.  And
lo, here the kynge of Orcanye, on whom I sey grete parti of the
pees, and therfore lete vs here hys avise."  And the kynge loth
seide, "For ought that ye haue seide touchinge me, I will not
that the pees be lefte."  And whan thise othir herde this, thei
a-corden to this counseile alle, and com to the kynges
teinte.  And the lady was sente fore, and alle that weren of hir
counseile.  And whan thei were alle assembled, thei sat alle, saf
Vlfin; he was stondinge, and rehersed the a-corde of the pees as
it was be-fore spoken.  And than he seide to the barons, "Be ye
not alle thus a-corded?"  And they seiden alle, "Yesse."  Than
he turned to the kynge, and seide, "Sir, how sey ye to this
thinge; will ye ther-to agreen to the acorde and ordenaunce
of these worthy lordes?"  And the kynge seide, "Ye, yef the
duchesse and her frendes be contente, and that the kynge loth
will for me take the Dukes doughter."  And than ansuerde the
kynge loth, "Sir, ther is nothinge that ye me requyre for youre
love or youre profite but I will it gladly performe."  Than spake
Vlfyn to hym that hadde the wordes for the duchesse, a-lowde,
that alle it myght heren, and seide, "Assente ye to this pees and
acorde?"  And ansuerde full wisely and pitously, be-holdinge
his lady and her counseile, of whom the tounges of hir hertes
were at hir yen, so that thei gonne wepe for ioye and pite; and
he also that ansuerde to Vlfyn dide wepe, and seide that so high
and wurschipful a-mendes <MILESTONE N="28b" UNIT="folio"/>dide neuer a lorde to his man.  And
than the lady and hir counseile toke theire avisement, and thei


<PB REF="" N="86" ID="pb.86"/>

seiden, "Ther is no man in the worlde but he ought her-to
assenten; wherfore we rede in-as-moche as we se that the kynge
is so gracious a man and so trewe, that after alle these wordes
we submytte vs holy to his ordenaunce."  And thus was the
pees graunted on that <CHOICE><CORR>oon</CORR><SIC>o</SIC></CHOICE> side and the tother.  And so
Vterpendragon toke Ygerne to his wif, and maried her doughter to kynge
loth of Orcanye.  The weddynge of the kynge and Ygerne was
the xxti day after that he hadde by hir leyn in hir
chamber.  And of her doughter that was maried to kynge loth com Gawein,
Agrauuayn, Gaheret, and gaheries, and mordred.  And the kynge
uentres of Garlot hadde a-nother of hir doughters, that was geten
on baste, whos name was Morgeins.  And be the counseile of alle
hir frendes the kynge sette hir to skole in an house of religion, and
she lerned so moche of an arte that is cleped astronomye, wher-in
she wrought many tymes; and by that crafte was she cleped
morgne-le-fee.  The other doughters alle the kynge dide marye,
and moche he dide for the Dukes kyn and frendes.</P>
<P>  Thus was the kynge wedded to Ygerne, and kepe her till her
gretnesse apered.  And as the kynge on a nyght lay with
her, he asked with whom she was so grete, and þat she myght
not be so grete with hym, seth the tyme thei were wedded, ffor
he hadde neuer tyme with her leyn but that the tyme was
wreten; ne she ne myght be grete by the Duke, for longe tyme
be-fore his deth she hadde not hym seyn.  Thus the kynge oposed
Ygerne, and she hadde grete drede, and seide wepinge, "Sir, of
this that ye sey I may make to yow no lesynge, ne of other
thinges shall I not lyen; ffor oure lordes love, haue mercy on
me, and I shall telle yow a merveile that is very soth, yef ye
will me assure, yef it plese yow, that ye shull not me
forsaken."  Quod the kynge, "Seith on hardely, for I will not departe fro
yow in no wise for nothinge that ye sey."  And than was the
quene glad, and seide, "Sir, I shall telle yow a wonder
thinge."  And she tolde hym how a man hadde leyn with hir in semblaunce
of the Duke, and brought with hym two men in semblaunce of
two that the Duke loved beste of all the worlde.  And thus com
he to my chambir, seinge alle my peple, and lay with me.  And

<PB REF="" N="87" ID="pb.87"/>

I wende verily it hadde be my lorde; and he be-gate the childe
that I am now with so grete.  And I knowe wele it was that
same nyght that my lorde were slain, for he lay with me whan
tydinges com of my lordes deth.  And than made he me to
vndirstonde that he was my lorde, and that his peple ne wisten
not that he was come to me.  And so he departed, when he hadde
herde these tidinges, and seide to me, 'Feire wif, loke than noon
this knowe, as moche as ye may kepe this secret, for so sholde ye
be shamed yef it were knowen,'" "And I will that ye it knowe
that this childe that shalbe born of yow, nys nother youre ne
myn by reson; wherfore I pray yow that whan it is born, ye
yevith ther as I shall comaunde to be yoven, that neuer we here
ther-of speke."  And she ansuerde, "Sir, of me and all that to
me aperteneth, may ye do youre volunte."  Than com the kynge <MILESTONE N="29a" UNIT="folio"/><CHOICE><CORR>to</CORR><SIC>to to</SIC></CHOICE> Vlfyn, and tolde these wordes of hym and the quene.</P>
<P>  When Vlfyn vndirstode, he ansuerde the kynge, "Now may
ye knowe that my lady is both gode <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> trewe, and also
wise, that so grete a thinge durste yow counsell.  And ye haue
also wele spedde the entente of Merlin, that in other maner ne
myght haue the childe that she is with grete."  Thus they
endured to the vj monethes ende, that Merlyn hadde sette to
speke with Vlfyn previly, and hym asked tydinges of that he
wolde; and when thei hadde spoke to-gedir, he sente after the
kynge be Vlfyn.  And whan they were alle thre assembled, the
kynge tolde Merlin how he hadde do with the quene, and how he
hadde made the pees for to haue the childe.  And Merlin seide,
"Vlfyn is som-what a-quytte of the synne that he hadde in the
love makinge, but I am not yet a-quyt of that; I helped to
disseyve the lady ne of the childe that she hath with-inne hir,
of whom she wote not who is the fader."  And the kynge seide,
"Ye be so gode and so wise that ye can yow wele in this
a-quyten."  And Merlin seide, "Ther-to moste ye helpe."  And
the kynge seide he wolde hym helpe in all the maner that he
can, and the childe wolde he make hym to haue.  And Merlin


<PB REF="" N="88" ID="pb.88"/>

seide, "Ther is in this contre a gode man, that is oon of the
trewest of all thi reame; and he hath a wif that is gode
woman and a wise, and the trewest of this londe and beste
tacched of alle gode condiciouns; and she is now leide down in
hir bedde of a childe male, and hir lorde is not moste riche man;
ther-fore I wolde that ye sende for hym, and yeve so of youre
goode, that he and the gode lady his wif swere on a boke to kepe
a childe that shalbe brought vnto them, and that she yeve it soke
of hir owne mylke, and hir owne childe to be put to a-nothir
woman to be norisshed, and that they norisshe and kepe that
childe that shalbe brought vnto hem."  And the kynge seide,
"Euen as thow haste seide, so shall I do."  And Merlin toke his
leve, and wente to Blase.  And Vterpendragon sente after this
noble knight; and whan he was come, the kynge made hym gret
chere; and merveiled why the kynge made hym soche grete
feeste.  And the kynge seide, "Dere frende, I most discure to
yow a merveile that is me be-fallen, and ye be my lege man, and
therfore I pray yow for the feith that ye owen vnto me, that ye
me helpe, after that I haue seide yow my counseile, and that ye
kepe it secrete to youre power."  And he ansuerde, "Syr, ther is
nothinge that <CHOICE><CORR>ye</CORR><SIC>y</SIC></CHOICE> sey to me, or commaunde me to do, but that I
shall do it with  all my power; and yef it be a thynge that I may
not do, I shall it wele counseile."  And the kynge seide, "Ther
is be-falle to me a wondir thynge in my slepe: of a man that
come be-fore me, and seide ye be the worthiest man of all my
reame, and moste trewe to me; and also he seide that ye hadde
engendered on youre wif a childe that is born; and he badde me
that I sholde pray yow to put youre owne childe to sowken
a-nother woman, for my love, and youre wif to yeve the childe
sowken of her owne mylke that <MILESTONE N="29b" UNIT="folio"/>shall be brought vn-to hir, and
it kepe and norisshen."</P>
<P>  Whan the gode man herde this ansuere, "Sir, this is a
grete thynge that ye me requyre: that I sholde my
childe disseuer from his nature, and make hym to be norisshed of
a-nothir woman; and, sir, I pray yow, when shall this childe be
born, and to me be brought?"  And the kynge seyde, "So god


<PB REF="" N="89" ID="pb.89"/>

me helpe, I wote neuer."  And than seide the knyght, "Sir,
<CHOICE><CORR>ther</CORR><SIC>ther ther</SIC></CHOICE> is nothinge in this worlde that ye me comaunde but I shall
it don."  Than the kynge yaf hym so grete yeftes that he was
all astoned ther-of, and com home to his wif, and tolde her as
the kynge hadde seide.  And whan she it herde, she thought
it a straunge thinge, and seide, "Sir, how may I that do,
for to leve my sone for another mannes?"  And the gode man
seide,  "Ther is nothinge but that we moste it do for hym
that it oure sourein lorde; and he hath yoven vs so moche,
and promysed, that we moste nede don hys plesir and his
volunte, and I will verily that ye it graunten."  And she
ansuerde, "I am yowre and the childe youre, therfore do with
me and with hym youre will; and I it graunten wele, for I
ought in no wise to do agein your volunte."  Than he bad hir
ordeyne a-nother woman to norissh hir sone, for he dide but
a-waite after the hour that the tother sholde be brought; and
thus disseuerid the gode man his sone fro his wif.  And the
kynge sawgh that the quene was redy to ly down.  And the day
be-fore com Merlin to court secretly, and seide to Vlfyn, "I am
wele plesed with the kynge, for he hath wele do as I seide to
hym.  Now go, bid hym go to the quene, and bid hym telle her
that shall haue chylde to-morow at nyght, after mydnyght, and
comaunde her that she do the childe to be delyuered to the firste
man that shall mete at issue of the halle."  And whan Vlfyn
herde that, he seide, "Shull ye not speke with the kynge?"
And Merlin seide, "No."  Than com Vlfyn to the kynge, and
seide as Merlin hadde comaunded.  Whan the kynge herde that, he
made grete ioye, and seide, "Shall I not speke with Merlyn er
he go?"  And Vlfin seide, "Nay; but do as he hath sente yow
worde."  Than yede the kynge to the quene, and seide, "I shall
telle yow a thynge that ye shall fynde trewe, and doth as I shall
comaunde yow."  And she seide, "Sir, I will do as ye comaunde."
And the kynge seide, "To-morow, after mydnyght, with the
grace of god, ye shull be deliuered of the childe in youre


<PB REF="" N="90" ID="pb.90"/>

wombe; And I pray yow and require that as soone as it is born
that ye take it to oon of youre moste secrete woman, and bid hir
deliuer it to the firste man þat she fyndeth at the issue of the
halle; and that ye sey to hem that be at the birthe of the childe
that they speke neuer worde ther-of, ne discure that ye hadde
childe, for moche peple shull sey than that it were neuer myn,
ne me semeth not it sholde be."  And the lady ansuerde, "Sir,
that I haue tolde yow is trewe;" and seide, "I knowe not who it
be-gat; and I shall do that ye comaunde as she that hath grete
shame of hir mysauenture.  But of this haue I grete merveile:
that ye knowe so wele my delyueraunce; and I pray yow that ye
do as I yow say;" and seide, "So shall I do so god be myn
helpe."  Thus departed the counseile of the kynge and the quene.  And
she a-bode as longe as god wolde.  And the morowe after
evesonge toke hir grete disese of trauelinge, vnto the hour that the
kynge hadde hir seide, and a-noon after mydnyght she was
delyuerid.  And than a-noon she cleped a woman that she moste
trusted, and seide, "Take this childe, and bere it to the halle
dore, and yef ye fynde ther a man that it aske, deliuere it to
hym, and take gode hede what man he be."  This <MILESTONE N="30a" UNIT="folio"/>woman dide
as the quene comaunded; toke the childe, and folded it in the
beste clothes that she hadde, and bar it to the halle dore; and
whan she come ther, she fonde a man that semed right olde
and rympled.  And she seyde, "What a-bidest thow after?"
And he seide, "For that that thow bringeste."  And she seide,
"What man art thow; to whom shall I telle my lady that I
haue yoven her childe?"  Quod he, "Ther-of hast thow nought
to done, but do as thow art comaunded;" and toke hym the
childe.  And a-noon as he it hadde, she wiste not where he was
be-comen, and com ayen to the lady, and seide she hadde yove
the childe to right an olde man; but I wote not what he is elles,
for as <CHOICE><CORR>sone as</CORR><SIC>sone as sone as</SIC></CHOICE> I hadde it hym delyuered he was vanysshid in
soche maner that I knewe not where he be-cam."  The quene dide
wepe, as she that hadde grete doel, and he that hadde this childe


<PB REF="" N="91" ID="pb.91"/>

yede as faste as he myght to Antor, and fonde hym erly, as he
was goinge to masse.  And he hadde take the semblaunce of a
moche olde man, and called to hym, and seide, "Antor!  I
wolde speke with the." "And I with yow," quod he gladly.
The olde man seide, "I haue brought the a childe, and I pray
the that thow do it norisshe as richely as thow wolde do thyn
owne.  And, wite thow wele, yef thow do thus, grete gode shall
come to the and thyn heyres; and yef a man tolde it the, thow
woldest it not be-leve."  And Antor ansuerde, "This is the
childe that the kynge me praide to norisshe of my wif, and to
put a-wey myn for hym."  And he seide, "It is the same
saunzfaile; and the kynge and all worthi men and worthi wemen
oughten the to preyen, and I my-self the preye; and, wite it well,
that my prayer is as moche worth as a riche mannes."  Antor
toke the childe, and saught it was right faire, and asked yef it
were cristned, and he saide, "Nay; but now a-noon do it baptise
in this chirche."  And Antor toke it gladly, and asked of hym
"What shall be his name?"  And he seide, "My rede is that
thow clepe it Arthur, and thow shalt fynde that it shall falle
to the grete welthe, er thow haue it kept longe while.  And
thow ne thy wif shall not wite whethir thow shalt love better of
thi childe or hit."</P>
<P>  Antor seide, "Who shall I sey hath take me this childe, and
what man ye be?"  And he seide, "Ye shall not knowe at
this tyme no more of me."  And thus thei departed, and Antor
made the childe to be baptised, and cleped hym Arthur, and bar
hym to his wif, and seide, "Lo, here the childe that I haue yow
so moche I-praide fore."  And she seide, "It is welcome."  And
she toke it, and asked yef it were baptised.  And he seide, "Ye,
and his name is Arthur."  Than the lady yaf it sowke, and it
norisshed, and put her sone to a-nothir woman.  And
Vterpendragon hilde after the londe longe tyme; and so he fill in a grete
sekenesse of the gowte in handes and feet.  And thanne a-ros the
Danes in many places of the londe a-gein hym, and dide grete
outrage; so that he sente for his barons, and asked theire
counseile.  And the barons redden to be avenged vpon hem, yef he

<PB REF="" N="92" ID="pb.92"/>

myght.  Than seide Vterpendragon, "I pray yow assemble yow
a power as worthi men owe for theire lorde."  And thei seide
thei wolde so with gode will.  And so they yede, and met
with their enmyes, and saugh that thei hadde drawe to hem
grete part of the londe.  And the kynges men were with-outen
a lorde assembled, and were discounfited; and so loste the kynge
grete part of his men.  Whan the kynge herde tydinges that his
men were discounfited, he was full wroth.  Than come the
remenaunte from the bataile.  <MILESTONE N="30b" UNIT="folio"/>And whan the tother party hadde
discounfited this bataile, thei encresed moche of peple, and wexed
right stronge.  And Merlin, that alle these thinges knewe, com
to Vterpendragon, that for his maladie was right feble.  And
whan he wiste that Merlyn was come, he was gladde, and
thought in his herte that now he sholde haue counfort.  Whan
Merlin come be-fore Vterpendragon, he made hym right feire
chere.  And Merlin seide, "Ye be right seke, and gretly ye be
afraide."  And Vterpendragon seide, "I haue right, for my men,
and that ye knowe wele, and that I wende to haue no drede of,
haue distroyde my reame, and slayn my men in bataile."  And
Merlin seide, "Now maist thow se that peple ne a-vaile not in
bataile with-oute a gode lorde."  And the kynge seide, "For
godes love, Merlin, counseile me what I shall do."  And Merlin
seide, "I will telle the a thynge in previte, that I will tho
byleve: make somowne all thyn oste an thy peple; and whan
thei be alle come, do the to be bore in a lytier, and so go fight
with thyn enmyes; and, wite it verily, thow shalt hem
venquise.  And whan thow hast hem venquysed, thow shalt knowe well
what a londe is worth that is with-outen a kynge.  And whan
thow hast thus don, departe for god, and for thy soule all thy
tresour, for thow maiste not longe ther-after lyven.  And I will
wele that thow knowe that thei that haue this grete auers, and
diden er it be departed, that the merite of the godes be not
theires; but it is theirs that will not suffre hem to do nought
for theire owne soules, and tho be develes.  And, wite wele, it
were better to the richeman that he hadde neuer nought I-hadde,
but he departe in his lif tyme.  The richesse and the honoures


<PB REF="" N="93" ID="pb.93"/>

of the worlde doth but annoye to the soule; but yef it be spent
and departed as it oweth to be, and thow that knowest thow
moste make an ende, thow oweste to departe hem in soche maner
that thow lese not the lif perdurable, ne the ioye of the tother
worlde; for this is but vanyte, and that shall I shewe in <CHOICE><CORR>oon</CORR><SIC>oo</SIC></CHOICE>
worde; noon hath here so grete ioye erthly to whom it ne
faileth, and that oon beyeth in the othir worlde may neuer faile
ne a-peire; and what oon suffred in this worlde, oure lorde doth
it to prove hym for the tother.  Therfore, yef thow be wise of
that god hath the yoven in this mortall lif, that thow ther-with
purchase the lif euerlastynge.  And thow that haste had so grete
goodes in this worlde, what hast thow do for oure lorde that alle
these graces hath the yoven? I haue the moche loved, and I love
the, and knewe wele that noon may so wele love as thi-self; and
as I haue the seide, thow maist not longe lyve after this
victorye.  And alle the gode dedis a man doth by his lyve is litill a-vaile
but yef he haue gode ende; and yef thow haddest do alle the
gode dedes of the worlde, and thyn ende were euell, thow were
in a venture all for to lese; and yef thow hadde don all the
wikkednesse of the worlde, and thow haddest gode ende, thow
sholdest haue pardon.  And I do the to wite thow shalt nought
haue with the oute of this worlde, but thy gode dedes.  Now do
that thow hast to do; and thow knowest wele that thy wif
Ygerne is deed, and that thow maist no mo haue; and thy <MILESTONE N="31a" UNIT="folio"/>londe be left after the with-outen heire; and therefore enforce
the to do well, for thyn owen soule.  Ffare-well now, for I haue
no more with the to do; but bid Vlfyn to yeve credence to me
whan myster is, and than he helpe me to bere trewe witnesse
whan nede is, and recorde the trowthe."  And Vterpendragon
seide, "This is a ferly thinge that thow hast seide, I sholde
venquyse myn enmyes in a litere; how may I that yelde to oure
lorde?" And Merlin seide.  "By thi gode ende.  And now I go;
I pray the, after the bataile, haue mynde of that I haue the
seide."  And Vterpendragon asked tidinges of the childe that he
bar a-wey.  And Merlin seide, "Of that ne recche the nothinge
for to enquere; but this I will that thow wite, that the childe


<PB REF="" N="94" ID="pb.94"/>

is feire and well growen, and well taught and norisshed."  And
the kynge asked, "Shall I se yow euer eny more after
this?"  And Merlyn seyde, "Ye, ones, and neuer no more."</P>
<P>  Thus departed the kynge and Merlin.  And the kynge
somowned his oste, and seide he wolde go with hem on
his enmyes.  Than he was ledde in a letere; and the sarazins com
and fought with hym.  And the kynges men, be the counseile of
her lorde, discounfited their enmyes, and slowen grete plente;
that hadde the kynge the victorye of the bataile, and venquysed
his enmyes.  And so the londe was set in pees; and than he
be-thought hym of that Merlin hadde hym seide, and repeired to
london, and sente for his grete tresour, and yaf his godes to gode men
and gode women, and to mysese peple of his reame, and dide
many faire almesse dedes; and the remenaunt he dide departe be
the advise of his mynistres to holy cherche.  Thus departed the
kynge his tresoure, that nought be lefte to hym-self wher-of he
cowde remembre, that he ne yaf all for the love of god by the
counseile of Merlyn.</P>
<P>  Full meke was the kynge a-gein god and the peple, and a-gein
the mynistres of holy cherche, that alle thei hadde grete
pite.  Thus was he kepte longe tyme seke; and his peple were
assembled at london, that grete doute hadde of his deth.  And
thei knewe wele that dye he moste, for he wax so feble that he
myght not speke in thre dayes.  Than com Merlin in to the town,
that all this wiste wele.  And whan he was come, the worthi
men maden hym to come be-fore them, and seiden, "Merlyn,
now is the kynge deed that ye loved so wele."  And Merlin
seide, "Ye sey not wele; noon shall dye that maketh so gode
ende as he doth; ne he is not yet deed."  And thei seide, "That
he is, for this thre dayes he spake no speche, ne neuer shall speke
worde."  And Merlin seide, "Yef god will he shall speke; now,
come, and ye shall heir hym speke."  And they seide that than
he dide grete merveile.  Than thei rede ther as the kynge lay,
and opened alle the wyndowes; and than thei seide, "Sir, lo
here Merlin."  And the kynge turned toward hym to his power,
and made semblaunce that he knewe hym.  And Merlyn seide to

<PB REF="" N="95" ID="pb.95"/>

the barons, prelates that ther weren, "Now heir the laste worde
that the kynge shall speke."  And than thei drough nere, and
seide, "Trowest thow to make hym speke?" And Merlin seide,
"Ye shull se."</P>
<P>  Than Merlyn turned hym on the tother side of the pailet,
and rowned in the kynges ere, and seide, "Thow haste
made a faire ende, yef thi conscyence be soche as the semblaunce;
and I telle the thi sone Arthur shall be kynge nexte of thy reame
after the, be the vertu of <MILESTONE N="31b" UNIT="folio"/>Ihesu criste, and shall a-complisshe the
rounde table that thow haste be-gonne."  Whan the kynge herde
that, he drough towarde hym, and seide, "For godes love, pray
hym to pray oure lorde Ihesu criste for me."  And Merlin seide
to hem that ther were, "Now haue ye herde the last worde that
the kynge hath spoke to me; and ye wende that he shulde neuer
haue spoken," And than wente Merlin, and alle the other that
hadden grete merveile of Merlin that he hadde made hym to
speken, ne ther was noon that wiste what the kynge hadde seide,
saf Merlin.  Thus ended the kynge, and the princes, and the
barons, and bisshopes and archebisshopes dide hym the grettest
honoure and the feirest servise that thei myght.  Thus lefte the
londe with-outen heyre.  The morowe after the kynge was
biried assembled the barons and the prelates of the cherche, and
toke counseile how the reame sholde be gouerned, and neuer
myght the counseile a-corde to noon.  Than seide thei, be comen
assent, thei wolde counseile with Merlyn, that hadde grete
wisedom, and seide thei herde hym neuer but geve trewe counseile,
and gode to euery man.  Thus thei acorded, and sente to seche
after Merlyn.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.6">
<HEAD> CHAPTER VI. 
<LB/> ARTHUR MADE KING.</HEAD>
<P>  Whan he was come be-fore hem, they seide, "Merlyn, we
knowe well thow art wise, and haste alwey loved wele
the kynges of this reame, and thow knowest wele that this londe
is lefte with-outen heir; and a londe with-oute a lorde a-vaileth


<PB REF="" N="96" ID="pb.96"/>

litill.  Therfore we pray the and requere to helpe vs to these
soche a man as myght the reame gouerne, to the profite of the
peple and sauacion of holy cherche."  And Merlin seide, "I am
no soche man that owe to entermete of soche counseile, ne that I
sholde chese a man to be a gouernoure; but yef ye acorde to myn
a-warde, I shall telle yow, and yef I sey not wele, a-corded not
ther-to."  And thei seide, "Alle to the welfare and profite of vs
alle oure lorde sende grace!"  And Merlin seide, "I haue mochc
loved this reame and the peple ther-inne, and yef I wolde telle
yow whom ye sholde make youre kynge, I ought wele to be
beleved, and it were right; but oon faire a-uenture is yow
befallen, yef ye will it knowen.  The kynge is now deed sithe
Martin-masse, and fro hens to yoole is but litill space; and yef ye
leve my counseile, I shall yeve yow gode and trewe, bothe ageyn
god and the worlde."  And thei seiden all at ones, "Sey what
thow wilte, and we shall it holden."  And he seide, "Ye knowe
wele that now cometh the feste that oure lorde was Inne I-bore,
and he is lorde of alle lordes; and I will vndirtake, yef ye and
alle the peple comynyally pray to oure lorde for his grete pite,
for to sende yow a rightfull gouernour, as he, <CHOICE><CORR>through</CORR><SIC>thgh</SIC></CHOICE> his grete
humylite at this feste, cleped yoole, liste to be born of a virgyn,
and kynge of alle kynges; that he at this feste chese yow soche
a man to be youre kynge and lorde, that the peple may rule and
gouerne to his plesir; and that he shew soche demonstraunce that
the peple may se and knowe that it is be his eleccion, and that he
that so is chosen be kynge with-oute eny other eleccion; <MILESTONE N="32a" UNIT="folio"/>and,
wite ye well, yef ye thus do, ye shull se the eleccion of our lorde
Ihesu criste."  Than they ansuerde alle with oon assent, and
seide, "We acorde with this counseile, and ther is noon erthly
man but that he ought ther-to acorde."  Than thei praide alle,
bisshopis and archebisshopes, to comaunde thourgh alle the cherche,
that the peple to praye as ye haue herde.  And all the lordes
were sworne oon to a-nother to holde the awarde of holy cherche,
in that god wolde hem shewen.  In this maner be thei acorded
to the counseile of Merlin.  And Merlyn toke leve of hem, and
thei hym praide to be with hem at Cristemasse, to se yef it were


<PB REF="" N="97" ID="pb.97"/>

soth or no that he hadde hem taught.  And Merlyn seide,
"I shall not be ther, for ye shull not se me till the eleccion be
made."  Thus wente Merlin to blase, and tolde hym alle these
thinges.  Than alle the worthy men of the reame of logres, thei
come vnto logres at the yole.  Thus was this thinge don and
a-biden to the yole.  And Antor, that hadde this childe norisshed
till he was a moche man of xv yere of age, he hadde hym trewly
norisshed, so that he was faire and moche, and he hadde neuer
soken other mylke but of his wif, and his sone he hadde made
to be norysshed of a-nother woman, ne Antor wiste not whether
he loved better, ne he cleped hym never but his sone, and he
wende verily that he hadde ben his fader.  At halowmasse Antor
made hys sone knyght, and at yoole he come to logres, as did
the other knyghtes of the londe, and brought with hym his
two sones.</P>
<P>  On yoole even was assembled alle the clergie of the reame,
and alle the barouns that weren of valoure and wele hadde
don as Merlin hadde seide; and whan they were alle come, thei
ledde alle symple lif and honeste.  Thus thei abode alle the
yoole even, and weren at messe at mydnyght, and made mekely
theine orisouns to oure lorde, that he of his grace sende hem soche
a man that myght profitably meyntene hem and the cristen feith.
Thus they a-bode the messe of the day, and so ther were many
that seide thei were foles that trowed oure lorde wolde put his
entente to chesinge of her kynge.  And as thei were in this
talkynge, thei rounge to messe of the day, and so thei yede to
<CHOICE><CORR>servise</CORR><SIC>servse</SIC></CHOICE>.  Whan thei were alle assembled, ther was oon of the
holiest men of the londe araied to singe the messe, but er he
yede to messe, he spake to the peple and seide, "Ye be
assembled for thre thinges for youre profite, and I shall say
yow whiche thei be:  Ffirst of all, for the sauacion of youre
soules and for the wurship of god, and the myracle and high
vertu that he thys day shall shewe a-monges vs yef it be his
plesire to yeve vs a kynge and chiefteyn that may saue and
mayntene holy cherche, that is the sustenaunce of alle trewe
cristen peple, we be come to chese oon of vs, we be not so wise

<PB REF="" N="98" ID="pb.98"/>

to knowe who is moste profitable of alle this peple; and for that
we ne knowe, we owe to praye to the kynge of kynges, that is
Ihesu criste oure saucoure, that he shewe vs verry tokenynge to
his pleasaunce as he was bore on this day, so euery man praye in
the beste wise he can."  And thus they did as the gode men
hem counseiled; and <MILESTONE N="32b" UNIT="folio"/>he yede forth to messe and he com to the
gospell, and that thei hadden offred.  Some of the peple yede
oute of the cherche where ther was a voyde place; and whan
they com oute of the cherche thei sawgh it gan dawe and clere,
and saugh be-fore the cherche dore a grete ston foure square,
and ne knewe of what ston it was; but some seide it was
marble.  And a-bove, in the myddill place of this ston, ther stode a styth
of Iren that was largely half a fote of height, and thourgh this
stithi was a swerde ficchid in to the ston.</P>
<P>  When thei sye this that firste weren come oute of the
chirche, thei hadde gret merveile, and yede a-gein into
the chirche, and tolde the archebisshop.  And whan the gode
man that sange masse herde this, he toke haly water, and caste
vpon the stith.  And the archebisshop lowted to the swerde, and
sawgh letteres of golde in the stiel; and he redde the letteres,
that seiden, "Who taketh this swerde out of this ston sholde be
kynge by the eleccion of Ihesu criste."  And when he hadde
redde this letteres, he seide to the peple what it ment.  Than
was the ston deliuered to x worthi men to kepe, and to two
clerkes.  Than thei seiden that oure lorde hadde hem shewed
feire myracle; and yeden a-gein in to the mynistre to heir oute
the masse, and to yelde oure lorde graces.  And thei soungen 'te
deum laudamus.'  And whan the gode man was come to the
awter, he turned to the peple, and seide, "Feire lordes, now may
ye se that some of yow be goode men, when thourgh youre prayers
and orisouns oure lorde hath shewde this grete myracle; wherfore
I praye and reqire yow a-boue alle vertues in this erthe, for
highnesse ne erthly richesse that god hath yoven in this worlde,
that noon be a-gein this eleccion that god hath vs shewde the
demonstraunce, and the surpluys he shall vs shewen at his
volunte."


<PB REF="" N="99" ID="pb.99"/>
</P>
<P>  Thanne the godeman sange forth the masse; and whan it
was fynisshed, they assembled a-boute the ston, bothe
oon and other who that myght take oute this swerde firste.  And
than thei seiden and a-corded alle that thei sholde assaien it, as
the mynistres of holy cherche wolde assigne.  To this ther was
grete discorde amonge the higheste men and moste puyssaunt;
and thei that hadde force seide they wolden asseyen firste; so
ther were many wordes that ought not to be rehersed.  The
archebisshop spake that alle myght here, and seide, "Sirs, ye ne
be not so wise, ne so wele a-vised men as I wende.  And I will
wele þat ye alle wite that oure lorde hath oon i-chosen, but I
knowe not whom.  And thus moche may I say to yow, that
gentilnesse ne richesse shall haue no power a-gein the wille of
Ihesu criste, but truste so moche in hym, that yef he that is
ther-to chosen were yet vn-bore, it shall neuer be taken oute of
the ston till he come that it is ordeyned the honour."  Than
a-corded alle the noble men and wise, and seide that he hadde
seide soth.  And the wise men and the high barouns toke their
counseile, and a-corded to stonde the ordenaunce of the
archebisshop, and com a-gein, and seiden heringe alle the peple.  And
than made the bisshop grete ioye, and dide wepe for pite, and
seide, "This humylite that is in youre hertes is of god; and I
will that ye knowe after <MILESTONE N="33a" UNIT="folio"/>myn entente, shall be to the volunte of
god and profite of cristen feith, so that I shall haue no blame yef
god will."  This parlament was be-fore high messe of the assay
of the swerde, till that high messe was saide.  Than seide the
Archebisshop to the peple, and shewed hem the gret myracle
that god hadde don for hem at this eleccion, "and whan oure
lorde sette Iustice in erthe, he sette it in the styth and in the
swerde; and the Iustice ouer the lay peple ought to be the
swerde, ffor the swerde at the be-gynynge was take to thre orderes
to diffende holy cherche, and mayntene right witnesse.  And
oure lorde hath now made eleccion be the swerde; and, wite it
wele, alle that this haue seen and be-holde to whom he will the
Iustice yeve.  And lete no man be to hasty for to assaye, for it
shall neuer be drawen oute for richesse, ne for pride; ne the


<PB REF="" N="100" ID="pb.100"/>

poure peple be not displesed, though the lordes and the high
astates assaye be-fore, ffor it is right and reson that the lordes
assaien firste; for ther ne is noon of yow but he ought to haue
his kynge and his lorde, the beste and moste worthy man that he
kowthe knowe be his reson."</P>
<P>  Thus thei acorded to the archebisshop with gode herte, and
with-outen euyll will, that he sholde chese hem that he
wolde to assaye firste.  Thus thei graunted alle to holde hym for
hir kynge, to whom god wolde shewe his grace.  Thanne the
arche-bisshop chese oute C.l. of the hiest and moste worthi lordes,
and made hem go to the assaie.  And whan they hadde alle
assayed, than he commaunded alle other to assaye.  And than they
assayden alle they, oon after a-nother, that assaye wolde; but
ther was noon that myght it taken oute.  And so it was
comaunded to be kept with x noble men; and thei were charge to
take goode hede who com to assaien, and yef eny ther were that
myght drawen out of the ston.  Thus was the swerde assaied
alle þe viij dayes, and alle the barouns were at high messe; and
the archebisshop hem preched, and shewde as hym semed
beste.  And than he seide, "I tolde yow wele that all be leysere myght
he come that was ferthest fro the assaye of this swerde; now
may ye verily knowe that neuer noon, saf he that oure lorde
will, ne shall it not oute take."  And than thei seiden alle that
thei wolde not out of the town, till thei westen to whom god
wolde graunte that honoure.  In that maner thei a-biden oute the
messe, and after thei wente to their hosteles to mete, and after
mete, as they were vsed that tyme, yede the barouns and the
knyghtes to boorde in a feire pleyn, and the x men that were
ordeyned to kepe this swerde, yede also to se this bourdise.  And
when the knyghtes hadde turneyd a-while, thei toke their
sheldes to their squeres, so that the peple of the town yede to
arme them.  And Antor hadde made his eldeste sone knyght at
the halowtide be-fore yoole.  And whan the medle was be-gonne,
Kay called his brother Arthur, and seide, "Go faste to oure oste,
and fecche my swerde."  And Arthur was goode and seruisable,
and seide, "With gode will;" and than smote the hors with the

<PB REF="" N="101" ID="pb.101"/>

spores, and rode forth to his ostell for to fecche his brothers
swerde, or ellis some other, yef he <MILESTONE N="33b" UNIT="folio"/>myght eny fynde.  And he
fonde noon, ffor the hostesse hadde sette it in hir chambir.  And
so he turned to hem a-gein; and whan he saugh he myght noon
fynde, he gan to wepe for grete anger.  And as he come be-fore
the mynster ther the ston was, he saugh the swerde whiche he
hadde neuer assaide, and thought yef he myght it gete to bere it
to his brother.  And as he com ther-by on horse bakke, he hente
the swerde be the hiltes and drough it oute, and couered it with
his lappe.  And his brother that a-bode after with-oute the towne
saugh hym come, and rode a-gein hym, and asked his
swerde.  And Arthur seide he myght not haue it; "but I haue brought
heere a-nother," and drough it oute from vndyr his cote, and
toke it to his brother.  And a-noon, as Kay saugh this swerde, he
knewe it wele that it was the swerde of the ston, and thought
he wolde be kynge, and seide he wolde seche his fader till he
fonde hym, and than he seide, "Sire, I shall be kynge; lo, here
is the swerde of the ston."</P>
<P>  Whan the fader it saugh, he hadde merveile how he it
gatt.  And he seide he toke it oute of the ston.  Whan
Antor herde that, he leved it not, but seide he dide lye.  Than
thei yede to the mynster, ther the ston was, and the tother
squyre after.  Whan Antor sigh the ston, and the swerde not
ther-ynne, he seide, "Feire sone, how hadde ye this swerde?
Loke ye, do not lye; and thow do lye, I shall it know wele, and
neuer shall I the love."  And he ansuerde as he that was sore
a-shamed, "I shall yow lye no lesynge, for my brother Arthur it
me brought whan I badde hym to go fecche myn, but I wote
neuer how he it hadde."  Whan Antor herde this, he seide,
"Sone, yeve it me, for ye haue ther-to no ryght."  And Kay it
deliuered to his fader; and he loked be-hynde hym, and saugh
Arthur, and cleped hym, and seide, "Come hider, faire sone,
and take this swerde, and put it ther as ye it toke."  And he
toke the swerde, and put it in the stith, and it heilde as wele, or
better, than it dide be-fore.  And Antor comaunded his sone Kay
to take it oute; and he assaied, but it wolde not be.  Than


<PB REF="" N="102" ID="pb.102"/>

Antor cleped hem bothe, and seide to Kay, "I wiste well that
thow haddest not take the swerde oute."  Thanne he toke
Arthur in his armes, and seide, "Feire dere sone, yef I myght
purchase that ye be kynge, what gode sholde I haue therfore?"
"Ffader," quod he, "I may nother haue that honour, ne noon
other goode, but that ye be ther-of lorde, as my lorde and my
fader."  And he seide, "Sir, youre fader I am as in norture, but
certes I dide yow neuer engender, ne I wot neuer who dide yow
engender."  Whan Arthur saugh that Antor hym denyed to ben
hys fader, he wepte tendirly, and hadde grete doel, and seide,
"Feire sir, how sholde I haue this dignite, or eny other, whan I
haue failed to haue a fader."  "A fader muste ye nede haue;
but, feire dere sir, yef oure lorde will that ye haue this grace,
and I helpe yow it to purchase, telle me what I shall be the
better?"  And Arthur seide, <MILESTONE N="34a" UNIT="folio"/>"Sir, so as ye will youre-self."
Thanne Antor tolde hym what bounte he hadde hym don, and how
he hadde hym norisshed, and how he put a-wey his sone Kay,
and made hym to be norisshed of a straunge woman; "where-fore
ye owe to yeve my sone and me guerdon, ffor ther was neuer
man more tenderly norisshed than I haue yow.  Wherefore I
praye yow, yef god yeve yow this grace, and I may helpe yow
ther-to, that ye guerdon me and my sone."  And Arthur seide,
"I praye yow that ye denye not me to be my fader, for than I
sholde not wite wheþer that I sholde go; and yef ye may helpe to
purchase this grace, and god will that I haue it, ye can no-thinge
sey ne comaunde but I shall it do."  And Antor seide, "I shall
not aske thi londe; but thus moche I will praye yow, that yef ye
be kynge, that ye make my sone Kay youre stywarde in soche
maner that for no forfet that he do to yow, ne to man of youre
londe, that he lese not hys office; and yef he be fool, or fell, or
vilenis, ye owe better to suffre hym than eny other; and
therfore I praye yow to graunte hym that I yow demaunde."  And
Arthur seide he wolde it do with gode will.  And than he ledde
hym to the auter, and swore that he sholde this trewly
performe.  And whan he hadde sworne, he com be-fore the mynster; and
the turment was ended, and the barouns com to hire evesonge.


<PB REF="" N="103" ID="pb.103"/>
</P>
<P>  Than Antor cleped alle his frendes, and com to the
Archebisshop, and seide, "Sir, lo, here is a childe of myn that
is no knyght, that prayeth me that I wolde helpe that he myght
assay the auenture of the swerde, and that it plese yow to clepe
the barouns."  And so he did; and thei assembled a-boute the
ston.  Than Antor bad Arthur take oute the swerde, and delyuere
it to the Archebisshop.  And Arthur toke the swerde be the
hiltes, and with-oute more taryinge yaf it to the
Archebisshop.  And a-noon he toke Arthur in his armes, and seide "Te deum
laudamus," and so brought hym in to the mynster.  And the
barouns and high men, that this hadde seyn and herde, were angry
and sorowfull for this, and seiden it myght not be that soche a
symple man of so lowe degre sholde be lorde of hem
alle.  Therwith was the Archebisshop displesed, and seide, "Sirs, oure lorde
knoweth beste what euery man is."  And Antor and his frendes
abode by Arthur, and alle the comen peple; and alle the barouns
were a-geyn them and a-geyn Arthur.  And thanne seide the
archebisshop wordes of grete hardynesse, "I do yow to wite
thaugh alle thei that ben in the worlde wolde be a-gein this
eleccion, and oure lorde will that this man be kynge, he shall be
it with-outen faile; and I shall shewe yow how, and what
affiaunce I haue in oure lorde Ihesu criste.  Now, feire brother
Arthur, go, put the swerde a-geyn in the same place that ye toke
it fro."  And Arthur put the swerde a-geyn in the selue place,
and it hilde as faste as by-fore.  And than seide the
Archebisshop, "So feire eleccion was neuer sene; now go ye, riche
barouns and lordes, and assay yef ye may take oute the swerde."
Than yede alle for to assaye, but noon it myght remeve fro the
place that it was Inne.  Than seide the archebisshop, "Grete
folye do ye that be a-geyn oure lordes wille; for <MILESTONE N="34b" UNIT="folio"/>now ye se well
how it is."  And thei seide, "Sir, we ne be not a-gein oure
<CHOICE><CORR>lordes</CORR><SIC>lodes</SIC></CHOICE> wille; but it ys grevouse thinge to vs to haue a garcion
to be lorde ouer vs alle."  And the archebisshop seide, "He that
hath hym chosyn knoweth beste what he is."  Thanne the
barouns praide the bisshop to lete the swerde be stille in the ston
till Candelmesse; and by that tyme men of ferther contrees


<PB REF="" N="104" ID="pb.104"/>

myght come to assaye the auenture.  And the archebisshop hem
graunted.  Than come oute of euery contree, and asseyde who
that wolde.  And whan they hadden assaied, the archebisshop
seide, "Arthur, yef it be pleser to oure lorde Ihesu criste that
thow be kynge, go forth and brynge that swerde."  And Arthur
yede to the swerde, and toke it oute as lyghtly as nothinge hadde
it holden.  Whan the prelates and the comen peple saugh this, thei
ganne to wepe for ioye and pite, and seiden, "Sirs, is ther yet
eny man that seith a-gein this eleccion?"  And the barouns seide,
"Syr, we pray yow that the <CHOICE><CORR>swerde be</CORR><SIC>swerde be swerde</SIC></CHOICE> suffred yet in the ston to
Passh, but eny man come by that terme that may take it thens;
and ellis we will obbey to this; and yef ye will not suffre so
longe tyme, euery man do the beste he may."  And the
archebisshop seide, "Yef so be he a-bide to Passh, and noon other come
that may parforme this a-uenture, wele ye Than obbey yow to
this eleccion?"  And thei seide alle, "Ye."  Thanne the
archebisshop seide to Arthur, "Sette the swerde a-gein in the ston, for
yef god will, thow shalt not faile of the dignite that he hath the
promysed."  And Arthur did as he comaunded; and ther was
ordeyned to kepe the ston x men and v clerkes; and in this
maner thei bode to Pasch.  And tharchebisshop that hadde take
Arthur in warde, seide, "Wite ye right well ye shall be kynge
and lorde of this peple; now loke that ye be a gode man, and
fro hens-forth cheseth soche men as shull be of youre counseile,
and officers for youre housolde, euen as ye were now kynge, for
so ye shall be with the helpe of god."  And Arthur seide, "I put
me holly in god and in holy cherche, and in youre gode counseile;
therefore chese ye as ye seme be moste to the plesaunce of Ihesu
criste; and I praye yow clepe to yow my lorde my fader."  Than
the archebisshop cleped Antor, and shewde hym the ansuere of
Arthur.  Thanne chose they soche counsellers as thei wolde; and
be counseile of the archebisshop and certein of the barouns, Kay
was made stiwarde.  And of alle other thinges thei a-bode to
Pasch, and than thei assembled alle at logres.


<PB REF="" N="105" ID="pb.105"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan thei were alle assembled on the Ester even, the
archebisshop drough hem alle to his paleis, and rehersed
hem the grete wisdom and the gode condiciouns that he fonde in
Arthur.  And the barouns seide, "We will not be a-gein godes
ordenaunce; but it is vnto vs a mervelouse thynge that so yonge
a man, and of so base lyngnage, sholde be lorde and gouernour of
vs alle."  The archebisshop seide, "Ye do not, as cristen men,
thus to be a-gein cristes eleccion."  And they seide, "We be
not ther agein; but ye haue seyn his condiciouns and we ne haue
not don so, and therfore we praye yow to suffre vs to knowe his
condiciouns, and the manere of hys gouernaunce that he will ben
of here-after."  The archebisshop seide, "Will ye thus delaye
his coronacion?"  And thei seide, "We wolde that his sacringe
and coronacion be respite to Penticoste.  <MILESTONE N="35a" UNIT="folio"/>Thus we alle pray and
requere."  And the archebisshop it graunted.  Thus departed
alle the counseile; and on the morowe, whan hight messe was
seide, Arthur yede to the swerde and toke it oute as lightly as
he hadde don be-fore.  Than thei seiden alle that thei wolde
haue hym to their lorde and gouernoure, and thei praide hym to
sette ther the swerde a-gein.  And Arthur ansuerde to the barouns
full debonerly, and seide he wolde do their requeste, or eny
thinge that thei wolde of hym desire.  Thanne they ledde hym
in to the mynster to speke with hym, and to assaye his
condiciouns, and seide, "Sir, we se well that god will that ye be oure
kynge and lorde ouer vs, wherefore we will do to yow oure
homage and of yow holde oure honoures, and we be-seke yow to
respite youre sacringe in to Pentecoste, ne therefore shull ye
nothynge be inteript, but that ye shull be oure lorde and oure
kynge; but to this we praye yow to sey vs what is youre
volunte."  Quod Arthur, "Of that ye sey ye will do to me
youre homages, and holde youre honoures of me, I may it not
receyve, ne I ne ought not to do, ffor I may not to yow ne to
noon other yeve noon honoures till I haue receyued myn; and
ther ye sey ye will that I be lorde of yow and of the reame, that
may not be by-fore that I be sacred and receyved the honoure of
the empere; but the respite that ye desire I it graunte yow with


<PB REF="" N="106" ID="pb.106"/>

gode will, for I will not be sacred, ne nothinge that ther-to
aperteneth, ne I may not with-outen godes will and youre
volunte."  Thanne seide the barouns a-monge hem-self, "Yef this
childe live he shall be right wise, and wele he hath vs
ansuerde."  And than thei seide, "Sir, vs semeth with youre advice
that ye be crowned and sacred at Pentecoste, and by that terme
we shull obbey to yow at the comaundement of this
archebisshop."  Thanne thei made be brought Iuellis and alle othir
richesse, and yaf it to hym to se whedir he wolde be couetouse
and cacchynge; and whan he hadde alle these yeftes resceyved,
the booke seith he departed it; to knyghtes the stedes, and coursers,
and fresshe robes; and to hem that <CHOICE><CORR>were</CORR><SIC>we</SIC></CHOICE> Ioly and ennoisies,
he yaf the Iuwellis; and to hem that were auerouse, golde and
siluer; and to sadde wise men he yaf soche thinge as hym dought
sholde hem plese; and with hem he heilde companye, and
enquered in the contre what myght hem beste plese.</P>
<P>  Thus departed he the yeftes that were yoven hym, for to
knowe of what condicion that he wolde be of.  And whan
thei sawgh hym thus demened, ther was noon but that hym
gretly preysed in theire hertes, and seide that he sholde be of
high renon, and that thei cowde not in hym espie no poynte of
covetise; but as sone as he hadde the grete auers, he be-sette hem
in soche manere, that euery man seide that noon cowde haue do
better, euerych astate and degre.  Thus thei assaide Arthur, and
nought cowde fynde in hym but high vertu and grete
discrecion.  And so thei a-biden to the Witsontide.  And than alle the
baronage assembled at logres, and ther thei assaide a-gein at the
swerde alle that assaie wolde, but neuer was ther founde man that
it myght remeve fro the ston.  And the archebisshop hadde
ordeyned redy the crowne and septre, and all that longed to the
sacringe.  On witson even, be comen counseile of alle the barouns,
the archebisshop made Arthur knyght.  <MILESTONE N="35b" UNIT="folio"/>Alle that nyght dide
he wake in the chief mynster, till on the morowe day.  And
whan it was day, alle the baronye come to the mynster.  The
archebisshop seide, "Sirs, lo here is the man that god hath
chosen to be youre kynge, like as ye haue seyn and knowe.


<PB REF="" N="107" ID="pb.107"/>

And, lo, here is the crowne and the vestementz rioall, ordeyned by
youre avys and alle the comen assent.  And yet ther be eny of
yow that to this eleccion will not assent, lete hym now sey."  And
they ansuerde and seide, "We acorde that in godes name he be
sacred, and a-noynted with this, that yef ther be eny of vs that
he be with displesed of that we haue be a-geyn his coronacion,
that he pardon vs alle in to this day."  And ther-with thei
kneled alle at ones to Arthur, askynge hym mercy.  And Arthur,
for pite, gan wepe, and seide <CHOICE><CORR>to hem</CORR><SIC>to hem to hem</SIC></CHOICE>, "That lorde whiche hath
graunted me to haue this honoure, mote yow pardon, and as moche
as in me, I make yow quyte."  And ther-with thei risen vp,
and toke hym by-twene their armes, and ledde hym to the
vestymentz rioall.  And whan he was aried, the archebisshop was
made redy to synge masse, and seide to Arthur, "Now go fecche
the swerde, wher-with ye shull kepe Iustice to deffende holy
cherche, and mayntene right and the cristin feith to youre
power."  And so they yede in procession to the ston.  Thanne
seide the archebisshop to Arthur, "Yef thow wilt swere to god,
and to oure lady seint Marye, and to oure modir holy cherche,
and to seint Petir, and to alle seyntes, to saue and to holde
trouth and pees in the londe, and to thy power kepe trewe
Iustice, com forth and take this swerde, whereby god hath made
the eleccion vpon the."  Whan Arthur herde this, of pite he
gan wepe, and so dide many other.  And he seide, "As verily
as god is lorde ouer alle thynge, so he of his grete mercy graunte
me grace and power this to mayn-tene like as ye haue rehersed,
and I haue it well vndirstonde."  And than he sette hym on his
knees, holdinge vp his hondes, and than toke oute the suerde
lightly with-oute greuaunce, and so bar it vp right.  And thei
ledde hym to the auter, and ther he leide the swerde.  And than
thei hym sacred and a-noynted, and dide that longed to a
kynge.  And after all the seruise was ended, thei yede oute of the
mynstir, and come by the place ther as was the ston; and no
man cowde knowe where it was be-come.  Thus was Arthur
chosen to kynge, and heilde the reame of logres longe in pees.





</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.7"><PB REF="" N="108" ID="pb.108"/>
<HEAD> CHAPTER VII. 
<LB/>REVOLT OF THE BARONS; AND DEFEAT OF THE SEVEN KINGS BY ARTHUR.

</HEAD>
<P>  A noon after the myddill of August, after that Arthur was
crowned, he helde court roiall, grete and mervelouse; and
theder come kynge loth of Orcanye, that helde the londe of
loonois and a parte of Orkanye, and with hym v C knyghtes; and
thider come the kynge vrien of gorre, that was a yonge knyght,
and moche preised in armes, and with hym iiij C knyghtes; and
theder also come kynge Ventres of Garlot, that hadde wedded oon
of Arthurs susters, and with hym com vij C knyghtes; and after
com Carados brenbras, that was kynge of the londe of Strangore,
and was oon of the knyghtes of the rounde table, and with hym
vj C knyghtes welle horsed; after that come kynge Aguysas of
Scotlonde, that was a freisshe yonge knyght, and with hym v C
knyghtes; after hym come kynge Ydiers, with iiij C
knyghtes.  Whan thei were alle assembled, Arthur dide hem grete honoure,
and to hem <MILESTONE N="36a" UNIT="folio"/>made grete ioye and grete feste; and for thei were
so high astates and men of grete puyssaunce, he made hem riche
presentes, and yaf hem grete yeftes and riche, as he that therof
hadde hym wele perveied.  Whanne these barons saugh the grete
yeftes and the riche presentz that the kynge hadde hem yoven,
thei heilde therof grete disdeyn, and seide a-monge hem-self, That
grete foles were they, whan of soche oon as he was of so base
lynage, sholde be kynge of so worthi a reame as is the reame of
logres, and seide that thei wolde it no lenger suffre.  And thanne
thei refused the yeftes that the kynge hadde hem offred, and
yoven, and dide hem wele to wite that thei heilde hym not for
ther kynge ne lorde, but that he sholde in all haste voide oute of
the londe and the contree, so that he were no more seyn ther-in;
and yef he wolde not voide the londe, and thei myght hym take,
they lete hym well to wite that ther was no more but he sholde
be deed.  Whan the kynge Arthur vndirstode their manaces, he
yede oute by a wyndowe of karlion, for he douted moche of


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treson.  And thus thei soiourned xv dayes in the town, that they
dide noon other forfet on nother side.  And than Merlyn entred
in to the town, and shewde hym-self openly to the peple, as he
that of alle peple wolde be seyn.  And than be-gan in the town
a gret tumulte and a merveilouse, and eueriche man seide, "Lo,
here is Merlin."  Whan the barouns vndirstode that Merlin was
come, they sente after hym; and Merlin come be-fore hem mery
and gladde.  And whan thei saugh hym comynge, thei yede
a-gein hym, and made of hym grete ioye.  Than thei ledde hym
in to a paleise vpon the river with-oute the town, in a faire
medowe, and brought hym vp to a wyndowe a-lofte, where they
myght se faire water, and a grete that yede aboute the wallis of
karlion.</P>
<P>  When the barouns were come thider, they a-resoned Merlin,
and asked what hym semed of the newe kynge that
the archebisshop hadde crowne with-oute her lycence, and
with-oute assent of the mene people of the londe?  "Trewly,"
quod Merlyn, "thei haue don wele, and, knowe it verily, thei
myght no better haue don."  Than seide the barouns, "Merlin,
how is this that ye sey; ne beth ther many in this reame of
higher astate, and worthier men and wise, that were better
worthi to resceyve that dignyte, than a boy that no man wote
whens he is comen?"  Quod Merlin, "Ye sey as ye liketh; but,
knowe this verily, that he is of more gentill linage, and higher
born that eny of yow; and I do yow to wete that he is nother
sone to Antor, ne brother vnto Kay, that he hath made his
stiwarde, saf only of norture."  The barouns seide, "Merlin, how
is this that ye sey so?  now go ye more oute of reson than ye were
wonte to do."  Quod Merlin, "I shall telle yow what ye shull
do: ye shull sende to the kynge Arthur, that he come in gode
trewis, and Vlfin, the counseiller of Vterpendragon, and Antor,
that hath be with Arthur euer vnto this tyme; and than shall ye
here the trouthe as it is."</P>
<P>  "Merlin," quod the barouns, "we will do after thi counseile,
and we graunte well that he come and go suerly and
saf, for so moche that thow doste vs prayen.  But who shall

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<MILESTONE N="36b" UNIT="folio"/>
go on this message?"  Than thei seide, "Bretel shall go yef
Merlin assente."  "And I graunte well," quod Merlin, "for he
shall well do that is nede."  Than the barouns called Bretell and
charged hym with the massage, and than seide Merlin that
Arthur sholde bringe with hym in his company the
archebisshop.  Than Bretell com to the maister forteresse where as the kynge
was, and seide, "Sir, the barouns haue sente for yow and the
archebisshop, and the bisshop of logres, by gode trewys," and he
seide he wolde with gode will go speke with hem.  Than Bretell
yede to Vlfyn, and seide that Merlin and alle the barouns hadde
sente for hym that he sholde come with-oute lenger
a-bidinge.  When Vlfin herde that Merlin was come, and that he sente for
hym to seche, he was glad and ioyfull, for than he knewe well
that the trouthe of the kynge sholde be knowen.</P>
<P>  Than yede thei bothe in to the paleis where as the barouns
a-biden, and Vlfin made gret ioye when he saugh Merlin,
and than thei spake to-geder of many thinges; and on the tother
parte come the kynge Arthur and the archebisshop, and Antor that
many day hadde hym tendirly norysshed, and come to the paleis
ther as the barons were a-bidinge after hem; but first hadde
Arthur the kynge put on hym an habergon vndir his robes er he
yede oute of the tour.  And whan he was come be-fore the
barouns, thei fonde moche peple that a-bode to hire what Merlin
wolde sey in audience.  Whan the barouns saugh Arthur comynge,
thei dressed alle hem a-geyn hym for that he was a kynge
a-noynted and sacred, and for love of the archebisshop, that was
a gode man and holy of lyvinge.  And than thei were alle sette
saf, the archebisshop that a-bode stondynge on his feet and seide,
"Sirs, for the reuerence of god, haueth pite of cristen feith that
it be not a-peired thourgh yow, for it were grete damage and
grete shame yef be yow it sholde be distresed, and considereth
that eche of yow is but oon sole man, and as soone shall the
hiest and the richest be deed as the porest creature of this
Citee."  
"Sir," seide the barouns, "a-bide a-while till we haue herde
Merlin speke, for hereafter ye may vs preche at leyser, for Merlin
hath seide to vs a thinge that we haue more merveile of than we


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hadde euer be-fore."  Than the archebisshop sat down, and
Merlin a-rose vpon his feet and seide, "Sirs, I haue be-gonne for
to telle yow whos sone was the kynge Arthur, and I do yow to
wite alle that beth here that he was the sone of Vterpendragon,
that hym engendred on Ygerne the same nyght that her lorde
was slayn vpon the brigge, when he issed oute for to assayle the
kynge Vterpendragon.  And on the morowe, whan the kynge
was come a-gein to hys oste, I asked hym that hadde gete on
the duchesse that nyght in rewarde of alle seruises that I hadde
hym don, and he me graunted, that as soone as it were born,
that he wolde make that it sholde be delyuered to me, and of
this he dide me make letteres, and ther-on hanginge his seal,
whiche that Vlfin hath yet in his kepynge in his bailly, and Vlfin
hym-self was at the couenaunt makynge.  After whan the kynge
hadde wedded the quene Ygerne, she wax grete with the childe
that the kynge hadde gete on her, er he hadde here wedded, and
so it fill many tymes that the kynge hir blamed and remembred
diuerse tymes, and seide that the childe that <MILESTONE N="37a" UNIT="folio"/>she was with grete,
was not his, wherefore the quene was shamefaste, and discouerid
to hym the very trouthe, how the childe was be-geten the same
nyght that the Duke was slain, as ye hau herde; and whan the
kynge saugh and knewe that she hadde discouerd to hym the
trouthe as it was, he dide repente that he hadde made hir in
hevynesse ther-of, for he loved hir moche more for her grete
trouthe, and seide, `Dame, seth it is so, that the childe is not
myn in maryage, it were not right that it sholde enherite this
reame, ne be kynge after me, and therfore I comaunde yow, as
derely as ye me love, that as soone as ye be delyuered that ye
make the childe be deliuered to the firste man that ye mete at
the halle dore.'  And the quene dede as he her comaunded, for
she wolde in no manere do nothynge that were to hym eny
displesaunce, and so was the childe deliuered to me the same nyght
that it was born."</P>
<P>  "Whan I hadde this childe, I yede to the gode knyght
that is here, Antor, and hym I delyuered þe childe,
and praide hym that it sholde be norisshed vp with his wyfes


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owne mylke; and so he dide, and put his owne sone, whiche was
not fully of half yere age, to be norisshed vp with a-nother
woman.  And thus is Kay brother to Arthur, as by hys moder
brestes that he dide of sowke, whiche was wif to Antor; for
Vterpendragon hadde hym ther-of tenderly praide be-fore, that
he sholde do to the childe as I sholde hym comaunde; and so he
hath don, god quyte it hym! and dide hym to be baptised, and
cleped his name Arthur; and yet so is his name.  And therefore,
lordynges," seide Merlin, "I se well that god doth not for-yete
his seruaunte, thow he haue be a synner, yef so be that he will be
repentaunte, and hym serue with gode werkes.  And therfore, of
the gode fader and the gode moder oure lorde will yelde rewarde
to the gode seede that of hem issued; for he sente the ston and
the swerde, like as ye haue seyn, to make assay to alle the peple,
who sholde be kynge.  And therfore, knowe it well alle, that it is
very trouthe that I haue yow tolde; and therfore also enquereth
of Antor, that hath hym norisshed."  And than the barouns asked
yef it were so.  And Vlfyn and Antor seide it was trouthe,
with-oute faile.  "And ther-to," quod Vlfin, "se here the
letteres and the seall of Vterpendragon ther-on hanginge, that he
lete make to Merlyn of the couenauntes."  And than the
archebisshop toke the letter, and redde it, herynge alle the peple
euery worde, as Merlyn hadde rehersed to the barouns.  And
whan the peple of the londe herde this merveile, tho many
begonne to wepe, and curse alle tho that were a-geyn the kynge
Arthur.</P>
<P>  Whan the barouns saugh that, and that the mene peple and
the clergie hilde with Arthur, thei seide thei wolde
neuer haue no bastarde to theire kynge, and many other repreves
and vilonyes thei seide that I will not reherse.  And the
archebisshop seide he sholde be kynge and haue the reame of logres,
who-so-ever ther-to wolde contrarye, seth that it was godes will,
for he wolde hym helpe, and mayntene his londe, and to strengthe
hym in his werre with all his powere.  And whan the
archebisshop and the mene peple saugh the vntrouth of the barouns,
thei heilde all to-geder with oon acorde with kynge Arthur.

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And the barouns fro thens departed in grete wratthe, and badde
hym to be well ware, <MILESTONE N="37b" UNIT="folio"/>and lete hym wite that thei heilde hym
not for no kynge; and fro hens-forth thei hym deffien and his
helpes.  Than thei yede to theire loggynges, and armed hem,
and made to arme alle theire peple.  And the kynge Arthur yede
a-gein into the maister toure, and dide arme alle his meyne and
his frendes.  And whan thei were alle assembled to-geder, thei
were well vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> on his partye, what of clerkes and of mene peple,
but of knyghtes he hadde but fewe, and of tho that ther were
it were but pore knyghtes; and to hem he yaf hors and harneise,
and money to their exspencis; and were of hem iiij C and l. by
counte, that seide thei wolde hym helpe, to live and dye with hym.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge and his peple were armed, and redy dight,
they com to the baill of the toure well arrayde hem to
diffende.  And the barouns, as ye haue herde, were at here
loiginges, to array their peple; and lepen to horsbak, and
assembled in the town euerych at his baner, and were well viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
knyghtes, with-outen seriantz and arblastis, and fotemen grete
plente.  And whan thei were alle assembled, the barouns asked
yef thei sholde go assaile the paleise ther the kynge was?  And
somme ther-to dide acorde, and somme seide that thei wolde ley
siege environ the baile, and shet hem with-ynne, that thei sholde
neuer be so hardy to ysse out of the toure.  And as thei spake
thus, com Merlin to hem, and seide, "Sirs, what is that ye
purpose to do?  Y do yow to wite ye will gete youre-self the
werse, and shull lese ther-on more than ye shull wynne, ffor god
will shewe soche wreche, that ye shull be full rebuked and
foule shamed, the moste queynte of yow alle; ffor ye beth a-gein
hym with wronge of the eleccion that the archebisshop hath
made, like as ye haue seyn."  "Now hath the enchauntor well
spoken!" seide the barouns, and be-gonne for to Iape oon to
a-nother.  And whan Merlin saugh thei made Iapes of his wordes,
he returned a-noon a-gein to kynge Arthur, and bad hym he
sholde nothinge be dismaied, for he sholde not drede hem alle;
ffor he wolde hym helpe so that the moste hardy of hem in the
oste, er it were nyght, sholde wiesshe to be at home in his owne


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contree.  Than Arthur <DEL>the archebisshop</DEL>toke Merlyn, and ledde hym a-parte, and
the archebisshop and Antor and Kay and Vlfyn and Bretell, these
vij were prevely in counseile.  And than seide Arthur to Merlin,</P>
<P>  "Dere frende Merlin, I haue herde say that ye loved well
my fader, Vterpendragon, as longe as he was lyuinge,
and therfore I praye yow, for the love of god and for norture,
that ye will me counseile in this matere, as ye knowe well these
barouns do me grete wronge; and I wolde fayn and it plesed yow
to be with me as ye were with my fader, and knowe it for
trouthe, that I shall neuer do thinge that ought yow to displese
to my power, and ye haue me holpen in my yowthe and in my
tendirnesse, and therfore I praye yow helpe to mayntene and to
strengthe me to kepe my <MILESTONE N="38a" UNIT="folio"/>londe, ffor by yow and by my fader,
the archebisshop, and Antor, that hath me norisshed, am I come
to this that I am atte, and therfore at the reuerense of god haue
pite of me and of the mene peple that alle shull be distroied but
god sette remedye."</P>
<P>  "Now dismaye yow nothinge, sir," seide Merlin, "for ye
shull not haue no fere of hem; but as soone as ye
be deliuerid of these barouns that beth here now come for to
assaile yow, do that I shall yow rede and counseile.  This is
the trouthe, that the knyghtes of the rounde table, that was
stablisshed and founded in the tyme of Vterpendragon, youre
fader, on whos soule god haue mercy, thei be gon to soiourne to
their owne contrees, for the grete vntrouthe that thei syen in
this reame.  This is in the reame of kynge Leodegan, of Tamalide,
that is an olde man and his wif is deed, and of alle his childeren
is lefte but oon doughter, to whom the reame shall falle after his
deth; and the kynge leodegan hath grete werre a-gein the kynge
Ryon, that is kynge of the londe of Geauntes and of the londe of
pastures, whar-in dar noon inhabite for diuerse auentures and
merveiles that ther fallith bothe day and nyght.</P>
<P>  "This kynge Rion, of whom I speke, is right myghty of londe
and of peple, and full of high prowesse, and is right a


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crewell man, and he hath conquered by force xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> kynges crowned,
fro whom he hath taken alle their berdes by force and in dispite,
and sette hem in a mantell, whiche he maketh euery day a
knyght to hold a-fore hym atte mete, atte alle tymes whan he
holdeth courte rioall, and he hath sworn that he shall neuer
finysshe till he haue conquereth xxx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> kynges.  This kynge
werreth vpon leodegan, and in his londe doth grete damage.  This
leodegan marcheth to thy reame, and yef he lese his londe thow
shalt lese thyn after; and vndirstonde well that he sholde haue
loste his londe longe er this tyme ne were the knyghtes of the
rounde table that mayntened his werre, for he is now in grete
age, and therfore I rede that thow go and serue hym a-while,
the kynge leodegan, and he shall yeve the his doughter to be thy
wif, to whom the reame longeth after his deth, and she is right
feire and yonge, and the wisest lady of the worlde of so yonge
age; and of thy londe haue thow no doute, for eche of these
barouns that now werreth vpon the, thei shull haue so moche to
do, that litill shull thei forfete in thy londe, but passinge thourgh
the playn contrees; but er thow go, do garnysshe thy forteresses
of euery Citee, and euery castell, with vitayle, and men, and
stuffe of other artrye; and the archebisshop shall a-curse alle tho
that in thy londe eny thinge forfete a-gein the or in thy contree;
and the archebisshop hym-self shall shewe the cursynge in sight
of alle the barouns that now ben here, and comaunde alle the
clergie to do the same in heringe of hem alle, and soone after ye
shall se soche thinges, by the helpe of god, that the proudest of
hem shall be affraide.  And wite ye well that I will be redy
with yow in euery grete nede; and whan I crye to yow, `Now
vpon hem,' set forth boldely and smyte in a-monge hem, and wite
it verily that thei shull be so a-baisshed that litill thei shall <MILESTONE N="38b" UNIT="folio"/>yow
disese, but alle thei shull be fayn to fle as discounfite."</P>
<P>  "Sire," seide the kynge, "gramercy!" and than thei
departed.  And the archebisshop wente vpon the walles
on high, and the kynge Arthur dide his peple make hem redy
and lepe on horse, and in that maner-wise thei a-bide longe
tyme.  And Merlin made to kynge Arthur a baner wher-in was grete


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significacion, for ther-in was a dragon, which he made sette on a
spere, and be semblaunce he caste oute of his mouth fire and
flame, and he hadde a grete taile and a longe.  This dragon no
man cowde wite where Merlin it hadde, and it was merveilouse
light and mevable; and whan it was set on a launce thei
beheilde it for grete merveile.  Than toke the kynge the dragon,
and yaf it to Kay, his stiwarde, in soche forwarde that he be
chef banerer of the reame of logres euer while his lif doth
dure.  Thus arraied thys mayne the kynge Arthur, and a-bode in soche
maner on horsbak be-fore the yate be-fore the paleis, and the barouns
made picche her teynte and pavelouns thourgh the medowes
that were large and faire.  And whan the archebisshop that
saugh, he asked what thei were come to seche so armed; and
thei seide that thei were come to take the maister toure, which
thei wolde no man sholde be Inne but by hem.</P>
<P>  Than the archebisshop yaf the scentence full dolerouse, and
cursed of god and with all his power alle tho that in
the londe dide eny forfet, or were a-gein the kynge Arthur.  And
the barons seide that for eny cursinge thei wolde not cesse till
thei hadde dryve the kynge oute of the londe; and yef thei
myght hym take, thei lete hym knowe that he sholde not escape
with-oute the deth.  And whanne Merlin vndirstode their
bobaunce, he caste his enchauntement, so that alle their logges
and pavilouns were alle on fire a-flame.  And thei ther-of were
so a-baisshed that hem dought longe er thei myght gete out in to
the medowes fro the fyre; but er thei myght come ther, thei
caught grete harme, and foule were thei skorched with the
fier.  Merlin ran to the kynge, and seide, "Sir, now hastely vpon
them!"  And thei spronge oute at the yate, as moche as theire
horse myght renne, the speres on their asseles, theire sheldes
be-fore her bristes.  And thei were so a-baisshed and affraide that
the moste hardy of hem wolde fain haue be thens; ffor thei
wende not that ther hadde be so moche peple with-Inne; for thei
with-oute were sodenly many of hem born down with speres,
and moche peple slain; ffor thei were so astoned with the hete of
the fier that theire deffence was but symple.  There was grete

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slaughter of men and horse.  Ther dide Arthur merveillouse
dedes of armes, that gretly he was be-holden, bothe on that
oon part and on the tother; he ouerthrewe knyghtes, bothe
horse and man, with stroke of spere and of swerde.  And ther-to
hadde the princes and barouns grete enuye, and assembled hem
to-geder, and seide that it were grete shame yef he so
escaped.  And thei were noble knyghtes and hardy, and full of high
prowesse, and many of hem carnell frendes.  Than seyde kynge
Ventres of garlot that he wolde hem delyuere in short tyme, for
yef Arthur oonly were deed, the werre of the remenaunt were
soone fynysshed.  "Goth on," seide the othir prynces, "and <MILESTONE N="39a" UNIT="folio"/>yef
ye haue myster we shall yow socoure."  Ther-with departed the
kynge Ventres and his company, that was a moche man of body,
and a gode knyght and yonge, of prime barbe; and he was
mervelouse stronge, and he helde a shorte grete growen spere, sharp
grounden, and rode agein Arthur.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur saugh hym come, he dressed a-gein hym his
horse hede, and griped a grete aisshen spere, the heede
sharp trenchaunt of stiell; than smote the horse with the spores,
that it ran so faste and so briaunt, that alle hadden merveile that
it be-helden.  And he afficched hym so in the sturopes that the
horse bakke bente, and smote to-geder so hetely vpon the sheldes
that thei preced thourgh.  The kynge Ventres brake his spere
vpon kynge Arthur, and Arthur smot hym a-gein so sore that he
bar hym ouer the horse croupe, and his legges vp-right, that the
erthe rebounded, but he hadde noon other hurte.  And whan the
kynge loth of Orkanye saugh the kynge Ventres ouerthrowen, he
was wroth and sorowfull, for thei were bothe cosin germains,
and also thei hadde wedded two sustres.  Than smote he the
horse with spores a-gein Arthur, that yet hadde he his spere
hoill.  And whan he saugh the comynge of kynge loth, he come a-gein
with grete hardinesse, as he that of hym hadde no dowte; and
mette to-geder on the sheldis, so that the horse ne myght not
passe ferther till the tymbres were broken; and on the passinge
forth thei hurtelid to-geder so fiercely, with sheldes and with her
beyes and her helmes, that the kynge loth was so astonyed that


<PB REF="" N="118" ID="pb.118"/>

he fley ouer his horse crowpe.  Than a-roos grete noyse and cry
on the oon part and the tother.  Ther be-gan a grete stoure and
merveillouse.  The knyghtes that were with kynge Ventres
peyned hem sore to socoure their lorde, and so dide the knyghtes
of kynge loth; and Arthurs knyghtes peyned hem sore to helpe
Arthur, and to take and holde these other two kynges.  And so
be-gan the medle on bothe parteis crewell and fellenouse.  But
with grete peyne were these two kynges rescowed and horsed
a-gein.  Whan Arthur was releved, he drowgh his swerde oute of
skabrek, whiche was so cler and bright shynynge as thei semed
that it be helden that it glistred as it hadde be the brightnesse of
xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> tapres brennynge.  And it was the same swerde that he
toke oute of the ston; and the letteres that were write on the
swerde seide that the right name was cleped Escaliboure, whiche
is a name in ebrewe, that is to sey in englissh, kyttynge, Iren,
tymber, and steill; and the letteres seide trewe, as ye shall
heeren here-after.  whan the kynge Arthur hadde drawen oute
his swerde, he smote in to the prese, ther as he saugh thikkeste,
and smote a knyght on the sholder, so that he made it discendir
from the body; the stroke was grete and the swerde trenchaunt,
so that he slyt a-sonder the sadell and the chyne of the horse, that
bothe the knyght and the horse fill on an hepe.  And than he
smote a-boute hym grete strokes bothe on the lefte syde and on
the right side, and made so grete occision a-boute hym that all
that it syen helde it grete merveile, <MILESTONE N="39b" UNIT="folio"/>and ne durste not a-bide his
strokes, but made wey and voided place for drede of his swerde
and of his fell strokes.</P>
<P>  Whan the vij kynges saugh the damage and the grete losse
that they hadde thourgh hym, thei were wroth and
right sorowfull, and seyde eche to other, "Now let vs alle sette
on hym attones, and bere hym down to the erthe, for elles may
we nothynge conquere;" and to this thei acorded.  Than thei
henten speres grete and rude, and ronnen a-gein hym with as
grete ranndon as their horse myght hem bere, and smyten hym
on the shelde and on the haubrek, but is so stronge and sure that
no mayle ne perced; but thei bar to hym so harde that Arthur


<PB REF="" N="119" ID="pb.119"/>

was throwe to the erthe, bothe he and his horse on oon
hepe.  And whan Kay and Antor and Vlfin and Bretell, and other of
Arthurs frendes syen this, Antor hasted hym to kynge Carados,
and met hym so hedylyche with a grete spere, that bothe the
tymbir and stelen heede shewed thourgh his shuldre, and threwe
bothe hym and his horse to the erthe, and lay longe in
swowne.  And Vlfyn and kynge Ventres of Garlot mette so sore to-geder,
that ether bar other to the grounde, and the horse vpon
hem.  And the kyge ydiers and bretell brake their spers that oon vpon
the tother, with-oute more harme doynge.  And alle the tother
barouns a-bode vpon the kynge Arthur, that yet lay at the erthe
all stonyed, and thei smote on his helme grete storkes and pesaunt,
so that thei made hym moche more astonyd.  And whan Kay
saugh that the kynge was at so grete myschef, he griped his
swerde, and come ther the kynge was ouer-throwen, and smote
the kynge loth vpon the helme that he made hym stoupe on the
arson of his sadell, and leyde on hym so grete strokes that loth
all astonyed, fill to the grounde.  Than come thei to the rescowe,
bothe on the oon and on the tother.  Ther was grete bataile, and
stronge stour, and grete slaughter, bothe of men and horse; and
so peyned thei that were with kynge Arthur, that thei haue
hym remounted on his horse; but firste hadde thei grete payne
and traveile and grete losse, ffor the meene peple of the town
were come oute with all wepen that thei myght haue
deffensable.  And the cry and the noyse rose thourgh all the contre, so that
alle the commons hasted thider all that myghten, and seiden that
thei wolden alle be deed on the same grounde, er that kynge
Arthur hadde eny greef, as longe as thei myghten hym
deffende.  Than they smyten in a-monge the preesse of the vij kynges, that
many thei dide sle and wounde, and so put hem to flight, whether
they wolde or noon.  And so thei yede <CHOICE><CORR>discounfited</CORR><SIC>discounfite</SIC></CHOICE>, but thei
seiden thei sholde neuer haue gladnesse till they were venged,
and that they wolde not take of Arthur but his heed.</P>
<P>  <MILESTONE N="40a" UNIT="folio"/>The kynge Arthur, that was full wrothe, and Kay hem chased
fercely be-fore alle other.  And so fill it that Arthur
ouer-toke kynge ydiers, and wende to smyte hym on the helme,


<PB REF="" N="120" ID="pb.120"/>

but the horse bar hym to faste, so that the stroke descended on
the horse and slyt hym euen a-sondre be-hynde the sadill, and
ydiers and his horse blusshet to the erthe; wherefore his men
were gretely affraied leste he hadde be slain, and returned hym
to rescowe, ther be-gan the stour grete and merveillouse, for that
oon part peyned to with-holde and to take kynge ydiers, and on
the to-ther syde thei peyned hym to rescowe, and so was ther do
more damage and harme than hadde be all the day be-fore, ffor
ther was neyther horse ne man that myght endure agein the
swerde of Arthur, that was cleped Calibourne, that was all
blody of brain and blode so that his armes were so steyned that
nought was seid but all reade.  Neuertheless, so peyned ydiers
men that they haue hym remounted on horse-bak, and so ben
thei departed discounfited, and the chase lasted longe tyme, and
so the vij kynges losten I-nough, for of all the harneys that thei
hade brought thider, thei hadde not with hem the valew of ijd,
that all ne was brente with the fier that Merlin made discende
amonge theire tentes and pauelouns, saf only the vessels of golde
and siluer and the money.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.8">
<HEAD> CHAPTER VIII.  
<LB/>THE MISSION OF ULFYN AND BRETELL TO KING BAN AND KING BORS.</HEAD>
<P>  When kynge Arthur hadde discounfited the vij kynges, by the
helpe of god and of Merlin, like as ye haue herde, he
returned to Cardoell, in Walis, whan he hadde be at Karlion,
and sente after sowderes ouer all, and yaf hem wagis, and horse,
and harneyse, and robes, and so he be-come in grete love a-monge
the pore knyghtes of the contree, so that thei assured hym and
sworn that thei wolde hym neuer fayle while their lives endured.
After this that Arthur hadde so don that hadde gete the hertes
of moche peple.  Than he stuffed his castelles, and townes, and
Citees, and after heilde courte at logres, his chief Citee, that now
is cleped london.  This was on oure lady day in septembre, at

<PB REF="" N="121" ID="pb.121"/>

this courte that the kynge heilde, he lete make many newe
knyghtes with his owne honde, whiche alle dide hym homage
and fewtee; and than he yaf hem londes and riche yeftes, so
that thei myght hem well mayntene and gouerne.  And so the
kynge gate hym grete love, so that fro thens-forth thei dide hym
neuer faile for no drede of deth.  And so hadde he of his peple
grete socoure and helpe, as ye shull here her-after.</P>
<P>  After this that the kynge hadde made CCC knyghtes, as the
story reherseth, and that he hadde stuffed alle his
castelles with soche men as that Merlyn hadde yoven hym counseile,
than Merlin toke hym in counseile, and seide—but at the
counseile was Vlfyn, that right moche hym loved.  And Merlyn
seide, "Sir, I knowe a thinge that I will shewe to yow, and
telle yow my customes; this is the trouthe:—<MILESTONE N="40b" UNIT="folio"/>Ther is a man in
Northumbirlonde, whiche is an hermyte, in the moste wilde place
of all the foreste, and he is gretly my frende, and moche I hym
love, for he deffended my moder oon tyme fro the deth; and I
will telle yow how."  Than be-gan he to reherse his moder lif,
and how she was ledde to be brente for a blame that was put
vpon hir; and how Vortiger dide hym seche for his tour; and
his moder was a nonne in an abbey where as he her lefte; and
how the tour dide holde that Vortiger lete make; and the
significacion of the two dragouns, how that oon dide sle the tother;
and how after the deth of Vortiger how he was a-queynted with
Pendragon and Vter, and of the grete bataile where as
Pendragon was slayn; and after how he was with his broder
Vterpendragon, and how he made hym to ly with the duchesse Ygerne
in the castell of Tintagell; and how he made the kynge in
semblaunce of the duke hir husbonde, whan Arthur was be-geten;
and how that Vlfyn devised the mariage of Vterpendragon and
the quene youre moder, whiche hadde v doughteres by the Duke,
hir husbonde, and two by hir firste husbonde; wherof the kynge
loth hath oon doughter to his wyf, and the kynge Ventres of
Garlot a-nother, and the kynge Vrien the thirthe, and Briadas
the forthe, whiche is deed, and he was fader to Agnysas of
Scotlonde; and the fyfthe is yet at logres in gret bretein, at scole,


<PB REF="" N="122" ID="pb.122"/>

whiche lerneth wele, and is right wise and connynge in grete
clergie.  And wite well that the kynge loth hath v sones by
his wif, of whiche thow didest engendre that oon at logres whan
thow were a squyer.  And alle thei be feire yonge squyres, and
the eldest hight Gawein.  And wite thow well that he shall be
the trewest knyght of all the worlde a-gein his lorde; also he
shall be oon of the beste knyghtes of the worlde, and moste
shall the love while his lif doth endure, and shall the helpe agein
all the worlde and agein his owne fader; and ne doute not
thourgh hym shalt thow haue a-gein all thy londe, and also alle
thy men that for drede of hym shull be full meke and fain to
obbeye to the; where thourgh thow shalt ouer-come thyn
enmyes, and also be the helpe of his brothern, whiche shull be
so noble knyghtes.  And the kynge Ventres of Garlot, that is so
gode a knyght, hath a-nother sone by his wif that is thy suster
also; and he is a fayre yonge squyre, and is I-cleped
Galeshyn.  And kynge Vrien hath a-nother that hight Ewein le gaunte, that
shall the helpe; and he hath alle bountees bothe of herte and
body.  These shull the love and serve euer to the deth; and wite thow
well that thei shull neuer be dubbed of no man till thow a-dubbe
hem and yeve hem armes.  Thise shull make the a-queynted with
many a gentilman that ben of high lynage, that for love of hem
and of her company shull the serue as longe as thei shall
lyve.  And on that other side, in litill Breteyne, ben two kynges,
which ought to be thy men; and they haue wedded two sustres
to their wyfes, and owen to holden their londes of the; and thei
be men of high lynage, and be bretheren germain.  These two
bretheren shull haue sones whiche shull be merveilouse <MILESTONE N="41a" UNIT="folio"/>gode
knyghtes, that in no londe shall be founde noon better.  That
oon of these two kynges is cleped the kynge Ban of Benoyk, and
the tother is cleped the kynge Bors of Gannes.  But thei haue an
euell neighbour that marched nygh to theire remes, and he is a
kynge, and werreth vpon hem, and shall yet here-after do hem
grete peyne and traueyle for enuye; and for that he may not
hem now Iustice and ouerlede, and for that thei be so worthy
knyghtes and so trewe.  I will thow sende to hem, that thei


<PB REF="" N="123" ID="pb.123"/>

come to thy courte, and that thow woldes hem se, and with
hem be aqueynted, and sey that gretely thow desirest her
aqueyntance, and that thei be here at halowmesse, for than shalt
thow holde thy courte at logres, and sende to alle the noble men
of thi londe that will to the obbeyen.  And somme shull come for
gode, and some for euell; but thise two kynges shull come by
theire debonertee, for thei be full worthy men and right
trewe.  And therfore, loke thow, a-queynte the with hem, and offre hem
thy servyse, and thei shull conne the grete thanke, and thei
shull do to the homage full gladly; and when thi courte shall
departe, telle to hem thi counseile, and sey how thow wilte go in
to Carmalide, to serve the kynge leodogan; and therfore lede
hem with the, for thei be full noble knyghtes, and full of
merveilouse high prowesse; and thow shall haue to hem grete
mystere at thy repeyre a-geyn in to this londe, for thyn enmyes
wolde deffende the fro the londe; but ther-to shall thei not
endure ne haue power for the helpe of these two kynges that
shull be in thy company.  And I will well that thow wite
my condiciouns be, that I gladly repeire in to forestes and
wildernesse, by the nature of hym that me be-gat, for he loveth not to
haue the company that is of godes be-halue; But I ne go not for
his sake, but for the love of Blase, the holy hermyte.  And
knowe it verily that in every nede that thow haste, I shall
redily be with the, to helpe the and counseile; but ofte tymes
shalt thow se me in other semblaunce than thow doste now,
for I will not that alle peple knowe me whan I speke with
hem, or whan I speke with the; but I will that thow
swere that thow shall not me discouer to no man of thynge
that I sey to the, ffor yef thow me discure thow shalt haue
therby more damage than thow woldest trowe."  And the
kynge Arthur swhore to hym with gode will, like as he dide
devyse, as he that was full ioyfull to haue his a-queytaunce and
companye, and seide that neuer wolde he sey, ne do nothynge
that sholde to hym displese by his power.  And than Merlin
hym assured of his londe, and seide he wolde helpe hym so well
that he wolde deserue of hym grete thanke.

<PB REF="" N="124" ID="pb.124"/>
</P>
<P>  Thus Arthur sente Vlfin and Bretell for kynge ban and kynge
bors, hys brother, and sente hem worde that as dere <CHOICE><CORR>as</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE>
thei hym loved, to come to hym to logres in grete Breteyne, at
the feste of halowmasse; ffor these two knyghtes were well
a-queynted with these two kynges that thei wente to seche, for
moche thei to-geder loveden, and well were aqueynted in the tyme
of Vterpendragon.  And thei passed ouer the see, <MILESTONE N="41b" UNIT="folio"/>and come in to
litill Breteyne, and com thourgh the londe that was all wasted; and
they fonde many townes brente and distroied.  And so they come
to a Citee that was cleped Beynoyk, that now is cleped Burges in
barre, and be-longinge to kynge Claudas de la deserte.</P>
<P>  This kynge Claudas of whom I speke claymeth a Castell that
the kynge Ban hath closeth in his londe.  And Claudas
seide that the londe was his, and the kynge Ban seide, "Nay."
And so be-gan the werre be-twene hem, grete and merveilouse,
and longe endured the mortall hate be-twene hem, as longe as
thir life dured.  And so Claudas ran thourgh the lodes of
kynge ban er he hadde hym warned, and so he dide hym grete
damage of prisoners that he toke in the Contree, and in townes
that he fonde vn-walled, whiche he brente and distroied, and
made grete slaughter of his peple, as he that was with-oute
pitee, of that he myght haue the hier honde.  But to the Castell
that kynge ban hadde do closed, myght he nothinge do, for it
was right stronge.  This castell hadde kynge ban well stuffeth
with men of werre, and in the maister forteresse hadde he sette
<CHOICE><CORR>at</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> Castelein, a right noble man and a trewe, that was cleped
Grascien, and made his compere a godsone of hys, that he hadden
houe fro the fontstone, and was cleped after the kynge ban
Bawdewyn, whiche was after full renomede, and full of grete
prowesse in the reame of logres, and in many other contrees,
where as he dide many grete dedes of armes, of whiche is yet
made no mencion, till that my mater com ther-to.  But speketh
of kynge ban, that was sorowfull and wroth for the damage that
kynge Claudas hadde hym don with-oute diffyinge.  And than he
assembled his power, and yede hym a-geyns in all the haste that
he myght, at a passage that he sholde come by.


<PB REF="" N="125" ID="pb.125"/>
</P>
<P>  When thise two hostes sholde mete ther was right grete
bataile, and stronge stour, and grete slaughter on both
partyes, for the kynge ban slough so many with his owne honde
that the hepes lay in the feilde as it hadde be dede swyne or
shepe.  And so bar hym the kynge ban and his peple that the
kynge claudas was putt to flight, and loste all his harneyse and his
praye, and the prisoners that they hadde taken were rescowed.  And
on that othir syde, on that side that marched to gawnes, the kynge
bors and his men entred and brente and distroide the londes of
the kynge Claudas euen to the yates of his chief Citee that
cleped la deserte, and toke alle the prisoners that he
myght.  And so he distroied all as he wente thourgh the contre, that
with-ynne lx myle ye sholde not fynde an house in to herberowe
but it were in roches or in seleres vnder erthe, but other
habitacion sholde ye noon fynde.  And so was Claudas made pore and
maat.  And by that distruxion Claudas heilde hym <MILESTONE N="42a" UNIT="folio"/>so coy that
he druste not werre no more in theire londes longe tyme after; and
after that he greved the two brethern more than thei dide hym,
as ye shull here her-after.  And so the messagers of Arthur
fonde the contree distroied like as ye haue herde; and thei
merveiled gretly how this myght be.  And thei rode forth till thei
come to Trebes, the castell that the kynge ban hadde do closed,
whiche was right stronge, and stode on a high grounde.</P>
<P>  In this castell was the quene Elein, the wyf of kynge ban of
Benoyk, which was a gode lady and of holy
livynge.  And ther-to she was of wonder grete bewte, so that noon was
founden feirer in no contre; and ther-to was she yonge, of the
age of xvj yere, and hadde be but litill while be-fore be maried
to the kynge Ban.  And the kynge Boors hadde wedded the
to-ther suster, that was a gode lady and gentell, and was the
yongest of the two quenes.  And whan Vlfin and Bertell come to
Trebes, thei axed after the kynge Ban; and the peple seide he
was at parlament with his brother kynge Boors of Benoyk.  And
whan thei vndirstode this, thei toke leve of the quene Elein and
departed fro thens all armed, for the contre that thei sholde passe
thourgh was not sure, for men of werre that ran thourgh the


<PB REF="" N="126" ID="pb.126"/>

londe.  And more thei wolde haue don, but for drede of the two
brethern that were kynges.  And thei kepten streite Iustice, ffor
alle tho that myght be take with eny forfet or robbery, thei
were a-noon putte to Iustyse and distroide with-oute
respite.  Whan these two messagers departed fro Trebes a five mile, thei
saugh vij knyghtes of Claudas, men that repayreden thourgh the
Contree to assaye yef thei myght ought wynne vpon the kynge
bors or on the kynge Ban; but the contre was so voyde that
they fonde nought to take, ffor the peple were fledde to stronge
Citees and to stronge Castelles with all that thei hadden.  Whan
the two massagers saugh the vij knyghtes, than seide oon to
a-nother of he vij, "See yonder two knyghtes, be-holde whiche
horse thei ride; grete foles were we yef we sholde lete hem thus
passe!"  Than seide oon, "It semeth well that thei be not of
this contree, for thei bere not the armes of this londe ne as
knyghtes of this reame."  "Trewly," quod oon of hem,
"what-so-euer thei be, they seme to be worthy men, bothe by their
armes and by theyr horses; and yef thei be in seruise, it sheweth
well that they serue a gode lorde."  "What forse," quod
a-nother, "what-euer thei be, lete vs go take from hem
theire horse and theire harneys, for ther-to haue we grete nede."
Anoon oon of hem smote the horse with the spores, and ran
cryinge after these messagers, and seide, "Sirs!  ne passe no
ferther, for yef ye do ye be but deed, yef ye be longynge to the
kynge Ban or to the kynge Boors; but and yef ye be with the
kynge Claudas, than haue ye no drede; for we kepe the weyes
and the passages of this marche, that noon ne a-scape that is
a-gein Claudas.  And therfore we aske of yow the trewage, after
the custom that we vse; for wite it well yow be-houeth to leve
with vs youre horse and youre armes, and ye ascape, so ye may
conne vs grete thanke; but for that vs semeth that ye <MILESTONE N="42b" UNIT="folio"/>worthy
men, we lete yow passe a-lyve with-oute inprisonment, with this
raunsom, to lese youre horse and youre harneyse."  Whan Vlfyn
vndirstode his manasynge, he seide, "Sir knyght, ne haste not to
sore, for yet thow may come all be tyme.  I knowe nought what
thow arte, but thow arte a bolde speker, and also a grete a-vauntour;<PB REF="" N="127" ID="pb.127"/>
 and ille happe haue he that vylenis knyght that asketh
eny tribute of eny trauellynge knyghtes; and thow arte nothynge
curteyse.  And wite thow well that thow shalt nother <CHOICE><CORR>haue</CORR><SIC>haue haue</SIC></CHOICE> oure horse ne oure harneyse so lyghtly as thow wenest, but er
thow hem gete, thei shull be right dere solde."  And when
Bretel vndirstode how Vlfin spake to the knyght, he seide, "Sir
<CHOICE><CORR>knyght</CORR><SIC>kynght</SIC></CHOICE>, in euyll tyme hast thou asked vs tribute."  Than smote
he the horse with the spores ageyn hym, and that other knyght
com hym a-gein, gripynge his spere in the fewtre.  And thei
smeten to-geder vpon the sheldes so sore that they perced thourgh,
and the spere heede of the knyght stynte on Breteles
haubrek.  And Bretell smote hym a-gein, that with so grete ravayn that the
spere ran thourgh his left sholder that the heed shewede a span
be-hynde.  And he bar on hym so sore that he threwe the knyght
to grounde, and his horse vpon hym.  And he swowned for
the grete anguyssh that he felte.  And Bretell drowgh oute a-gein
his spere that yet was hool.  And than seide he to the knyght in
scorne, "Sir knyght, now maist thow loigge here be leyser, and
kepe these weyes, that noon ne ascape with-oute paiynge of
trewage."  And than he rode a walop after Vlfyn, gripynge his
spere.  And Vlfin saugh wele the Iustynge of hym and of the
knyght, and ther-of he was gladde, and moche he preysed
Bretell.  And whan thei were come to-geder, thei rode fourth a
softe paas.  Whan the vj knyghtes saugh theire lorde
ouerthrowen and wounded, thei were sorowfull, and seide that neuer
sholde thei be gladde er thei were a-venged.  Than two of hem
renged hem, and priked after the messagers as faste as the horse
myght hem bere.  And whan thei approched, thei ascryde hem,
and manaced hem crewelly.  And whan the messagers saugh
hem two a-gein two, they returned her hedes, and bowed vnder
theire sheldes as thei that were gode knyghtes and sure.  And
they mette to-geder alle foure, with alle theire myght of horse
and man, and smyte to-geder with sperres in the sheldes, so that
thei fley on peces.  And Bretell bar his spere so high that he


<PB REF="" N="128" ID="pb.128"/>

smote his felow a-bove the shilde, that the haubrek rente, so that
he sente the hede and the shafte thourgh his throte, and so he
fill to grounde vp-right.  And Vlfyn hitte so his felowe thourgh
shelde and haubreke, that the spere hede wente thourgh the lyfte
sholder, that he fill to the erthe ouer his horse crowpe.</P>
<P>  After this made them redy two of the tother foure for to
ouer-take them that hadde theire felowes slayn.  They
ascryde the two messagers, and seide that thei sholde dye for
thei wolde a-venge theire felowes at hir power.  And whan they
saugh hem come, thei turned the hedes of theire horse, and that
oon requyred <MILESTONE N="43a" UNIT="folio"/>the tother to do well.  And than thei mette
to-geder in a valey, and Vlfyn lete renne to hym that com a-gein
hym, and Bretell a-gein the tother.  The two knyghtes brake theire
speres vpon the two massagers; and Bretell smote so his felowe
that he slyt ther shilde and the haubrek to rente, that the spere
yede thourgh the body, and bar hym to grounde all blody and
deed.  And Vlfyn smote his felowe so sore that he fill to the
erthe, and his horse on his body, and in the fallynge he brake
his nekke.  Than seide Bretell to hem, "Sirs, now may ye
manace vs, and ther-to I yeve yow leve to kepe the weyes and
the passages."  At these wordes lowgh Vlfin for merthe.  Than
yede these two massagers forth theire wey, and trauaylde forth
all the day wery, and for the traueile of the bataile that thei
hadde agein the knyghtes, so that by euen thei come to Benoyk,
where thei fonde grete plente of peple; ffor the kynge ban
hadde sente for the kynge Boors his brother, and hys barouns with
hym, that moste were of his counseile.  The two messagers rode
thourgh the town, till thei come to the maister paleise, and ther
thei a-lighten, and toke theire horse and their armes to a squyre
to kepe, that thei hadde brought with hem with-oute mo
meyne.  Than yede thei vp in to the paleise, and asked after kynge Ban
and his brother the kynge Boors.  And it was tolde hem how they
were in a chamber in counseile soole <CHOICE><CORR>by</CORR><SIC>by by</SIC></CHOICE> hem-self.  And than
were the messagers gladde that thei hadde hem founden so


<PB REF="" N="129" ID="pb.129"/>

to-geder.  And thei a-bode till that the two kynges hadde made
ende of her counseile.  And as they a-bode so, com to hem a
knyght that highte Leones, and brought with hym a knyght that
he moche loved, and his name was Pharien.  Thise tweyne come
to the messagers, and hem asked what thei were, and thei
ansuerde that thei sholde sone knowe, yef it plesed hem to a-byde
so longe till thei hadde seide theire message to the two
kynges.  And when these other herde hem so sey, thei a-vised hem better,
and knewe hem wele.  And than thei toke hem in armes, and
made hem grete ioye, as thei that longe tyme had to-geder loved
from theire childehode.  And than thei asked yef thei hadde
grete haste; and thei ansuerde, "Ye, right grete."  Than thei
toke them be the hande, and ledde hem in to the chamber where
the two kynges weren, and whan the two kynges hem saugh,
thei yede hem a-geins, for thei knewe well, that soone after
sholde they here tydynges, and Leonces a-resonde hem, and seide
to the two brethern, and seide, "Lo, here two messagers of the
grete Breteyne that beth come to speke with yow."  And the
kynges seide they were welcome; and than thei made of hem
grete ioye, as thei that moche hem loved, and than thei seeten
down, and than the kynge ban asked what nede hadde brought
hem in to that contre, for with-outen cause ye be not come hider;
and after he axed of tydinges of the londe that thei come fro,
and yef the barons hadde yet a kynge after her in-tente, for well
knewe thei of the stryfe and of the eleccion, and how the swerde
and the ston that apered on the feeste of yoole be-fore the
mynster.  <MILESTONE N="43b" UNIT="folio"/>Than the messagers tolde hem trouthe all <CHOICE><CORR>as</CORR><SIC>as as</SIC></CHOICE> it
hadde be by-twene the kynge Arthur and the vij kynges,and
the grete damage that Merlin dide hem with the fire, and how
grete merveiles of armes the yonge kynge dide; and after thei
seide their message, how Arthur hadde sente hem to seche, be the
counseile of Merlin, and whan they hadde seide all their message
fro the be-gynynge to the ende, Vlfin praide hem to take here
counseile, and to yeve hem ansuere hastely, for the terme was


<PB REF="" N="130" ID="pb.130"/>

but shorte, and theire nede grete.  And the two brethern that
were kynges seide that they were greved gretly with a werre,
that they hadde agein the kynge Claudas, "and  therfore we drede
<DEL>when</DEL>whan   we be oute of the Contree, that they falle not vpon vs, for
so myght we haue grete damage."  "Sir," seide the messagers,
"that ne wolde we not, but Merlin sente yow worde, that ye
sholde haue no drede as longe as ye be in this viage."</P>
<P>  Whan the two kynges vndirstode that, that thei hadde seide,
they merveiled moche of Merlin that thus knewe of the
thynges that shull be-falle; and than they graunted to the
Messagers the thei sholde meve the thirde day, and thei hem thanked
with gode herte.  Than thei made hem to vn-arme hem, for the
kynge ban wolde not haue at noon other osteill, but in his
house; and whan thei vn-harneysed, theire armour was
gretly be-holde, and they seiden alle that the messagers hadde
but litill be by the fire ne stonde be the chymney.  Than the two
kynges come to hem and asked hem where theire sheldes hadde
be so arrayed, and chargede hem be the feith that they ought
theire lorde, that thei sey the trouthe.  Than they tolde how
they were assailed by vij knyghtes, and all as it was  be-falle, as
ye haue herde be-fore, "and," quod they, "thanked be god we
haue do so that we beth now here."  And whan the two kynges
herde that they were so delyuered fro the vij knyghtes, they
praysed hem gretly, neuertheles they knewe wele that they were
worthy knyghtes, and gode men and trewe.  Than made the
kynge Ban the messagers to be sette, and serued with riche
seruyse and deynte metes, as he that wele cowde it do, and
Leonces and Pharien moche peyned hem to serue and make chere,
for longe hadde thei be aqueynted to-geder in the grete Breteyne
in the tyme of Vterpendragon.  A-noon kynge Ban and his brother
arayed hem to move the thirde day, and Comaunded theire londes
in the kepynge of Leonces, and Pharien, that was theire cosyn
germayn, and a gode man and right a trewe; and Pharien in his
companye, and the stywarde of Benoyk, and they of the reame


<PB REF="" N="131" ID="pb.131"/>

of Gannes, whiche were full worthy men; and the two kynges
comaunded hem, yef they hadde nede, that they sholde sende to
hem for socour, and lete hem wete how it was with hem.  And
the kynge ban toke gode tokenes that they sholde sende to the
barouns of the londe, yef nede were, and the tokene was a rygne
of hys fynger, that who-so brought hem that rynge they sholde
yeve credence to the message that it brought.  And than thei
departed, and sped so here Iourneys that thei com to the see, <MILESTONE N="44a" UNIT="folio"/>and entred in to the shippes, and passed ouer with-oute eny
lettynge.  But now cesseth the tale of hem, and returneth to
speke of kynge Arthur, that is lefte at Logres.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.9">
<HEAD> CHAPTER IX. 
<LB/> THE VISIT OF KING BAN AND KING BORS TO ARTHUR; AND THE TOURNAMENT AT LOGRES.</HEAD>
<P>  Now, seith the storye, that whan the messagers were departed
from Arthur,and that he hadd stuffed his Citees and euery
castell with soche peple as that Merlin hadde hym counseiled,
for he knewe well whiche were gode and trewe, and he wiste
also whiche were with-oute treson.  And whan all this was don,
Merlin come to hym and seide, "Sir, be gladde and mery, for
Vlfin and Bretell haue well do theire message."  And than Merlin
tolde what aventre hem fill by the wey, and how they were
assailed of vij knyghtes, and how thei hem delyuerd, and how
they haue spoke with the two kynges, and how thei be now
entred in to the see, and how thei haue lefte here londes in
kepynge of the two knyghtes, and also of the tokene of the
rynge.  "Now, beith well a-vised that ye resceyve hem so
wurshipfully as soche high men and grete of astate and high renon,
and they ought to be youre men, and they beth I-born of the
highest lynage of the worlde, and moche higher than ye be youre
self, and so be theire wyves also."  And the kynge seide to
Merlin, "I pray yow telle me how I shall do and how I shall


<PB REF="" N="132" ID="pb.132"/>

me contene, and I shall do as ye me comaunde."  Thanne Merlin
taught hym how he sholde do: "hange the stretes ther thei sholde
come with riche clothes, and make alle the dameselles to synge
carolles and to go ageins hem synginge oute of the town, and ye
youre self shall ride agein hem."  "And whan shull they come?"
seide the kynge.  Quod Merlin, "They shall be here on sonday er
pryme."  And the kynge seide he wolde do as <SUPPLIED>he</SUPPLIED> hadde devised,
and Merlin taught hym all how he sholde hym gouerne.  Thanne
Arthur made his ordenaunce to resceyve the two kynges, and
a-bode in soche wise to the sonday.  And the kynge and hys
barouns were on horse bak, and the archebisshop yede a-gein hem
with grete procession; and ther as they dide mete, grete was
the ioye and the wurship that eche of hem did to other, and so
they entred in to the town alle to-geder, and <CHOICE><CORR>ther</CORR><SIC>ther ther</SIC></CHOICE> thei were met
with caroles and daunces, and with all maner of ioye.  And
whan they were come to the paleise, the kynge Arthur yaf grete
yeftes to the meyne of the two kynges, after the astate and degre
that they of were: ffor he yaf horse and palfreyes, and robe and
armures full feire and riche; and all this he dide by the
counseile of Merlyn.  And so was Arthur gretly preysed and moche
beloued a-monge grete and riche and pore, and in especiall of
hem that neuer hadde hym seyn, but for the reporte that was of
hym.  Gretly they merveled where he myght haue alle the
richesse that he ther yaf, so that with-Inne litill tyme, all that
repeyred a-bowte hym hadde so grete love to hym, that thei
sworn thei wolde hym neuer faile.</P>
<P>  Than these lordes entred in to the Citee of Logres, be-gan the
caroles and the daunces of the ladies and damsels, and
the turnementes of yonge bachelers, that all the day dured till
the nyght, and the town was thourgh hanged with clothes of
silke, <MILESTONE N="44b" UNIT="folio"/>and it was feire wedir and clere, for it hadde not yet
nothir reyned ne snowed ne frosen, but was as stille as a-boute
aust; and the stretes were strowed with small grasse, and incense
and myrre in fires in the stretes thikke, and in the wyndowes


<PB REF="" N="133" ID="pb.133"/>

many lightes, and so swote sauoured thourgh the Cytee that fer
men shulde fele the odour.  Thus come the lordes to-geder in to
the maister mynster, and where as the procession hem a-bode and
receyued hem fro fer with humble reuerence: that day songe the
archebisshop masse, and whan it was ended they yede vp in to
the grete paleyse, where as the mete was arraide with all the
coriouse ordenaunce that myght be don, and the thre kynges
were sette to-geder at oon table, and the archebisshop, and Antor
that hadde norischid Arthur; and kay serued at tables as was
reson; and two yonge knyghtes of grete prowesse, and were sones
to <CHOICE><CORR>two</CORR><SIC>tw</SIC></CHOICE> casteleins, that oon was cleped Lucas, the boteler, and
that other Gifflet, the sone of doo of Cardoell, which hadde be
maister forester to Vterpendragon, and thei serued with the
stiwarde, and with Vlfin and Bretell, that wele cowde hem
enforme so that thei were well serued and richely.</P>
<P>  After mete was the quyntayne reysed, and ther at bourded
the yonge bachelers, and after they be-gonne a
turnemente, and departed hem in two partyes, and were well on eyther
syde vij C and CCC of the reme of Benoyk, that kepte hem to-geder
in oon partye, and whan the turnemente was assembled redy to
smyte to-geder, the kynge ban and the kynge Boors, and her
brother that was a mervilouse clerke of Astronomye, noon in that
tyme so expert saf Merlin.  These were lenynge out at
wyndowes, and Arthur and the archebisshop with hem, and Antor,
that thei wolde not leve be-helden the turnement on bothe partees,
and saugh the signes, and the stedes to neye and crye and to
praunce vnder knyghtes and bacheleres, that the hilles and the
medowes resouned all a-bowte.</P>
<P>  And whan thei were so nygh assembled, than departed oute
of the renge a knyght that was cleped Gifflet, the sone
of do of Cardoell, that satte vpon a grey stede that merveilously
was swyfte, and on that other part com a-gein hym a knyght of
benoyk, that was cleped ladynas, and he was of grete renon, and
he sette a-gein Gifflet as faste as the stedes myght renne, theire
shelde a-boute their nekkes, gripynge the speres, and thei smote
to-geder in the sheldes so grete strokes that bothe brake theire

<PB REF="" N="134" ID="pb.134"/>

speres, for bothe were they gode knyghtes and couetouse to gete
worship; and they mette so to-geder with helmes and sheldes so
fiersly, that they semede the yen fill from theire hedes, so eche bar
other to the erthe, and theire horse a-bouen hem, and bothe lay
longe in sowowne that thei semed deed, and euery man seide that
they saugh neuer so crewell in-countre be-twene two
knyghtes.  With that they renged hem on that oon part, and on that other
for the rescewe of the two knyghtes.  At the metynge of this
turnement was sein many Iustinges, that gladly were be-holden,
and some ther were that threw other to the erthe, and some
that brake theire shaftes with-oute fallynge to grounde.  Whan
the speres were broken, thei drough oute swerdes, and be-gan
the turney grete and huge; and ther was oon knyght that dide
many mastryes <MILESTONE N="45a" UNIT="folio"/>of armes with his body, of whom was moche
spoken and preysed thourgh the Contree, and was cleped Lucas,
the boteler, and was cosin germain to Gifflet, that had the grete
encourtir.  This Lucas smote down knyghtes and horse, and
be-gan soche dedis of armes, that noon myght his strokes
endure.  He arached helmes fro hedes and sheldes fro nekkes, and be-gan
to do so well, that it was merveile him to be-holde, and the thre
kynges preysed him moche, and so dide many other.  Grete was
the turnement in the medowes by Logres, vpon the ryver of
Temse, and longe it endured, that noon ne wiste who sholde
haue the better, for on bothe sides were many worthi men, and
longe it was er the two were releved that hadden the grete
encountre.  And whan thei were horsed, thei smeten in to the
turnemente, and tho gan Gifflet to do soche dedes of armes, that
he and Lucas, the botiller, that thei gate place vpon hem of
Benoyk, and put hem fer bakke in the playn feilde; and than com
hem to helpe the CCC knyghtes of Benoyk that yet ne hadde no
stroke smyten, and on that othir syde come also CCC all fressh,
and so eche ran to other.  There was grete stour and merveillouse
and harde strokes smyten, and whan the speres were broken thei
leyde honde to swerdes, and be-gan the chaple so stronge and
dured longe tyme.  Ther men myght se many feire cheualries
don on bothe parties, for ther were many yonge bachelers that


<PB REF="" N="135" ID="pb.135"/>

dide right wele; but, a-bove alle other, Gifflet, the sone of Do
of Cardoell, and Lucas, the botiller, these tweyn were preised of
prowesse a-boue alle other.  Whan the turnemente hadde longe
indured and they were somdell wery for traueyle, than lept kay,
the stywarde, oute of his enbusshement, that yet hadde no stroke
smyten, he and other v felowes that were well horsed, and theire
shildes a-boute her nekkes, theire launces in their hondes, and
whan thei aproched the renges, thei smote in a-monge hem as
faucouns amonge starlinges, and bar the firste that thei mette to
grounde; and whan theire speres were broke thei drough oute
swerdes, and be-gonne to do soche maistryes and dedes of armes,
that kay hadde the prys and the wurship of the turnemente on
that oon part, and on that other part Gifflet and Lucas, the
boteller; and the beste after hem, was Marke de la roche, and
Guynas le Bleys, and drias de la foreste sauge, and Belyas, the
amerouse, of maydens castell, and Blyos de la casse, and Madyens
le crespes, and Flaundryns le blanke, and Grassien, the castelein,
and Placidas le gays: these dide so well whan thei come to the
turnement, that noon myght agein hem endure; but after that
the felowes of the reame of benoyk dide so wele, that they made
all the turnement resorte bak to theire firste place, for the
felisship of the table of Logres were gon oute for to chaunge helmes,
that weren to hewen and rente; and whan thei saugh theire
party turned to disconfiture, thei hem hasted and henten speres,
and come in to the turnemente as faste the horse myght hem
bere, and smote in a-monge the grettest presse, and kay cam
before alle his felowes as he that was desirouse to shewe his
knyght-hode, and griped a grete growen spere, and he was a
merveillouse gode knyght, yef he ne hadde not be so full of
wordes, for his euell speche made hym to be hatid of a-monge his
felowes, and <MILESTONE N="45b" UNIT="folio"/>also of straungers that herden of hym speke, that
after refuseden to go in his felisshep to seche a-uentures in the
reame of Logres, that after endured longe tyme, as this boke shall
reherse here-afterwarde.  This tecche hadde kay take in his norice
that he dide of sowke, ffor he hadde it nothynge of norture of his
modere, ffor his moder was right a gode lady and wise and trewe;


<PB REF="" N="136" ID="pb.136"/>

but of what kay seide, his felowes that knewe his costomes ne
rought neuer, but he was full of myrthe and Iapes in his speche,
for seide it for noon euyll will of no man, and ther at lough thei
gladly that knewe his maners, and on that othir syde he was oon
of the beste felowes and myriest that myght be founde.  Whan
he was come to the turnement, as ye haue herde, he mette with
Lydonas, that wele hadde do all the day, and moche he and his
felowes peyned to dryve hem of Logres oute of the feilde, and so
thei were nygh at disconfiture.  And whan kay saugh this he
was sory and wroth.  Than he smote in to the presse, and mette
lydonas in the shelde so sore that he perced thourgh-oute, and
the spere poynte stynte oute at the haubrek, and he shof so
harde, that he caste hym to the grounde vp-right; and with the
same course he smote Grascien, of Trebes, that he ouerthrewe
hym and his horse.  Than he leyde honde to his swerde, and
cride Clarence, the signe of kynge Arthur; and they be-heilde
hym, and saugh the socour that he brought, for they wende they
hadde all loste.  Than they returned, and be-gonne to do so well
that they hadde not do so well all the day be-fore.</P>
<P>  This Iustynge that Kay hadde don saugh well the kynge
Arthur, and the kynge ban and the kynge Boors, his
brother, and they preysed moche kay, and seide he was wight
and deliuere, and thei be-heilde hym gladly.  And whan Lucas,
the botyller, saugh kay hadde don so well, he smote the horse
the spores in to the grettest presse, and smote Blios so harde that
he fill to the grounde, and the spere fly on peses.  Than he pulde
oute hys swerde and spronge in a-monge hem, and be-gan to yeve
grete strokes and to do so well, that moche he was preysed, and
so be-gan the turnement newe to enforse for the rescewe of theire
felowes.  Than com Gifflet freschely armed, his spere in fewtre,
as faste as his horse myght hym bere, and saugh Blioberes and
two of hys felowes that leyde on kay, the stiwarde, with here
swerdes, and heilde hym so shorte that he hadde grete nede of
helpe, for thei were thre and he was but alone, and also they
were thre the beste of all the turnement, and Placidas hadde hitte
kay on the helme, that he lened on his sadill bowe; and whan

<PB REF="" N="137" ID="pb.137"/>

Gifflet sye this he for-thought it sore, and he smote blioberis so
harde, that he fill to the erthe, bothe he and his horse, and the
spere fly on peces, and leide honde to his swerde, and smote
Placidas on the helme that he bowed ouer the arson of his sadell,
and after leyde on hym so grete strokes, that he was so astooned
that he fill to the erthe vp-right, and kay hym dressed, <MILESTONE N="46a" UNIT="folio"/>that
grete nede hadde of that socoure, and after be-heilde and knew
that it was Gyfflet that so hadde hym delyuered, and thought to
quyte hym that bountee yef he myght; and so he dide
withynne shorte tyme, as ye shall heren heir-after, and for that thei
felishiped first to-geder, and woued well to-geder longe tyme after
of grete love alle the dayes of her lyf.  Whan Gifflet hadde
<CHOICE><CORR>delyuered</CORR><SIC>delyued</SIC></CHOICE> kay, as ye haue herde, he loked a-boute hym and saugh
Ieroas, that moche hadde greved in that stour; than he griped
his swerde and ran vpon hym for ire, and yaf soche a stroke that
the fire fley oute, and ther-with he kytte a pece of his helme, and
but the swerde hadde swarved, he hadde ben deed for
euer-more.  The stroke descended vpon the lifte sholder, that he fill to the
erthe all blody.  Than arose the noyse and the crye, for well
wende thei that this syen that he hadde be deed with-oute
recouer.  Than come his felowes to the rescowe, and on that other parte
com the felowes of kay, the stywarde.  Than be-gan the medle
grete and hidouse, that many were wounded and ouerthrowen er
that other was rescowed and sette on horse; and the fyve felowes
that were be-fore rehersed, whan thei saugh the medle so be-gonne,
thei smot so v of the first that thei metten that thei blushit to
the erthe; than thei smyten in amonge hem, and be-gan to do so
well, that all hadde merveile how they myght it suffre or
endure.  Ther be-gan a-gayn the turnement on bothe partyes, and well thei
dide in armes on that oon part and that other, Till it drough
towarde evenesonge, that the thre kynges descended from the paleise
and com in to the place where as was the turnement, and saugh
that thei heilde hem euen like, that noon ne wiste wele whiche
hadde the better.  Than com the thre kynges, and hem departed
and seide it was tyme to cesse, for it was to late eny more to
turney, and so were they departed, and eche yede to his ostell to


<PB REF="" N="138" ID="pb.138"/>

resten, for ther-to hadde thei nede and gret myster, for many
were they hurte; and the kynges yede to here euesonge, and than
thei yede to soper, and after begonne the carolles and to speke
of the turnemente, and asked oon of a-nother, how hem semed
of whom that hadde don beste.  And thei seide that the kynge
ban hadde xv knyghtes that hadde don alther beste more than
eny other, and on that other part were viij that hadde don
merveiles in armes, and gretly hadde they traueylled and peyned,
and moche were thei to a-lowe.  Thus heilde they here tales
longe, and alwey they yaf the loos and the pris to kay, the
stiward, and to Lucas, the boteller, and to Gifflet, the sone of
do.  These were the thre that beste hadde don, and ofte tymes Iusted,
and in euery nede were redy.</P>
<P>  Whan the tables were vp, arisen the thre kynges and the
Archebisshop and Antor, and Guynebaus, that was
brother to the two kynges.  Than thei yede into a chamber that was
be-syde the halle, towarde the gardyn of the river of temse, <MILESTONE N="46b" UNIT="folio"/>and
with hem yede tweyne that ne ought not to be for-yeten, that
was Vlfin and Bretell, and so thei pleide and spake to-geder of
many thinges.  Than be-heilde Vlfin and Bretell, and than he
gan to laugh, for he be-thought hym on the wordes that Merlin
hadde hym tolde, whan they were gon on his message, how thei
were assailed in the deserte of vij knyghtes, and how they dide
hem deliuere.  Than the kynge cleped hem bothe, and comaunded
hem, be the feith that thei hym oughten, that thei sholde hym
telle all the trouthe, how thei hadde spedde in their
message.  Whan thei herde the kynge thus speke, that oon loked on the
tother and be-gonne to smyle, and Bretell ansuerde the kynge,
that thought well he it knewe thourgh Merlin, and seide, "Sir,
wherto sholde we telle you oure spede in oure Iourney, for as
wele ye do it knowe as we oure self, thourgh hym that hath it
tolde, and therfore it were but speche loste."  Than seide the
kynge Ban, "Who is that, that hath hym this tolde?"  "Certein,
sir, the wisest man of the worlde."  "And where is he?" quod
Ban, "and what is name?"  "Sir," quod Bretell, "it is Merlin,
and he resteth in my chamber here-ynne, and by his counseile


<PB REF="" N="139" ID="pb.139"/>

hath my lorde sente after yow."  "Sir," quod kynge Ban, "lete
hym come hider, for we haue moche disired hym for to see, for
the merveiles that we haue herde of hym spoken."  And Arthur
seide that so wolde he do with gode will.  And than he sente
Vlfin for hym, and ther-with a-noon entred Merlin in to the
chamber agein Vlfin, and seide, "Returne," and so thei wente
be-fore the kynge, and and asked wherefore he hadde sente hym
to seche.  And the kynge ban blissed hym for the merveile that
he hadde, how he myght knowe these thingis, and Merlin seide,
"Ther-of no forse, for here-after ye shull wite I-nough."</P>
<P>  Than he be-gan to telle a party of his lif, and than com forth
Guynebaude, the clerke, and opposed hym of dyuerse
thynges, for he was a profunde clerke.  And Merlyn hym
ansuerde to alle the questiouns that he asked the very trouthe as it
was, and so indured longe the disputacion be-twene hem tweyne;
and at laste Merlin seide that all for nought he traueylede, "for,"
quod he, "the more thow sechest the more shalt thow fynde."
And than seide Merlin to hem that were a-boute hym, that he
hadde neuer founde no clerke that euer hadde spoke to hym of so
high clergie, ne not blase, that was so holy a man, ne cowde not
so moche enquere.  Wher-to sholde I make yow longe tale.  But
longe they spake to-geder, so that the toon was well a-queynted
with that other, and well thei loved to-geder.  And whan the
disputaciouns were don, Merlin com to the two kynges that were
his brethern, and seide, "Lordynges, ye be worthi men and of
high renoun, and also ye beth right feith-full and trewe; and lo!
here the kynge Arthur, that ought to be youre lorde, and of hym
sholde ye holde youre londes and do hym homage; and he ought
to helpe yow and to socoure agein alle men, yef ye haue nede."
And thei seide, "Merlin, now telle vs how he was chosen to be
kynge, and wherfore, and yef Antor knowe whether he be the
sone of Vterpendragon."  And Merlin seide, "Ye, with-oute faile."
Than he tolde hem <MILESTONE N="47a" UNIT="folio"/>alle the thinges like as was be-falle, so that
the archebisshop and Vlfin it recorded.</P>
<P>  "Merlin," quod the kynge ban, "we will that thow make
vs sure of oon thinge that we shall aske, for so moche


<PB REF="" N="140" ID="pb.140"/>

we knowe in yow, that ye will not to vs sey no lesynge for all
the londe that longeth to the crowne."  "A ha," quod Merlin,
"ye desire to haue me sworn that it be trewe that I sey."  And
thei be-gonne to laugh, and seide that ther uas noon so wise as
was he in no reame.  And Merlin seide, "I graunte youre
requeste and youre desire," and so thei toke respite till on the
morn.  Thus ended theire parlament, and departed and yede to
bedde, and the thre kynges and the archebisshop lay in oon
chamber, for they wolde not departe on sondre.  And moche
Guynebaude a-queynted hym with Merlin, that taught hym many
grete maistres and many feire pleyes; and Guynebaude well hem
vndirstode, as he that was wise and a grete clerke, so that he
wrought somme of the craftes ofte in the bloy Breteyne, that
longe tyme after endured, and as it shall here-after reherse.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.10">
<HEAD> CHAPTER X.  
<LB/>THE BATTLE BETWEEN ARTHUR AND THE REBEL KINGS AT BREDIGAN.</HEAD>
<P>  Whan these thre kynges weren a-bedde and at her ese that
nyght, the storye seith that they lay till on the morn, that
thei ronge to messe right erly, for it was a litill a-fore
halowmesse.  Than com Merlin and a-woke hem, and opened the two
windowes towarde the gardyn, for he wolde that hei hadde lyght
ther-ynne, and they hem clothed and a-rayed and yede to the
mynster, and the archebisshop sange the messe; and than Merlin
dide swere be-fore the kynges that Arthur was the sone of
Vterpendragon, and that he was be-geten on the quene Ygerne that
nyght that the Duke was slayn, and that he was the moste
rightfull heire that the londe myght holde.  After that swore Vlfin
that so god hym helpe and alle seyntes, that it was trewe all as
Merlin hadde rehersed.  Whan the two kynges hadde take the
oth of these two, a-noon thei dide to kynge Arthur their homage
full debonerly as was right, and the kynge he receyved with gode
herte and sympilliche with wepynge, and than thei kiste with

<PB REF="" N="141" ID="pb.141"/>

gode herte for grete love, and than was the ioye more than
before; and than thei yede vp in to the halle to mete, and thei
were served as high men ought to be, and after mete Arthur and
Merlin wente to-geder to counseile, and the two kynges that were
brethern, and Vlfin and Bretell and kay the stywarde.  Thanne
seide Merlyn, "Feire lordynges, ye be alle worthy men and
trewe, and I knowe yow alle as wele or better than ye do
youreself; and lo! here youre lorde the kynge Arthur, þat is right a
worthi man, and a gode knyght shall he be of his honde; and ye
knowe well that grete wronge that is do to hym by his barouns of
his londe, that will not resceyve hym for theire lorde, ne do to
hym homage as thei ought to do of right, but besy hem to greve
hym with all her power, and therfore I pray yow do as I shall
yow counsell, and knowe it well that it shall be the beste
counseile that I may yow yeve."  <MILESTONE N="47b" UNIT="folio"/>And they seide thei wolde do
like as he wolde devise, and he thanked debonerly.  And than
he seide, "Lordinges, se here the kynge that hath no wif, and I
knowe a mayden that is kynges doughtere and quenes, and of right
high lynage, and also she is right feire, and of grete valoure, that
no lady ne may haue more, and that is the doughter of kynge
Leodegan, of Carmelide, that is now an olde man and hath no
mo children but this doughter, whos name is Gonnore, to whom
the londe moste falle after his discesse; and he hath grete werre
a-gein the kynge Rion, that is of the lynage of Geauntes, and he
is right riche and right puyssant, and yef it happe that he
conquere the reame of Carmelide, that marcheth to the reame of
Logres, that is Arthures, wite it well that Arthur ne shall not
longe kepe his londe in pees, and alle the dayes of his lif he shall
have werre on alle partees; and ne were the knyghtes of the
rounde table, that deffende the reame of kynge Leodegan a-gein
the Geauntes, thei sholde haue all his londe wasted and distroied,
and ther-fore I counseile yow that ye take with yow certain of
youre peple, and go with Arthur, and a-bide with the kynge
Leodegan a yere or two, till that ye be with hym well a-queynted,
and ye shull but litill while be ther, but he shall love yow better
than theym that with him now ther; and knowe it wele that he


<PB REF="" N="142" ID="pb.142"/>

shall profer Arthur his doughter to be his wif, and ther-by shall
he haue his reame all quyte.  Ne neuer after that the Geauntes
knowe, that he hath her wedded shull they not be so hardy to
a-byde in the contre, ne nygh it by a Iourney."</P>
<P>  Than ansuerde kynge Ban to Merlyn and seide, "Dere frende,
yef we go in to straunge londe, and leve our londes in
this manere as thei be, how shall ther-of falle, for we haue an
euell and fell nyghbour that vpon vs werre, and brenneth oure
townes and castelles?  Ne this londe also is no-thynge sure, ffor
the barouns that sholde be the kynges frendes and his liege men,
thei do vpon hym werren, therfore it is grete pereyle to leve his
owne reame for to deffende a-nother mannes."  "Ha, sir," quod
Merlin, "ye sey I-nough after youre in-tencion; but it is grete nede
a man to go bak to recouer the better his leep, for wite it well, for
a peny that ye less on this side, ye shall wynne tweyn on that
side; ffor on this party shall ye neyther lese Castell ne Citee, and
on that other side ther shall ye wynne an hool reame, tha euer
after shall deffende this reame."  "I wote neuer," quod kynge
Ban, "what I shall sey, for ye beth more wyser than we alle,
and a-gein me I will do that ye counseile, seth it is so as ye haue
seide ther is no more, but lete vs gon, and therfore devise ye
whan we shull meve, and ther-to lete eche of vs make hym
redy."  "All be-<MILESTONE N="48a" UNIT="folio"/>tyme," seide Merlin, "for ye ne shall not meve
before lenton, for er that tyme moste ye do a grete bataile in this
contree agein the barouns, that assemble and gedere as moche
peple as they may haue, and therfore we shull assemble as many
as we may gete in the pryviest wise that we can, and lete hem be
loigged in a launde that is in the forest of Bredigan, and ne doute
not ther-of but that ye shall do hem more damage than they shall
do to yow."  "Merlin," seide the kynge Ban, "yef I and my
brother sende for socour in to oure contree, may they come
betyme?"  "Ye, trewly," quod Merlin.  "Than shall I sende
thider?" quod Ban.  "Certes," quod Merlin, "I shall go and
do that is ther-to nede, and sonner shall I be ther than eny
messager that ye can sende; but thei be-houe to haste, for the bataile
shall be at Candilmesse, in the medowes of Bredigan, and therfore


<PB REF="" N="143" ID="pb.143"/>

 youre peple moste ryde nyght and day for to haste hem;
and knowe it verily that I shall be at Gannes be to-morowe at
euen."  And whan they herde that they merveiled gretly, and
than thei hym clipt and made grete ioye.  Than Merlyn cleped
Arthur, and seide, "Sir, I go now on this message, for it is no
tyme lenger to tarye.  Now, sende and assemble knyghtes, and
seriauntes, and arblasters, as many as <CHOICE><CORR>ye</CORR><SIC>y</SIC></CHOICE> may gete, and ordeyne
that they be sente grete plente of vitaile in to the launde that I
haue nempned, that ye may departe a-monge the peple, for it
shall be grete nede, and make eche man to take vitaile for xv
dayes.  After that they be loigged, as mele and salteflyssh
withoute more; and the gouernours to departe hem shall be Lucas, the
boteller, and Gifflet, and Vlfin, and Bretell; and ye, sir," quod
he to the kynge Ban, "yeve me youre rynge, that I may it take
to Leonces de paerne, youre cosin, be the token that he telle me
that I shall sey to yow."</P>
<P>  Whan the two brethern herde how Merlin spake they hadde
grete merveile, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE> were a-bassht, for thei wende that
no creature lyvinge hadde knowen of that he seide; for he knewe
alle thinges at <CHOICE><CORR>oon</CORR><SIC>o</SIC></CHOICE> worde as of soche thynges as hym liste to
knowe, were thei neuer so prevy.  And thei seide, "Seth it is so, we
shall delyuer yow the rynge, and wite ye well that we love yow,
and truste more than all the worlde."  "Be my feith," quod
Merlyn, "ye sey as wise men at this worde, and thus moche
shull ye wynne ther-by, that ye shall se oon day how moche that
I do yow love."  With that the kynge toke hym the rynge, and
Merlyn it toke and comaunded hem to god, and yede thider as I
haue yow tolde, and com be Blase, and tolde hym alle these
thynges, that nought he lefte vn-seide; and also tolde hym how
he yede on message in to litill Bretein.  And he wrote in this
boke that Merlin hym tolde, and by his writynge haue we yet
the knowinge ther-of.  With that departed Merlin fro blase,
that lenger ne wolde not tarie, but dide his message well and
feire, ffor on the morowe by pryme he come to Citee of Gannes,


<PB REF="" N="144" ID="pb.144"/>

and tolde to Leonces that the two bretheren hym sente, and
shewed hym the rynge that was the prevy token be-twene hym
and the <MILESTONE N="48b" UNIT="folio"/>kynge, and Leonces a-noon yaf credence to all that Merlin
seide.  Than a-noon he sente oute and purchased, and gedered so
moche peple, that thei were well x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, alle on horse bakke, armed,
be-fore the Citee of Benoyk, viij dayes be-fore yoole.  Than they
sette kepers in the two Citees that were the two bretheren, soche as
thei wiste was myster, and oon of the kepers was Lambeges, that
was right a trewe knyght, and a gode man of his body, and hym
thei sette in the forteresse of Gannes, and Pharien, his vncle, praide
hym to do well, and he seide so he wolde to his power.  And in
the forteresse of benoyk sette they Rahier de haut mur, that was
right a gode knyght and yonge at pryme barbe; and in the
forteresse of Trebes thei lefte Bawdewyn, the sone of Grassien,
that was the godsone of kynge Ban.  And ther-ynne were the two
susters lefte that were quenes, for that was the beste Castell, and
the <CHOICE><CORR>strengest</CORR><SIC>n</SIC></CHOICE> of bothe reames.  At Mouloir, a stronge castell of
kynge Boors, thei lefte Placidas, that was a gode knyght and a
trewe.  Whan thei hadde thus garnysshed all the Contree, thei
toke their wey be nyght, for the moone shone clere.  And Merlin
condited the hoste oute fro euyll passages, and so thei traueyled
till thei come to the see and entred in to shippes.  On the tother
side Arthur a-raied hym in the beste wise that he myght, as
Merlyn hadde hym taught, for he sente and somowned, in the
previest wise he cowde, to alle tho that he knewe were his frendes,
and so com grete plente of peple, more than he wende; and some
come thider with gode will for the grete yeftes that he yaf, and
some for to haue of hym a-queyntance for the grete bounte that
thei hadde herde of hym speke.  And whan thei were assembled,
thei were well x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> on horsbak armed, for fotemen wolde thei noon
lede.  And on the tother side come all the cariage of the londe,
that brought vitaile as Merlin hadde hem comaunded.  And the
kynge made the hoste to be ledde, in the stillest wise that he myght,
in to the launde of bredigan, for it was oon of the wildeste places
of that oon knewe, ffor whan thei were ther loigged, thei were,
as who seith, loste.  And the kynge dide oon thynge that Merlin


<PB REF="" N="145" ID="pb.145"/>

hilde grete wisdome, ffor as soone as the cariage and vitaile was
ledde in to that place where thei were loigged, he sette in euery
wey gode kepers thourgh the londe, that noon ne sholde passe
that ne were take and brought be-fore hym, for that he wolde
noon espye sholde entre in to his londe, for to discure to his
enmys, and made defende oute thourgh his londe, that who ne
heilde of the kynge Arthur ne ride not thourgh his londe be-fore
that Candelmasse were passed, and yef eny ther were that passed,
he dide hem to wite that he sholde other lese his lif or membre
yef he myght be taken, ffor so hadde the kynge comaunded; and
thei heilde hem so in pees that thei com not ther, and ther-of
merveiled the mene peple what it myght mene.  And thus was
the chyuachie so privily kept, that noon wiste where thei be
come, saf only thei of the kynges counseile.  But now stenteth
the tale of hem, and returneth to speke of the vij kynges that
were discounfited at Clarion, and all her companye, as ye haue
herde.</P>
<P>  Now, seith the story, that sorowfull and full of hevynesse
were the vij kynges, whan thei were discounfited ther as
thei loste all here harneyse of hirs and of <MILESTONE N="49a" UNIT="folio"/>her mayne.  Than thei
swore and assured to-geder that neuer shulde thei be gladde till
thei were avenged of kynge Arthur and vpon his enchauntour, by
whom thei hadde all that losse, yef thei in eny wise myght hym
gete.  In this wise yede the vij kynges, mat and sorowfull for
thire discounfiture wherefore thei sholde be the werse all hir lyf
tyme, and somme of hem were caried in horse lyters that myght
not suffre to ryde, and so thei traueyled smale iournes, till thei
come in to theire londes, and soiourned till thei were hool of her
woundes.  And at the monthes ende thei toke a parlement in a
contre that is be-twene the reame of Gorre and Scotlonde, and
the parlement was this: that eche of hem sholde sende after all
his kyn and frendes, and so go vpon the kynge Arthur and be-reve
hym his londe, and so exile hym fro all the contree; and so thei
sette day to assemble at Bredigan, in the medowes.  Thus thei
departed, and sente for helpe bothe fer and nygh; and com hem
to helpe the Duke Escam, of Cambenyk, with v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes,


<PB REF="" N="146" ID="pb.146"/>

and also come the kynge Tramelmens, of Northwales, with vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men, and the kynge Clarion with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the <SUPPLIED>kynge</SUPPLIED> with
the hundred knyghtes, that was a noble knyght and an hardy,
come with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and also com the kynge Loth, of Orcanye,
and Leonoys, with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the kynge Carados, of Strangore,
com with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and also the kynge Ventres, of Garlot, com
with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the kynge Vrien, of Gorre, com with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
Men, and also come the kynge Ydiers, of Cornewaile, with vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men; and so thei rode forth smale iournes, as thei that wende
well to distroye the contree.  Than thei sente their espyes
thourghoute the londe, for to knowe the rule of kynge Arthur; but the
kepers that were sette in the contrey a-noon token hem alle, and
sente hem to kynge Arthur, and were sette in prison that thei
cowde heir tydynges.  And these kynges spedde forth her iourney
till thei mette, and were logged vnder the Castell of bredigan,
and were mery and gladde, for thei wende well that they hadde
all wonne.  Thei sente theire forrears through the contrey, but
litill thei fonde to take, ffor all was ledde in to Castelles and
stronge townes, and this was do be the counseile of kynge ban
and the kynge Broos, his brother, that were full wise
knyghtes.  And whan thei saugh that all was gon, and that the peple of the
contrei hadde this don, thei sette all on fier and on flame, and
distroied the londe all that thei myght, and made vitaile be
brought to the oste of her owne londes; and when thei were
alle to-geder thei were acompted lx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  But now cesseth the tale
to speke of hem, and speketh of Merlin, and of the socour that
he bringeth oute of the litill Breteyne, as ye haue herde be-fore.</P>
<P>  Now, seith the boke, that so Merlin, and Leonces, and Pharien,
and Antoynes, the stiwarde of Benoyk, com to the rochell,
and entred in to the shippes, and so thei sailed till thei com to
the bloy bretaigne, and it is reson that the boke do yow to
vndirstonde whi it is so cleped.  This is the trouthe: after that the
distruxion of troye, it <MILESTONE N="49b" UNIT="folio"/>fill so that two barouns departed and
fledde the contrey, and oute of the londe, for doute of the
Grekes.  Of these two barouns that fledde the londe come grete plente of
peple; and the name of that oon was Brutus, whiche dide a-ryve in


<PB REF="" N="147" ID="pb.147"/>

this contrey, and dide do make a Citee, that in his lyve was cleped
the newe troye, for that he was come oute of troye, and the londe
was cleped in worship of his name Bretaigne, for that his name
was Brutus; and longe tyme after the dethe of this Brutus com
a-nothir kynge in to this londe, that hight Logryns.  This Logryn
a-mended gretly the Citee, and made towres and stronge walles
enbateiled, and whan he hadde thus <CHOICE><CORR>amended</CORR><SIC>ameded</SIC></CHOICE> it he chaunged the
name and cleped it Logres, in breteigne, for that his name was
Logryn, and this name dured in to the deth of kynge Arthur; but
after his deth, and the deth of his barouns, that thourgh Mordred
and Agrauayn eche slow other on the playn of Salisberi, as
the boke shall reherse her-after, the deth of launcelot, that was
the sone of kynge Ban, of benoyk.  And so it fill after that ther
was a grete pestelence and slaughter of barouns and of the mene
peple, and for that the losse was so grete, the mene peple cleped
it the bloy bretaigne, ffor that her hertes and her thoughtes were
so bloy and so blake for theire frendes, that thei hade so loste for
myschaunce of synne.</P>
<P>  Now haue ye herde the cause why this londe was cleped the
bloy bretaigne.  The tother baron that fledde oute of
troye was cleped Corneus.  This Corneus was of the lynage of
Geauntes, and in that contree that marched to bretaigne, and he
was right a mervilouse knyght, and was moche and stronge, and
made townes and Castelles, and men cleped the contrey
Cornewaile in bretaigne, ne neuer after yet this name ne lefte.  And
of hym come the Geauntes, as seith the frenshe book, that
moche harme haue don to the bretouns, wherof this book shall
reherse yow here-after, and also of the merveiles that be-fill in
their tyme.  But now returneth the tale to Merlin, that cometh
in the see, and with hym bryngeth the socour and helpe to kynge
Arthur oute of the litill breteigne.</P>
<P>  Now seith the boke that whan Merlin and his companye
were arived in the grete breteigne, Merlin comaunded
that all the harneise and armoure sholde be trussed in males and
cloth sakkes, and in other cariage, ffor he wolde not that they
sholde not loigge ne tarye on the wey, but that thei sholde

<PB REF="" N="148" ID="pb.148"/>

trauaile day and nyght till thei come in to the place where
Merlin wolde hem loigge with the meyne of kynge
Arthur.  And thei dide his comaundement.  And so thei spedde her
iourneyes that the fifte day thei come in to the forest of
bredigan, where thei fonde the hoste of kynge Arthur.  And
bothe hostes made to-geder ioye, as soone as eyder of hem
myght sen other.  Than thei loigged in tentes and pavilouns,
and restede hem so viij dayes hool, and than was the vitaile
departed as Merlin hadde devised.  And than come Merlin to <MILESTONE N="50a" UNIT="folio"/>the wardeyns of the hoste, and seide, "I go to fecche the thre
kynges, for thei shull do beste at this nede than eny other."
And thei seide to Merlin in game, "Loke ye be-war <CHOICE><CORR>of the</CORR><SIC>of the of the</SIC></CHOICE> tother
parti, for we here sey that thei do manace yow sore."  "I knowe
that well," quod Merlin, "but thei shall neuer haue ouer me no
power; and I do yow to wete that thei haue reson to hate me,
for thei haue no werse enmy, ne noon that may do hem so grete
damage as I shall do, as longe as thei be enmyes to the kynge
Arthur.  But I haue it not yet be-gonne; but be well ware that
noon isse oute of this hoste, ffor than the harme myght neuer be
restored, ffor alle Arthurs enmyes ben loigged here faste by,
vndir the castell of bredigan.  And thei be acompted xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> wele
horsed men.  And of oure party we be but xxv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and therefore
we moste be wisely gouerned, or elles we sholde alle lese."</P>
<P>  "Sir," quod Vlfin, "another ought rather to go on this
massage than ye."  "Nay," quod Merlin, "I can
better lede hem in safte than eny other, so that thei shall not be
seyn ne knowe of no man."  "Now goth, a godes name," seide
the barouns, "and as hastely as ye may come to vs a-geyn."  And
Merlin departed a-noon fro hem so sodenly, that thei knewe not
where he was be-come.  And than thei blissid hem for the grete
merveyle that thei hadde ther-of.  And than thei departed, and
yede a-boute in the hoste and sette soche gouernaunce that noon
was so hardy to meve ne to sette a fote oute of the hoste, ne of
her loiggynge.  And thus thei a-bode iiij dayes that thei ne herde


<PB REF="" N="149" ID="pb.149"/>

no tydinges of the thre kynges ne of Merlin.  And, as the boke
seith, the same nyght that Merlin departed fro the hoste, he come
to logres be-fore euesonge, where as he fonde the thre kynges full
pensif and hevy, for the contrey that was so wastid and
distroyed.  Than come Merlin so sodenly a-monge hem that thei wiste not
fro whens he com.  And a-noon thei hym clipt and made grete
ioye, and after thei asked hym how he hadde spedde seth that he
fro hem departed; and he seide right wele, and badde hem make
redy to go in to the oste, ffor ther-after the barouns dide a-bide.</P>
<P>  "How, sir," quod kynge ban, "is oure socour than I-come."
"Ye," quod Merlin, "thei be loigged by Arthurs
oste in the myddel of the launde, in the foreste of bredigan; and
thei be xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> horse-men, and also of Arthurs x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  But on that
other party is moche peple, for ther be x kynges crowned and a
Duke, and thei haue in theire companye l<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> horsemen."  "Now
god helpe vs," quod Arthur, "for this a grete peple."  "Ye,"
quod Merlin, "yet is ther more with this myschef than all this,
ffor thei be gode knyghtes and of high prowesse; but be the
feith that I owe to kynge Arthur, that is my lorde, I hope, with
the helpe of god to do so moche thourgh the <MILESTONE N="50b" UNIT="folio"/>witte that he
hath me sente, that in euyll tyme come thei ther, for thei shall
haue so moche to done that thei shall not a-gein yow endure.  But
ther shall be a bateile, and that shall be grete, and moche slaughter
ther shall be of men and horse; but on owre partye shull not be
deed above xxiiij, but on their syde shall be deed the thowsandes,
and that shall ye se.  And therfore a-noon aray yow, for after
soper we will ride.  And also do lede with yow vitaile for iiij
dayes, for it is not to a-bide lenger."  And whan that thei
vndirstode that Merlin hadde seide, a-noon thei made redy and
araide hem of alle thynges that was nedefull, and than yede to
soper at gode leyser.  And than the kynge asked Merlin yef
thei sholde hem arme.  And he seide, "Nay," for it sholde do
hem to moche gref, ne thei sholde haue no drede of no man
lyvinge be that wey as he wolde hem lede.</P>
<P>  Whan thei hadde souped thei cloded hem warme as thei
myght, for the froste was grete, and the mone shone


<PB REF="" N="150" ID="pb.150"/>

clere; and they passed on her iourney.  And ne were no mo
than xxv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> what oon and other.  Whan thei were alle on horse
bakke, Merlin rode be-fore, and the thre kynges and Antor, that
satte vpon a grete stede, whiche the kynge made hym on to
ryde, to be with hem in company; but he wolde haue abiden
with gode chere yef the kynge wolde.  In this maner thei rode
all nyght; and Merlin was Guyde till thei com in a grete
foreste, where thei a-lighte till here mete was made redy.  Than
thei ete and dronke of soche as thei hadde brought with hem, for
thei hadde I-nough.  And whan thei hadden ete, Merlin <SUPPLIED>yede</SUPPLIED>
to the thre kynges in counseile, and seide, "Sir," quod he to
kynge Arthur, "wote ye what I shall sey:  ye be a yonge man,
and haue a grete reame to maynteyne, and the barouns ne deyne
not to yow obbeye; and also the mene peple ne knowe yow but
litill ne were the great yeftes that ye have yoven.  And,
ther-fore, I say yef euer ye haue be large of yeftes here be-fore, loke
now that ye be larger hens-forth, ffor ye may not so wele gete
the hertes of youre peple as for to be fre and gentill in yevinge;
and ye shull haue I-nough whereof, and I will telle yow how."</P>
<P>  "I do yow to wite that in this grounde, ther we be now, is
the grettest tresour that may be founde in eny place;
but ye shall not take it till ye be repeired fro the bateile, for ye
shall haue I-nough of other thinges to departe.  And, loke ye,
take gode hede of this plotte of grounde that ye now sitte on,
whan that ye be agein repeired."  Than he shewde hem a welle,
and made ther a signe.  And the kynges were gretly
a-merveiled of that he hadde seide.  And whan thei hadde longe
spoke togeder thei lepe to horse, and rode day and nyght till
thei come in to the hoste, in the foreste of bredigan.  And ther
thei pight the kynges teynte, by the feirest welle and the moste
clere that thei hadde seen.  And it yaf so gret foyson of water
that the brooke ran down the launde, that was right feire and
<CHOICE><CORR>delectable</CORR><SIC>delctable</SIC></CHOICE>.  And the weder was right colde, for, as the boke
seith, it was in the moneth of Janever, viij dayes before <MILESTONE N="51a" UNIT="folio"/>Candelmesse.  And whan thei were loiged thei rested, and right her
armours, and soiourned so two dayes hool.  Than com Merlin


<PB REF="" N="151" ID="pb.151"/>

to hem, and seide that "Now fro hens-forth may we go vpon
youre enmyes, and ther-fore devise now who shall haue the
vaunt garde, ffor ye shull go in soche manere that thei shall not
knowe till ye be vpon hem, and that shall be two oures be-fore
day erly; ffor and thei a-perceyve yow thei be so moche peple
that ye may not agein hem endure.  And haue ye no drede, for
ye shall haue the victorye."  Than thei hem armed, and a-raide
in the beste manere, and devised her batailes, and deliuered to
kay the kynges banere, for to bere, that condited the firste
bateile.  And with him was Gifflet and Lucas the boteller, and marke de
la roche, and Aguyuas li blois, and drias de la forest sauage,
and belias the amerouse, and flaundrins le bret.  These viij
knyghtes were in the firste sheltron, and were iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> horsemen;
the secunde ledde Bretell, that was of grete bounte and a trewe
knyght, and a sure of his honde, and he hadde iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> wele
horsed.  The thirde he delyuered to Vlfin, that moche knewe of werre,
and was a full noble knyght.  In this <CHOICE><CORR>warde</CORR><SIC>warde warde</SIC></CHOICE> was kynge
Arthur, and iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of gode men that neuer wolde faile their lorde
for no drede of deth, and eueriche of these wardes drough by
hym self a-sonder like as was devised.  And so rode forth a softe
pas kepynge clos, as Merlin dide hem guyde, whiche rode before
vpon a grete courser.  After that the kynge Ban devised and
ordeyned his peple and his brothers, and delyuered the firste warde
to Pharien for to lede, and also to bere the ensigne of kynge
Boors, as he that was a noble knyght and wele a-vised, and with
hym was Moret de la veye, and ladunas, and Pales de trebes, and
grassiens li bloys, and blioberis and meliadus the blake, and in
her company iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> horsmen.  The seconde warde of kynge
ban ledde leonce of Paerne, that was a noble knyght and an
hardy, and in his company iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> wele arayed.  The thirde warde
lede the kynge Boors of Gannes, that full wele cowde hem
guyde, and were in his company iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men wele horsed.  The
forthe bataile ledde the kynge Ban of Benoyk, whiche was the
beste kyght of alle other that was in the hoste.  And he


<PB REF="" N="152" ID="pb.152"/>

delyuered his signe to Aliaume his stiwarde for to bere, that was
a gode knyght, and in his company iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of gode men, that
for no fer of deth wolde not faile their lorde.  And whan they
were all a-raide and discevered a-sonder, thei rode forth be the
mone light that was full bright shynynge.  Now cesseth the
tale to speke of hem at this tyme, and returne to telle of the
Danes, and of the kynges that marcheden to the londe a-boute,
that become to werre vpon the kynge Arthur.</P>
<P>  Now, seith the boke, that whan the kynge Brangore and the
kynge Margans, and the kynge hardogabran, that was
nevewe to the kynge Amynadus, that was kynge of the Danes,
that was oncle to Aungier, the danoys that Arthurs fader dide
slee like as ye haue herde here fore whan thei herde sey how
these vij barouns dide werre vpon kynge Arthur.  Than thei
dide somown her peple fer and nygh, till <MILESTONE N="51b" UNIT="folio"/>thei were xxx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> M<HI REND="sup">l</HI> of
men on horse bakke with-oute fotemen wherof was grete plente,
and so thei entred in to the londe, and toke many prayes and
brent townes and vilages and distroyed all the contrees as thei
passeden, and slow peple grete plete, and sette a sege be-fore a
castell that was called Vandelers, in cornewaile, and ther thei
were longe tyme, that neuer ne myght be put oute, for all the
power that the xj kynges hadden, till that the kynge Arthur
chased hem oute after that his barouns were acorded with
hym.  But now of hem no more speketh the boke at this tyme till the
mater it asketh, but repaireth to kynge Arthur and to Merlin,
and to kynge Ban, of Benoyk, and kynge boors, of Gannes, and
telleth how thei were in-batailed a-gein the xj kynges that were
be-fore the castell of bredigan.</P>
<P>  The boke seith that while kynge Arthur and kynge Ban, of
benoyk, and kynge Boors, of Gannes, ordeyned her batailes
in this wise, as ye haue herde; that nyght the xj kynges ne
toke noon hede to sette no wacche in thayr hoste, but wente to
their bedde, and slepte as thei that no-thynge knewe that her
enmyes were so nygh, but oon feire fortune for thei hadde, that
alle the xj kynges lay in the kynges teynte, that was cleped Roy
de Cent Chiualiers, and thei ne wende not to haue no drede of


<PB REF="" N="153" ID="pb.153"/>

no man; and as thei thus were slepynge be-fill that kynge looth
was in a ferfull dreme, ffor hym semed that he saugh so grete a
wynde a-rise that it caste down howses and stepelis of chirches,
and after that ther come a thounder so grete and merveilously
sharpe, that hym thought all the worlde trembled for fere and
drede, and after that com a water so sharply, that drof down the
howsynge and a grete parte of the peple, and hym semed how
hym self was in grete pereile to drowne; and as the kynge loth
was in this affray, he dede a-wake, and hym blissed and was sore
a-baisshed of this dreme that he was in, and a-roos and a-pareiled
hym, and yede to his felowes, and hem dide a-wake and tolde
hem his a vision.  And thei asked hym fro whiche part com the
water, and he seide from the foreste com all the rage and the
tempeste as hym semed.  And thei seide thei knewe verily that
thei sholde hastely haue bataile, and that merveillouse.  And
ther-with thei a-risen, and a-woke alle the knyghtes ther-ynne,
and comaunded hem to serche all the contre environ, that thei
were not supprised of no peple.  And thei armed hem right
wele, and lepte on ther horses, and rode serchynge the
contrey.  And the xj kynges hem armed and a-raide in the beste maner
that thei cowden.  And than Merlin be-gan to haste Arthurs
peple, that well knewe the gouernaunce of the tother party, and
thei com so faste on, that thei toke noon hede till thei were euen
fallen on hem that the contrey serched.  And whan thei saugh
hem armed, thei hadde grete drede, and asked Merlin, that mette
with hem formeste, what peple thei were, and Merlin seide <MILESTONE N="52a" UNIT="folio"/>it
was the kynge Arthur that was come to chalange his londe a-gein
alle hem that ther-with wolde be greved.  Whan thei herde
these wordes thei turned bakke, and smote the horse with spores,
and whan thei come in to the hoste, thei cryde "Treson,
treson.  Now as armes lordes, gentill knyghtes, for ther was neuer so
grete nede, for lo! here cometh Arthur euen at youre teyntes."
And thei ronne to here armes, that yet were in her beddys, and
hadde no leyser hem to clothe, and that was yet a faire happe
for hem that her horses were redy sadellyd; but yet for all that
thei myght hem hasten, thise other were vpon hem er thei myght


<PB REF="" N="154" ID="pb.154"/>

be half a-raied of her harneyse.  And ther-with hem fill a grete
encomberaunce, that Merlin sente hem soche a wynde and tempeste,
that her tentes fill vpon their hedes, and a-monge hem was soche
a truble that vn-ethe myght eny of hem se other ne heren.  And
that was a thynge that gretly hem distrubled in her armynge, and
ther-ynne thei caught grete damage, ffor Arthurs peple smote in
a-monge hem, and ouerthrewe and slowgh all that thei myght
a-reche.  But the xj kynges were departed and deseuered, and
yeden oute in to the playn feldes with-oute the tentes, and made
blowe a trompe high and clere.  And that was don for that all
theire men sholde drawe towarde hem.  And thei dide so as many
as myght aschape fro hem that of hem hadde no pyte, ffor ther
was of hem so many slayn in that grete myschef, that of the
thirde parte thei were well delyuered, and ther-to thei saugh
hem of so grete puyssaunce, that thei turned to flight towarde
her baner where as thei herde the trompe sowne, ffor the kynges
were stynted at the entre of the forest by a river, and ther
assembled alle her peple that thei myght haue.  And so thei encresed
litill and litill, till thei were xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> M<HI REND="sup">l</HI> that fledde, some heere and
some there, that ne myght come to here baner but with harde
peyne.  And so were thei sory and wroth for theire grete damage
and losse, and sore thei compleyned their grete annoye.  And
x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> lefte liggynge in the felde what dede and wounded, that no
power hadde hem to diffende ne for to greve noon other.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Arthur saugh that all the herbegage was
to hym be-lefte, than he com to Merlin, and asked hym
how he sholde do.  Quod Merlin, "I will telle yow what ye
shall do.  Ye shall go here be-fore to the passage at the forde,
where as be gadered xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> M<HI REND="sup">l</HI> men, and ye shall fight with hem
and make hem entende to yow.  And the kynge ban and his
brother shull go a-bowte, and come on the tothir syde of hem,
and com on hem fro the foreste.  And thei shull so be astoneed
that in hem shall be but litill defence."  Than thei departed the
toon fro the tother.  And the kynge yede thedir as the barouns
were a-bidynge that ne wende to haue no drede of noon other,
saf of hym; and of hym thei ne drede but litill, for thei trowed

<PB REF="" N="155" ID="pb.155"/>

hem wele to diffende agein gretter peple than ther was with
hym.  And the kynge Ban torned towarde the foreste, and
Arthur rode with his company till he com ther as the xj kynges
were to-geder assembled.  Whan thei come to the passage <MILESTONE N="52b" UNIT="folio"/>of
the forde ther sholde ye haue seyn speres perce thourgh sheldes,
and many knyghtes liggynge in the water, so that the water was
all reade of blode.  And kay heilde so the pas with the baner,
and payned that his company gate ouer.  And whan the xj
kynges saugh so small a peple, hem thourgh preced and rused,
for thei were but iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and thei were more than xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> M<HI REND="sup">l</HI>, thei
hadde ther-of grete despite and shame, and diffended hem
apperly.  And kay and his feliship kepte hem so clos that
noon ne myght hem persch, but longe thei myght it not suffre;
but than com Vlfyn hem to socour, that gretly hem conforted,
and passed the water delyuerly.  And whan thei were ouer thei
smyten in a-monge hem so vigorously that oon myght here the
crassinge of speres half a myle longe.  Grete and crewell was
the bateile at this assemble, and the noyse grete and huge vpon
the helmes and sheldes.  And many a noble man lay ther deed
and wounded, wher-of was grete damage.  But longe thei myght
not this endure; but than com Bretell, and hem sustened, and
moche he hem comforted.  And as soone as bretell was passed
the water he saugh hys company at grete myschef, for he saugh
Vlfin drowen down of his horse in the presse, that heilde his
swerde in his honde and strongly hym deffended, that noon was
so hardy his strokes to a-bide.  And whan bretell that perceyved
he was sorowfull and pensif, for he hym loved full
hertely.  He let his horse renne, and smote him so sore that he first mett
that he threwe hym and his horse to the erthe.  And whan
Clarion saugh that he hadde grete sorow at his herte, and seide
that he wolde his felowe a-venge yef he in eny wyse
cowde.  And whan bretell saugh kynge Clorion come, he sette his horse
hym a-geyn, and mette so sore to-geder that the sheldes perced,
for bothe the knyghtes were stronge and of grete pris and grete
maltalente, so that her speres splyndered in peces, and that
their passage hurtlid so to-geder with their bodyes and sheldes


<PB REF="" N="156" ID="pb.156"/>

and helmes, that her yen sparkeled that thei semed thei were
fallen from their heedes so were thei astoned.  And the horses
bar hem so harde that the skyn of the horse knees and legges
were all to rente, that the blode ran to the erthe.  Longe tyme
lay the barouns at erthe with-oute remevynge, so astonyed that
thei ne wiste whethir it was nyght or day; so thei that it
behelden wende eche hadde slayn other.  Thider preced bothe
partyes to the rescowe, and ther was grete losse on bothe
parties.  Than com kay the stiward to the rescowe, and on the
tother side come thre kynges.  Ther sholde ye haue sein fres
encountre, for on Arthurs side was viij, and on the tothir side
were xj; and thei smeten to-geder fiersly.  Ther was Gifflet
vn-horsed, and lucas the botiller, and the kynge brangore, and
the kinge Ydiers, and the kynge Vrien, and the kynge
aguysas.  Ther be-gan the medle grete and merveillouse, and longe it
endured, for thei remounted Gifflet be fyn force a-monge his
enmyes, and that made kay the stiwarde, for he sette Gifflet on
the kynge Ventres horse; and also he smote <MILESTONE N="53a" UNIT="folio"/>down the kynge
loot with a tronchown of a spere that he was sore hurte.  And
with that stroke com the kynge cleped the roy de Cent
chyualers, and hadde in his compayne lx knyghtes of the beste chosen
oute.  And whan he saugh kay the stiwarde hadde smyte down
the kynge loot, hit hym for thought sore, and seide, "But I hym
a-venge I am litill to preyse!"  He spored his horse that wey
and hitte kay so sore that he bar hym vp-right to the erthe, and
ledde his horse to kynge loot, and seide, "Sir, haue heer and
thenke to a-venge youre annoye, for moche haue we loste this
day."  And the kynge loot lepte vp lightly.  And whan Gifflet
saugh kay fallen, and also lucas the botiller, he was sorowfull
and hevy, and hadde recouered a stronge spere, and spored the
horse, and smote a knyght of the kynge de Cent chyualers that
he bar hym to grounde vp-right, and than hente the horse be
the reynes, and presented it to kay; and he lepte vp lightly as
he that hadde grete mystere.  And the kynge de cent chiualers
and kynge loot haue so medled that by fyn strengthe thei haue
horsed the kynge Ventres of Garlot vpon the horse of moret de


<PB REF="" N="157" ID="pb.157"/>

la roche, and the kynge ydiers vpon the horse of Guyuas le bloy,
and the Duke Escam of Cambanyk vpon the horse of drias de la
forest sauage.  And whan these lordes were horsed, thei seide
thei wolde be a-venged vpon the losse that thei hadde received, or
elles thei wolde be deed.</P>
<P>  Than these viij barouns yaf a newe a-saute, but ther was grete
losse of men and horse, whan that Arthur com that gretly
hem comforted and hem sustenyd, for as soone as he was passed
the forde, he smote the horse with spores, and fonde Vlfyn on
fote, and his swerde in his hande, and bretell, that with grete
peyne lepte on horse, wherfore Arthur was sore greved.  He
heilde a grete square spere and smote in to the presse where he
saugh thikkest, and mette with Tradilyuaunt, the kynge of
wales, that com a-gein hym all fressh, and he hym hitte so harde,
that he smote hym thourgh the shelde, that he yaf hym a wounde
in the lifte syde, and hym threwe to the erthe so rudely, that he
hym all to brosed, and Arthur hente the horse by the gilte reynes
and yaf it to Vlfyn, and bad hym lepe vp delyuerly vpon that
stede and thenke to a-venge the shame and the vilony that ye
haue hadde.  And so he dide lightly, and seide, "Sir, gramercy."
And a-noon as Vlfyn was vp he smote in to the presse, and leide
on so harde that he brake the presse, he and kynge and her
helpes that newe were come oute of her enbusshement.  And thei
on the tother side were wroth for the grete damage that thei
hadde, and yet were thei more peple be the haluendell than
hadde Arthur.  Than be-gan the medle right stour, and grete
and mortall, wherefore many a fre moder wepte salt teeres.  Ther
dide kynge Arthur many merveiles in armes, that by his dedis
he was knowe in shorte tyme of many oon that neuer hadde hym
sein, and they yaf hym place alle the moste hardy of hem, for
they ne durste not of hym a-byde a stroke.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge, that was called le roy de Cent Chiualers,
saugh the kynge Tradelyuanunt <MILESTONE N="53b" UNIT="folio"/>reuerse to the erthe he
was right wroth, for he hym loved with grete love, and he was
merveilously wele horsed, and he rode fiercely to kynge Arthur,
and smote hym so sore vpon the helme that he was astonyed.


<PB REF="" N="158" ID="pb.158"/>

And whan the kynge felte the stroke, hym for thought it sore,
and so dide kay that was in his company.  The kynge cam
formest grypynge his swerd for to smyte hym thourgh the
helme.  And whan he saugh the stroke come, he coured hym with his
shelde, and the kynge hym smote so harde, that the haluendell
fley in to the felde; and the stroke glenched vpon the horse hede,
and smote it of be the eres.  And so thei fill to grounde, the
horse and his maister.  And kay be-heilde and saugh an horse go
a-stray, and he caught it and yaf it to Antor.  And he lepte vp
lightly, and after caught a spere, and smote margnam, the
stiwarde of the kynge cleped roy de Cent chiualers, so harde
thourgh the shelde and the lifte shulder, that the spere hede
shewed thourgh, and he fill to the grounde vp-right, and
ther-with brake the spere.  And he leyde honde on the horse, and
ledde it to Bretell be the reyne, that ther-of hadde grete
nede.  And he lepte up delyuerly, and than he be-heilde a-boute in the
presse, and saugh lucas the botiller lye a-monge the horse feet
full doelfully.  And Gifflet a-bode by hym, and deffended hym
right vigerousely, and moche hym preysed and comended, for
ther was a-geyn hym xiiij, and he but sool by hym-self; and yet
myght thei not gete on hym no grounde for powert hat thei
hadden.  And whan bretell saugh this he com thider, and smote
the first that he mette so harde thourgh the helme that he slyt
hym to the teth, and after he smote the seconde on the arme,
that he made it fle in to the felde with all the shelde; and than
the thirthe so harde vpon the lifte shulder that he it deseuered
from the body.  Whan Gifflet saugh he hadde socour, he smote
oon so harde on the temple that he slyt it to the nekke; and he
fill down deed.  And Gifflet toke the horse, and ledde it to
lucas <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>h</SIC></CHOICE> boteller.  And he lept vp angry and wroth, as he that
wolde fayne a-venge his shame.  And than he hente a spere
grete and sharpe grounde, and saugh Aguysans, the kynge of
Scotlonde, and rode a-gein hym full egerly, and smote hym with
all his myght thourgh the coler of his haubrek so sore that he
fill to the erthe.  And whan Mares saugh hym so delyuered he
lepte vpon the horse delyuerly, and rode in to the bataile, that

<PB REF="" N="159" ID="pb.159"/>

not dide but enforce more and more, and fonde belias and
flaundryns, that were arested vpon diras, and on dionas tweyne
of her felowes, and peyned hem for to remounte hem on her
horse; but so grete was the presse that thei hadde no leyser hem
to be-holde.  And so thei foughten so strongely that it was
merveile to be-holde.  And thei smyten in monge hem, and
be-gonne to do so wele, that the two felowes were agein sette on
horse.  And on the tother side faugh the kynge Arthur and his
meyne so longe and the noyse and the cry aros of the two
kynges that thei hadde vn-horsed.  And so thei ronne to the
rescowe on bothe sides, that oon for to socour, and the <MILESTONE N="54a" UNIT="folio"/>tother to
helpe the kynge Arthur.  Ther was the medle grete.  Ther
eche wounde and kylde other; but with grete payne were the
two kynges rescued and sette on horse.  But first was ther grete
occision, for the kynge Arthur kepte hem so shorte that thei myght
not hem socour for power that thei hadden; and ne hadde be on
a-uenture that fill thei sholde neuer haue be rafte from Arthur,
for he ran the rescow of kay and Gifflet, that kynge Ventres,
and kynge brangores, and kynge Vrien, and the kynge Abigans,
hadde ouer-throwen from theire horse, and hem defouled vnder
the horse feet full lothly, and hadde no mo hem to deffende but
lucas the botiller, that these all so moche greved.  Whan the
kynge Arthur saugh this nede, he turned that wey as wroth as a
lyon, and leide a-boute hym on bothe sides, and slow all that he
raught with a full stroke, so that thei voyded hys strokes and
hym rome.  And kay and Gifflet pressed to the kynges, that
moche hem hadde greved, and with hem sore foughten.  And on
the tother side faught bretell and Vlfyn and Antor with the duke
Escam of Cambenyk, and a-geyn Tradilyuaunt, and a-gein clarion,
of Northumberlonde, and agein Carados, that was a noble knyght;
so thei made hem to blenche thider, as kynge Arthur faught,
that dide merveilouse prowesse of werre.  Ther thei stynte that
oon agein the tother, for ther was the maister baner, and ne
hadde be the kynge Arthur hym-self.  Alle thei hadden be
discounfited, for these kynges were odde noble knyghtes, and
more peple be the toon half than on Arthurs syde; and, therfore,


<PB REF="" N="160" ID="pb.160"/>

it myght not longe endure with-oute grete damage.  Than
com vpon hem the kynge Ban and the kynge Boors from
the foreste, where thei wende to haue no drede of no man
lyvinge.  And whan thei were come an thei hem sye, thei
yaf ascry that all the foreste and the river resounde; and
thei saugh well that the losse and the damage moste nede falle
vpon hem.  Thanne the princes and the barouns drowen a-part
to-geder in the medowes, and devised a-monge hem self what
thinge that thei myght do.  Than seide the kynge loot, "I wote
neuer how ye be a-vised to do, but as for me I shall vpon iij or
iiij of hem ben a-vengid of myn annoye, sith that all shall be
loste.  And whan the kynge cleped Roy de Cent chiualers
vndirstode how kynge loot hadde seide, he preisede hym moche,
and seide that in the same maner wolde he do; and so dide
kynge Carados, and the Duke Escam seide the same, and the
kynge Clarion of Northumbirlonde seide also in the selue
maner.  "Now than," quod kynge loot, "I shall telle yow what we
shull do.  Lete vij of us go a-gein hem that come fressh oute of
her enbusshment from the foreste, and fight with hem while we
may endure; and the tother v abide here in this bataile.  And
we shall go a-gein hem with xij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> shull a-bide in
this stour; and we shull holde this bataile nygh this wode, vpon
the river, vn-to the nyght, in soche manere that they may not vs
enclose; and than may we beste departe, for yef we now do fle,
we shull lese more than to a-bide stille."  To this counseile that
kynge loot hadde yove a-corded wele all the prynces; and drough
hem a-parte, and disseuerede her <MILESTONE N="54b" UNIT="folio"/>peple.  And the kynge loot,
and the kynge de Cent Chiualers, and the Duke escam of
Cambenyk.  And the kynge Aguysans of Scotlonde toke xij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> in her
companye, and made vj wardes, and in euerich of hem ij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men.  And so thei rode forth the softe pas straite and clos till they come
to the straite be-twene the wode and the river, as the kynge loot
hadde hem taught; and that was the beste counseile that any
man myght hem yeve.  Thus thei were redy hem to deffende;
and the tother v lefte in the bataile that full vigorously hem
deffended a-gein the kynge Arthur.  Of these v that a-bide


<PB REF="" N="161" ID="pb.161"/>

stille was the kynge Brangore, that oon, and the kynge
Vrien, and the kynge Ventres, and the kynge Clarion,
of Northumbirlond, and Tradilyuaunt, the kynge of North
wales, and hadde in her company vij<HI REND="sup">Ml </HI>men, and heilde her
enbuschement in a litill grove, and ther thei hem diffended right
sore, as thei that were full noble knyghtes and of grete renoun;
and grete doel and pite was it for the euyll will be-twene hem
and the kynge Arthur.  And here was sore bataile, and endured
till it was even toward nyght.  And on the tother side come the
kynge Ban and the kynge boors, and leonce and Pharien, that
ledde the firste bataile, and come clos a softe pas, and full longe
hem thought er thei were mette to-geder.  And on the tother
parte com a-gein hem the kynge ydiers.  And when thei aproched
nygh thei lete renne and smyte to-geder so harde that ye myght
here the strokes half a myle of length.  Ther was a merveillouse
stoure and harde bataile, and grete occision of men and of horse,
but thei myght not suffre longe, ne endure the peple of kynge
ydiers, but were driven bak vpon the warde of kynge Aguysans
of Scotlonde, that gretly hem counforted and sustened.  Here
be-gan the bataile merveilouse and harde.  And the peple of
Pharien were sore ouerleide; but as leonces of Paerne com hem to
socoure, and a-sailed hem so fiercely, that noon ne abode in the
place, but drof hem bak vpon the warde of the Duke escam of
Cambenyk.  Whan the Duke saugh hem come, he cride his
ensigne, and lete renne to theym that he sye comynge, and smote
in amonge hem fiercely.  Than recouered thei that fledden, and
returned a-gein to hem that hadde hem enchased.  And ther thei
stalleden and foughten the ton vpon the tother till thei were
bothe wery for travaile.  And so longe endured the fight
betwene hem that her strokes ne peysed but light.  Than com on
the kynge Boors with the grete baner, wher-of the feilde was
ynde, bende of golde.  And whan the kynge ydiers saugh hym
comynge, he seide, "Ha! now god vs deffende fro deth this day
and fro mayme, ffor now I se well that we be alle in pereile of
deth, for I se yonder comynge the baner of the man that most is
dredde of his enmyes thourgh the worlde.  And ther-to he is so

<PB REF="" N="162" ID="pb.162"/>

gode a knyght that alle other be but as hares as in comparison to
hym, saf only his brother, to whom no comperison may be made."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge that was cleped Roy de Cent chiualers
vndirstode the wordes of kynge <MILESTONE N="55a" UNIT="folio"/>Ydiers, he asked what
he was.  And he ansuerde, "It is the kynge Boors of Gannes;
and I ne wote how, ne whan, he com in to this contre; but, lo,
hym yonder, for I knowe well his baner."  Than seide the kynge
<SUPPLIED>of</SUPPLIED> <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>th</SIC></CHOICE> Cent cheualers, "How com he in to this londe?"  "So
helpe me god," quod kynge loot, "I wote neuer; but now it shall
be knowe who is knyght."  Than seide the kynge Carados,
"I wote not what eche of yow will do; but as for me, I will go
hym a-geyns, and yef I haue nede of socour and helpe, so do ye
youre dever."  And thei seide so thei wolde, and be-taught hym
to god that from euell hym sholde diffende.  Than departed
Carados from these other, and rode clos a softe pase a-gein the
kynge Boors.  And whan thei approched to-geder nygh a bowe
draught, thei lete bothe her horse renne the ton a-gein the tother
as faste as horse myght hem bere, and brake their speris in her
metynge.  And many ther were that were throwen to grownde,
and many wounded to the deth, and many ther were that
passeden thourgh and come with-oute stroke of spere, and after
drough theire swerdes and be-gonne stronge bataile, and harde
and merveilouse.  Than com the kynge Boors to a knyght that
was his godsone, and his name was Blaaris, and comaunded hym
to bere his baner.  And he was a merveilouse gode knyght, and
durste not refuse it.  And the kynge Boors seide he wolde assay
how the bretouns cowde bere armes.  Than he hente a grete
spere, and rode in a-monge hem that alle the renges fremysshed,
and smote a knyght so sore that ther was noon armoure myght
hym warante, but that he sente the heede and the shafte
thourgh the body and threw hym to grounde so rudely that in
the fall he brake his nekke, and the spere fley on peces; and
than he pulled oute his swerde, and be-gan to do so merveilouse
of armes that alle thoo it syen were sore a-basshed, and made hym
wey and fly from his strokes as soone as thei saugh hym come
towarde hem.  And ther hadde the kynge Carados loste to


<PB REF="" N="163" ID="pb.163"/>

moche; but as the kynge de Cent chiualers hym socoured
anoon with ij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, whiche was a worthi knyght and desirouse
in armes.  And as soone as thei were mette thei heilde hem
peryngall; but the prowesse of kynge boors was passynge alle
other, for he dide merveiles.  And on the tother side dide well
the kynge Carados, and the kynge de Cent Chiualers; these
suffred many myscheves.  And thus thei endured longe tyme.</P>
<P>  Than com the kynge Ban of Benoyk, that thought it was
longe tyme till he were mette with his enmyes.  The
kynge com in to the stour with hys baner in his honde, and it
delyuered to his stiwarde.  Crownes of goolde and asure bendes
entrauerse lysted as grene as a mede, and the stremers down to
the handes of Antony his stiwarde, and also he spredde ouer the
eres of his horse and the nekke.  And whan the barouns saugh
the baner of kynge Ban, thei wyste well that with-ynne short
tyme thei moste voyde the feilde, or elles dye <CHOICE><CORR>yef</CORR><SIC>yef yef</SIC></CHOICE> thei longe
a-bide.  And a-noon as thei were assembled <MILESTONE N="55b" UNIT="folio"/>thei on the tother
part ne heilde no place.  Than the kynge loot com and
assembled his company, wepinge with his yen, for he saugh wele that
all was loste on his party.  Thanne sholde ye haue seye
brekynge of speres on bothe sides vpon sheldes, and the erthe to
tremble vnder the stedes, and the wode to resounde of the grete
strokes that ther was yove to-geder, that men myght haue herde
it half a myle longe.  And whan the kynge Ban was come the
tother party ne a-bode not longe, but were dryven bakke that
thei were made to resorte to the fyve kynges and vpon her
peple.  Here was full grete dolour and grete mortalite of men
and of horses, for as soone as the kynge Ban com in to the
medlee he be-gan to do so grete martirdom of peple, and so grete
occision, that on alle partyes thei fledde from his swerde.  And
he serched the renges thourgh, and his swerde in his honde, and
leide on bothe sydes that ther nas noon so thikke presse but he
it disseuered full moche; and gretly was the kynge Ban and his
company I-douted.  Than com the kynge loot and the kynge de


<PB REF="" N="164" ID="pb.164"/>

Cent chiualers and margamour, alle thre; and the bateilles were
entermedled that oon with the tother.  And whan thei saugh
the kynge Ban, that dide hem so moche damage, loot was right
wroth, and so were the tother kynges.  Than he smote the horse
with the spores that wey, his swerde in his honde; and he was a
noble knyght and an hardy, and smote the kynge Ban vpon the
shelde a grete stroke, that a cantell fleygh in to the
feilde.  And whan Ban saugh this it a-noyed hym sore; and than he lifte
vp the bronde, and ficched hym in the styropes so harde that the
Iren bente, and wende to smyte the kynge de Cent Chiualers
vpon the helme, and he that douted, and the stroke blenched,
and smote the steede with the spores, and the stroke descended
be-hynde, and smote a-sonder the trappure of mayle, and thourgh
the horse to the erthe; and so thei frussht bothe on an hepe, the
horse and his maister.  And whan the kynge was fallen he lepe
vp delyuerly on fote, his swerde in his honde, and his shelde
coverynge hys side.  When the kynge Brangore saugh the
kynge de Cent chiualers falle, he ran vpon the kynge Ban, and
smote hym so grete a stroke thourgh the shelde that he slit
a-wey a grete quarter.  And the kynge ban hym yaf so grete a
stroke thourgh the helme that he slyt the sercle and the koyf of
Iren to the heed, and yef the swerde hadde not glenched he
hadde be deed.  And he fill to grounde astonyd.  Whan the two
kynges were releved thei be-gonne the medle a-gein the kynge
Ban; but he hym deffended so wele that thei hadde more
damage than he; ne ther nas noon of the two kynges but thei
hadde loste a grete part of her blode, for the woundes that thei
hadde resceyved.  And it a-bode not longe er ther come grete
damage and losse to the thre kynges, whan the batailes were
medled to-geder, and he made hem departe wheder thei wolde or
noon.  Than fill it that the kynge Arthur fonde the kynge ban
on fote, in myddell of the presse, his swerde in his fiste, that
hym deffended <MILESTONE N="56a" UNIT="folio"/>so vigerously that noon ne durst hym
a-proche.  And he was a moche knyght, and a stronge oute of
mesure.  And he lepe vpon hem thourgh the presse; and whan he
neyghed ner thei made hym wey, for so thei douted his strokes


<PB REF="" N="165" ID="pb.165"/>

that ther was noon so hardy that durst hem a-byde.  Ther-with
com the kynge Arthur, brekynge the presse, gripynge his
swerde, all be-soyled with blode of men and of horse, for he dide
many merveiles of armes with his body.  And whan he saugh
the kynge Ban at so grete myschef, he wax wode for Ire.  Than
he rode to a knyght that richely horsed; and Arthur lifte vp the
swerde, and smote hym thourgh the helme soche a stroke that he
slyt hym to the teth, and he fill to grounde.  Than he toke
the horse be the reynes, and ledde it to kynge ban, and seide,
"Frende, lepe on lightly, for in euell tyme ben oure enmyes
entred; anoon shall ye se hem for-sake the felde."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge ban was horsed be the helpe of kynge
Arthur, he was gladde of that hadde hym
founden.  And than thei two smyten in a-monge her enmyes.  And whan
the tother perceyved the grete damage that the kynge arthur
and the kynge ban hem dide her peple, that were so loste and
discounfited, and that thei hadde loste all talent of wele doynge,
and turned the bakkes.  And thei hem chased to the wode; but
ther were many slayn and defouled.  So were thei distreyned
be-twene the wode and the river.  Ther thei stalled and a-bode,
and knewe well yef thei hadde be in the playn thei hadde be in
pereyle of deth.  Than the kynge loot, and the kynge ventres,
and the kynge de C. chiualers, and the kynge Carados, and the
kynge vrien and the kynge ydiers, and the kynge brangore, and
the kynge of Northumbirlonde, helde hem to-geder; whan
marganors hem seide, and badde hem suffre and a-bide, while thei
myght for to socour theire peple; for yef thei be thus disconfite,
oure peple shull be all loste and distroied.</P>
<P>  Thus chased hem the kynge Arthur and the kynge ban
be-fore alle other, till thei come to a grete water and a
depe, where as thei that fledde hadde made a brigge of tymber
and of plankes.  And thei passed over the water after the
tother, and so enchased hem the kynge Arthur and the kynge
Boors, that thei come to that brigge that was so made, and wolde
passe ouer after hem.  And than com Merlin and seide, "Kynge
Arthur, what wilt thow do?  haste thow ouercome thyn enmyes?

<PB REF="" N="166" ID="pb.166"/>

Go in to thi londe, and lede with the thy frendes that thow haste
brought with the, and hem serue and worschipe at theire pleiser,
ffor I moste go in to the wode for to my distynes aboute blase,
that right moche is my frende."  Anoon he departed from Arthur,
and entred in to the forest, and fonde blase, that longe after hym
hadde desired.  And than he asked hym where he hadde so
longe a-biden.  And Merlin tolde hym how he hadde be a-boute
the kynge Arthur for to counseile hym.  And blase seide he dide
but foly to a-bide so moche a-bowte hym, saf only for to counseile
the crowne royall.  Than Merlyn tolde hym alle thynges that
were falle to the kynge Arthur seth he departed <MILESTONE N="56b" UNIT="folio"/>fro hym, and
how he yede for to fecche socour in the litill breteyne.  And
than he tolde hym how the hethen peple were entred in to the
londes of the barouns, and how thei werred.  And blase wrote
alle these thinges that Merlin hym tolde, and sette hem in his
boke; and ther-by haue we the knowleche ther-of.  But now
leueth the tale to speke of Merlyn and of blase, and speketh of
kynge Arthur and of the twey other kynges that ben in his
company.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.11">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XI. 
<LB/> THE DOINGS OF KING ARTHUR AFTER THE BATTLE, AND HIS DEPARTURE FOR TAMELIDE.</HEAD>
<P>Now seith the boke whan that kynge Arthur hadde discounfited
hys enmyes, and the xj kynges and a Duke, by the
counseile of Merlin, that was gon to blase his maister in
Northumberlonde.  Than he returned gladde and ioyfull of that oure lorde
hath yove hym the victorye of his enmyes.  Than he com to þe
logges wherof the walles layn at the erthe as Merlin hadde beten
hem down.  Than thei leged and pight teyntes and pavilouns,
and hem rested, and lete the hoste be wacched.  And leonce and
Pharien hadde the gouernaunce of the wacche, and Gifflet and
lucas the botiller.  Pharien and leonces kepte towarde the wode,
and Gifflet and lucas towarde the medowes, and alle the tother


<PB REF="" N="167" ID="pb.167"/>

lay and rested hem till day, and than thei ete and dranke grete
plente, for thei hadde I-nough of vitaile.  In this manere rested
the hoste till in the morowe, till the kynge Arthur made be
leide on an hepe all the wynynge and the richesse that ther was
geten.  And whan thei hadde herde messe thei com a-gein ther
as the tresour was leide to-geder.  And the thre kynges it departed
a-boute to soche as hem semed was for to do, to on lesse and to
a-nother more, after that the persones were of astate or
degre.  And so thei departed to pore knyghtes and squeres that neuer
after were pore, in so moche that thei kepte not to hem-self the
valew of a peny.  And after thei departed stedes <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> palfreyes and
clothes of silke, and yaf all while ther was ought to departe, and
sente a-gein alle knyghtes and squyres and sergeauntes and other
meyne, saf xl that sholde go with hem in to Carmelide.  Thus
yede Pharien and grassien and leonces, lorde of Paerne, and
ledde with hem her peple for to kepe her londe and her contrey,
that the kynge Claudas ne dede hem no stade.</P>
<P>  Whan these barouns were come in-to theire contrey thei
boughten londes and rentes wher-with thei leved after
in grete honour with the auer that was departed that made hem
after riche.  And the <CHOICE><CORR>kynge</CORR><SIC>ky</SIC></CHOICE> Arthur lefte in his contrey the
two kynges with hym, as ye haue herde.  So thei soiourned at
bredigan that was in the marche of breteyne the grete, and in
the marche of Carmelide; and ther thei a-bode Merlin that sholde
come to hem thider.  And on the morow, whan Arthur sholde
departe his peple, and that he hadde made hem grete feste and
grete ioye at bredigan, and the kynges hadde dyned, they yed vp
in to the loges <MILESTONE N="57a" UNIT="folio"/>that were vpon the ryver for to se the medowes
and the gardynes.  And as thei be-helden, they saugh come a
grete karl thourgh the medowes by the ryver with a bowe in his
honde, and his arowes vnder his girdell.  And in the brooke were
wylde gees, that hem dide bathe as theire kynde is to do.  The
karll drough his bowe, and with a bolte smote oon in the nekke,
that it brake in sondre.  Than he shette a-nothir bolte, and
slowgh a malarde.  Than he toke hem, and henge hem be the
nekkes at his girdell, and yede towarde the loges where as the


<PB REF="" N="168" ID="pb.168"/>

thre kynges were lenynge, and hadde well seen the shotte of the
karll.  And whan he come nygh the loges he shette a-nother
bolte, and whowped to the kynge Arthur.  And whan the karll
com nere, the kynge asked yef he wolde selle the briddes.  And
the cherll seyde, "Ye, with gode will."  Quod the kynge,
"How wilt thow yeve hem?"  And he ansuerde no worde.  And
the cherll hadde on grete boysteis shone of netes leder, and was
clothed in cote and hoode of rosset, and he was girde with a
thonge of blakke shepes skyn; and he was grete and longe, and
blakke and rowe rympled.  The cherll also semed to be crewell
and fell, and seide to the kynge, "I ne knowe nought of the
kynge that loueth tresoure, and is regrater and a wyssher, that
dar not make a pore man riche that myght hym do gode
seruyse."  Quod the cherll, "I <CHOICE><CORR>yeve</CORR><SIC>yeve yeve</SIC></CHOICE> yow these briddes, and yet haue I no
more than ye se; and ye haue not the herte for to yeve the thirde
parte of youre gode that in the erthe doth rote er ye haue it
vp-taken, and that is nether youre profite ne worship."  Whan these
kynges herde the wordes of the karll thei be-heelde the oon the
tother, and than thei seiden, "What deuell who hath tolde this
cherll?"  Than the kynge ban cleped the karll, and asked hym what
he seide; and the karll ne ansuerde no worde, but bad the kynge
Arthur to do take the briddes, and than he wolde gon hys
weye.  "Now, by thy faith," quod kynge ban, "telle me who hath
tolde the that the kynge Arthur hath tresour in the
erthe."  Quod the cherll, "A wylde man tolde me, that is cleped Merlin,
and also he tolde me that he sholde this day come to yow for to
speke with yow."  In the tyme that thei spake thus to-geder,
come Vlfin oute of a chamber, and come thider as the kynge
spake to Merlin, "Go forth thy wey," quod the kynge, "how
may I the trowe that thow haste spoke with Merlin?"  Quod
he, "Yef ye will leve me, and yef ye ne will, leve me nought;
for I ne leve yow nought, and so be we quyte."  And whan the
cherll hadde seide thus, and after Vlfin a while hadde listened,
and than he be-gan to smyle, and wiste wele it was Merlin.


<PB REF="" N="169" ID="pb.169"/>

And whan Merlin saugh Vlfin, he seide, "Sir stiwarde, take
these briddes, and do dight hem for youre kynges soper, that
hath not the hardynesse to make a man riche that myght hym
well guerdon, and to hym that this day hath spoke with the
man that hath hym tolde of the grete richesse vnther þe
erthe."  <MILESTONE N="57b" UNIT="folio"/>Than be-gan Vlfin to lawgh right harde, and seide, "Sir, yef it
plese yow come with me here a-bove, for I wolde speke with
yow of many thynges."  And he seide he wolde go with gode
will.  And the kynge be-heilde Vlfin, and saugh hym laugh
hertely, and than he required hym to telle why he dide laugh so
sore.  And he seide that he sholde wyte a-nother tyme.  Than
yede the cherll so araide as he was, and mette with kay the
stiward, and seide, "Holde here, sir seneschall, now may ye
plume, and as gladly mote the kynge hem ete as I it hym
yeve."  "Sir," quod Vlfin, "and this is not the firste tyme."  With
that com bretell, and hadde wele herde that Merlin hadde seide,
and also that Vlfin hadde seyde to hym, that better semed a
cherll than eny that was in the worlde.  And whan he hadde
herde hem a-while speke, he perceyved that it was Merlin, and
be-gan to lawgh vndir his mantell right harde.  And the kynge
herde hym, and badde hym telle the cause why that he
lowgh.  And he tolde he wolde telle hym yef the carll wolde
assente.  And the cherll than be-gan to laugh lowde, and seide to Vlfyn,
"Tell on, for I will that thow do so."  Than seide Vlfin to the
kynge, "Sir, ne knowe ye not youre frende Merlin, and ne
sholde not he come to speke with yow to day."  And the kynge
seide, "Yesse; wherefore say ye?"  "Sir," quod Vlfin, "I sey
for that ye knowe hym not so wele as I wolde that ye dide; ffor
ye se somme two tymes or thre, and yet ye ne knowe hem not, and
ther-of I merveyle."  Whan the kynge vndirstode Vlfyn he was
gretly dismayed, that he wiste not what for to ansuere.  "Certes,"
quod Vlfin, "ye haue seyn hym many tymes, and that I knowe
well."  Than seide the kynge, "Telle me what is this
cherll."  "Sir," quod Vlfin, "sholde ye ought knowe Merlin yef ye
myght hym se?"  "Yee, trewly," seide the kynge, "right
wele."  "Thanne be-holde this worthi man, and loke yef ye haue euer


<PB REF="" N="170" ID="pb.170"/>

hym seyn."  And <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>the the</SIC></CHOICE> kynge hym be-helde, and seide that he
hadde hym neuer seyn be-forn.  "Trewly," quod Vlfin, "he
may sey that euell hath he be-sette his servise on yow: for it is
Merlin, that so moche hath don for yow, and loved so moche and
holpen of all that he myght do or sey agein alle tho that vpon
yow do werre."  And whan the kynge Arthur vndirstode this
he blissed hym for merveile.  And also the two kynges were
sore a-merveiled, and seide, "How may this be, merlin; is
it thus? neuer dide we se yow in soche habite."  And he seide
that myght well be so.  "Sirs," seide Vlfin, "dismaye yow
not, for he shall shewe yow the same semblaunce that ye saugh
hym in firste."  And thei seide that thei wolde that fayn
se.  "Now," quod Vlfin, com with me in to this chamber, for I wolde
speke with yow."  And thei com in.  And than seide Vlfin,
"Sirs, ne merveile nought of Merlins dedes, for he shall shewe
yow semblaunces I-nowe; and at alle tymes whan he will he
chaungeth hym by forse of his art, where-of he is full.  <MILESTONE N="58a" UNIT="folio"/>And
Gynebans, the clerk, it witnesseth wele; and wyte ye well that
ye shall hym se yet many tymes, that ye shull not knowe that it
is he; and for that he chaungeth hym so ofte he is dowted of
many a man, for ther is many oon in this londe that full gladly
wolde se hym deed.  Now lete vs go in this chamber, and ye
shull se hym in the same semblance that ye saugh hym firste,
whan he a-queynted hym with yow."  And whan thei come
a-gein they fonde Merlin in the halle in the same semblaunce that
thei hadde seyn hym in firste.  Than thei ronne to hym, and
enbraced hym, and made hym grete ioye as thei that hym loved
with gode herte.  Than thei satte and Iaped, and pleyde with
hym alle to-geder; and of the shetynge that thei hadde seyn,
and of the wordes that he hadde seide to the kynge.  And than
seide Arthur, "Merlin, now I knowe that ye love me, whan
with so gode chere that ye have yove me these fowles, and that
I sholde ete hem for youre love."  And Merlin be-gan to
laugh.  Thus thei a-bode in ioye and solace till the lenton.  And so it fill


<PB REF="" N="171" ID="pb.171"/>

thay by the love of Merlin Arthur a-queynted hym with a mayden,
the feyrest that myght be founden.  This mayden was cleped
Lysanor, and was doughter to the Eirll Sevain that was deed, and
was heyr of the castell of Campercorentyn.  This maide was
come to do homage to the kynge Arthur, and with here other
barouns that dide homage as soone as he hadde conquerid these
xj kynges, ffor thei douted that he sholde be-reve hem of her
londes, and also thei thought that thei myght no better lorde
haue than hym; and some ther were that come with gode
will, and some for drede of more losse.  And this mayden that
was feire com to Bredigan, where-as the kynge soiourned, and
was at hoste with a riche burgeys.  And so be the helpe of
Merlin he spake with her previly, and lay with her a nyght,
and that nyght upon her was be-geten hoot, that after was
a full noble knyght, and was also a felowe of the rounde
table.  This hoot was of right high prowesse, as ye shull heren
hereafter.  And at mydlenten the kynge toke leve of the damsell,
and he and the other two kynges toke their wey in to Tamelide,
hym-self the fowrtithe.  But of hem now ne speketh not the
tale no more now at this tyme, but returneth to speke of the xj
kynges that were disconfited, and telleth wher thei be com and
whider thei yeden.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.12">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XII. 
<LB/> THE RETURN OF THE ELEVEN KINGS TO THEIR CITIES, AND THEIR ENCOUNTER WITH THE SAXONS.</HEAD>
<P>  Now seith the story that full of sorowe and hevynesse were the
barouns of theire disconfiture and losse, and riden forth
playnynge and regretinge theire grete damage; ne thei ne ete ne
dronke of all that nyght, and no more ne hadde thei don of all
the day be-fore, for the bataile hadde endured all the day; and
it was full colde weder and grete froste, and therfore thei were
at more disese for hunger and for grete colde.  Than thei com
to a Citee that was cleped Sorhant, and was a town of the kynge
Vriens.  And a nevew of he kynges resceyved them with grete

<PB REF="" N="172" ID="pb.172"/>

ioye, and his name was cleped Bandemagu.  Ther thei rested and
esed hem <MILESTONE N="58b" UNIT="folio"/>in the town as thei that ther-to hadde grete nede, ffor
many of hem were hurt and wounded that a-bode stille till thei
were heled.  But thei were not ther thre dayes, whan the
messagers of Cornewaile and of Orcanye com to hem and tolde hem
the losse and the distruxion of the Sarazins that dide thourgh
ther londes, and were at a sege before the castell Vandeberes, and
hadde filde the londe full of here peple, and seide how thei
sholde neuer be remeved ne driven oute of the londe.  And whan
the lordes <SUPPLIED>herde</SUPPLIED> these tidynges ther ne was noon of hem but
their fleishe trymbled for this auenture that was hem be-fallen,
for well thei knewe that thei were distroyed; and than thei
wepte full tenderly.</P>
<P>  Upon a day the kynge Brangore, that was a wise man, sente
his messages to alle the kynges, and praied hem to come
speke with hym.  And thei come in to Vriens grete halle; and
whan thei hadde herde what the kynge hadde seide, thei drough
hem alle a-part to-geder, as thei that her iyen were all reade and
for swelen for wepynge, so that vn-nethe myght thei se oon
a-nother.  And whan thei were alle to-geder thei were alle stille
and mewet as though thei hadde be dombe.  And whan the
kynge Clarion of Northumberlonde saugh thei seide no worde he
aros vpon his feet, and seide to the kynge Brangore, "Sir, I am
come hider to here what ye will sey, for yester even ye sente for
vs, and I am now come; now may ye sey youre pleiseir, and I
will go my wey, for I have now no nede to pley ne Iape; and
after may ye speke to these barouns of youre nede.  And I sey it
for this, that I heere no worde in hem spoken."  And the kynge
Brangore seide, "I shall telle yow the cause why I sente for yow,
lordinges."  Quod he, "we have herde the trouthe that the
sasnes of the kyn of Aungier, of Saxoyne, be entred in to oure
londes and in to oure heritages, and haue grete part of oure londe
distroied and brente, and haue be-seged the Castell of
Vandesberes, in the marche of Cornewaile; and therfore ye moste sette
hasty counseile how we shull spede that thei were driven oute of
the londe, or elles be we deed and disherited, we and oure


<PB REF="" N="173" ID="pb.173"/>

heyres for euermore.  Ye knowe well that we heue loste in this
chyuachie that we have made vpon the kynge Arthur.  Ne of
hym ne of his londe gete we no socour; and on this side of the
kynge Leodegan of Tamelide, that gladly wolde vs helpe and
socour yef he hadde power; but the kynge Rion, that is so
myghty and riche, vpon hym werreth, and hath do this two
yere.  Ne the kynge Pelles of lytenoys, for the kepeth the kynge
Pellynor his brother that lyeth seke, of whiche <CHOICE><CORR>seknesse</CORR><SIC>senesse</SIC></CHOICE> he shall neuer
be heled till he come that shall brynge to ende the auentures of
the seint Graal.  Ne of the kynge Alain, his brother, that lith
in sekenesse, and shall neuer be warisshed till the beste knyght
of alle Bretouns come and aske hym why he hath that maladye,
and what thinge sholde be hys helpe.  And of the kynge of Sorloys
ne may we haue no socour, ffor Galehaut, the sone of the Geaunte,
of the oute yles, werreth vpon hym, and will that that holde his
londe of hym, and he hym diffendeth as he may.  Ne of the
kynge Berennain ne may we haue <MILESTONE N="59a" UNIT="folio"/>no socour; ne of the kynge
Anadonain, ne of the kynge Clamadas, for alle these werreth;
and Calchous, that is cosin to the kynge de Cent chiualers, that
now for vs hath traueyled—god quyte it hym!  And I knowe
wele as soone as Galehaut may haue conquered these two remes,
that than he will come renne vpon vs, for he desireth nothinge so
moche as for to haue the reame that was Vterpendragon.  Thus
can we no counseile but god of his mercy vs helpe and rede;
and while we be now to-geder, lete vs ordeyne what is beste to
do, for it is nede.  And yef it be so that we discorde, than be we
vtterly distroyed, for well ye knowe that we haue loste grete
auoir, where-with we myght wele haue mayntened oure werres
a-gein the saxoyns.  And witeth it wele that this damage haue
we be the counseile of Merlin, that wente to fecche the kynge
ban of Benoyk and the kynge boors his brother, in the litill
Breteyne, that ben the beste knyghtes of the worlde.  And he hath
do hem to make homage to kynge Arthur; and witeth it wele also
that as longe as Merlin is in contrey a-gein vs we shull not a-gein
hym endure, ffor noon ne is so wise ne so puyssant that may of
hym be-ware, ffor he knoweth alle thynges that be to come, and


<PB REF="" N="174" ID="pb.174"/>

also that is do and seide; and therfore I sey wepinge, ne
makynge of sorowe, ne may vs not a-vaile; but wemen shull
wepe.  And lete vs take hede to saue the peple and the londe fro
these vn-trewe and misbelevynge sarazins that thus sodenly be
entred vpon vs.  Therfore, for the reuerence of oure lorde, lete
vs haue pite of the people and the londe and on oure self."  And
ther-with he satte down and was longe tyme er eny baroun seide
eny mo wordes.</P>
<P>  Than a-ros the kynge Tradilyuaunt, of North Wales, and
seide as he that was a full wise man and wele I-lerned,
"The beste counseile that I se is that we go stuffe the marches
on this partye ther the saxouns comen, and lete make all the
chyuachie, that we may assemble of all the chyualrie that we
may, and lete kepe the passages, that ther come to hem no more
socour ne vitaile than thei haue now; and in the meene while
lete vs geder oure kyn and oure frendes and sowderes out of alle
londes, and lete vs yeve hem bateile as soone as we may be
assembled, for other-wise I can not se how thei may be remeved fro
the sege."  Whan the lordes vndirstode this that the kynge
Tradelyuaunt hadde seide, thei preised hym moche, and seide it
was the beste counseile that myght be sette, and ther-to thei
a-corded alle to do as he hadde seide.  Than thei asked that whiche
marches thei sholde garnyssh, and with what peple; and soche was
theire counseile that thei sholde go with as moche peple as thei
myght brynge of hem that were lefte of the bataile to the Citee of
Huydecan for to garnyssh it there.  And so thei dide it stuffe.  And
that was a grete Citee and a stronge.  And than with the firste
puyssaunce that we may make, lete vs distroye the vitaile fro
them thourgh the contreye, and lete vs sette in eche garnyson <MILESTONE N="59b" UNIT="folio"/>as moche peple as we may, and yef we do thus, I sey yow for
sothe that we shull thus distroyne them more than and we faught
with hem euery day.  And whan we se that theu be-for hungred,
and that thei be not encresed of more peple than thei be now,
than lete vs assemble oure peple and fight with hem, and yef
we may hem discounfite, we shall be riche and in reste alwey
aftere, and this is the beste counseile that I se in this cas.


<PB REF="" N="175" ID="pb.175"/>

Now lete eche man sey that hym likes, for I haue seide myn
advise."</P>
<P>  Than a-ros the kynge loot and seide, "Certes, sirs, I can not
se how we may vs so garnysh, and the marches where as
thei go and come, but that we shull haue grete damage of the
kynge Arthur, be the helpe of the two kynges and of Merlin, that
knoweth all oure ordenaunce, and he ne loveth vs nothinge, ffor
as soone as thei knowe that the Saxons be entred, thei shull come
for to distroye vs fro Tintagell, where thei haue sette theire
wardes; and on the tother syde toward brialen, that is vij myle
fro Tyntagell, thei will assaile vs ofte sithes; and also at the
Castell del la Roche, ther thei haue made her garnyson that
may vs moche greve, ffor thei haue it stuffid with vitaile
and peple that thei haue no drede of vs, ne of the saxons
that be risen a-gein vs by the discorde that is be-twene vs,
and therefore I sey, yef thei renne vpon on two partyes we
shull haue grete disese, for yef the Saxons haue the hier honde
of vs, we shull firste be distroyed; and as for me, I ne sey not
but that I am redy to pursue what that euer ye will ordeyne
and do, and therfore sey better yef ye can."</P>
<P>  With this a-rose the kynge de Cent chiualers and seide,
"Feire lordes, of that the kynge loot seith that he douteth
the kynge Arthur, and the kynge ban, and the kynge boors, of
Gannes, and his helpers, of this we nede not to drede, ffor a
messager me tolde this othir day that kynge Arthur, and kynge ban,
and kynge Boors his brother, ben gon oute of this contrei and go to
socour the kynge leodegan, of Tamelide, that hath werre a-gein the
kynge Rion, of Irelonde, and thei go in manner of sowdiours, and
all this hath Merlin I-made; but he hath well stuffed alle his
forteresses, for he knoweth well of this that is vs be-fallen,
where-fore he goth the more hardely, for he knoweth well he dare haue
no drede of vs. and of his londe haue ye no fere of no damage;
and yef he ne were not gon, I wolde wele counseile that the peas
were made be-twene hym and vs in somme maner wise, that he
myght vs helpe to drive oute this hethene peple out of this londe
that neuer shall a-wey be enchased but god sette to his counseile,

<PB REF="" N="176" ID="pb.176"/>

and the beste that I can se is that the marches be garnysshed as
the kynge Tradilyuaunt hath seide; and whan the marches ben
garnysshed, than moste we take counseile of oon stronge Castell
that thei haue in this contrey, that is cleped the roche of saxons,
wherof a feire mayden is lady that is suster to Hardogebrant that
moche knoweth of egremauncye, be whom thei <MILESTONE N="60a" UNIT="folio"/>haue grete socour
and helpe but yef we take hasty counseile."</P>
<P>  Whan the lordes vndirstod that kynge Arthur was gon and
lefte his londe, than thei hadde grete thought wherefore
it myght be; but no wise cowde thei devise the cause, but that
thei wiste wele that Merlin it made, and yef the myght thei
wolde repente with gode will of the stryfe that thei hadde a-gein
Merlin, but to late thei were to repente.  And in the ende thei
acorded to garnysshe the marches of Galnoye and of Gorre, and
of galuonye towarde Cornewaile and Orcanye.  And than thay
sente after grete and smale, alle tho that myght bere armes, and
sowdioures of straunge londes that wolde take wages, and tho
that coveyted lose and pris; and so litill and litill thei
encresed.  But oute of the londe that longed to kynge Arthur ne com not
oon sole man, for thei hadde no couetise of theire auers, for theire
lorde hadde hem yoven I-nough.</P>
<P>  The first Citee that these kynges stuffed was Nauntes in
breteyne, that was towarde Cornewaile, for it was a
passage ther the Saxons repeired moste.  And thedir yede the
kynge Ydiers with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes of hem that ascaped fro the
bataile.  And whan the kynge Ydiers was come, thei of the Citee
were gladde, for thei   were in grete affray, and with-oute counseile
of the saisnes, that all day rode thourgh the londe, and so moche
be purchased of kynges and Dukes as he that was enterpendant,
that he hadde vij<HI REND="sup">Ml </HI>at his baner of Sowdiours.  And thei kepte
wele the contre ther-a-boute, and ofte tyme fought thei with the
saisnes, and ofte sithes thei wonne.  And so com the renoun in to
the hoste, that thei durste not ride that wey with-oute grete
foyson of peple.  And so on that part the kynge Ydiers kepte
hem so streyte that thei myght haue no socoure of no vitaile.


<PB REF="" N="177" ID="pb.177"/>
</P>
<P>  The tother Citee that thei yede to stuffe was cleped
Wydesans, and thedir yede the kynge Ventres of Garlot, and
ledde with hym knyghtes that were lefte of the hoste.  And
whan thei com to Wydesande in Cornewaile the lordes made
hym grete ffeste, for gretly were thei discounforted of the grete
hoste of saisnes that thei hadden seyn passe be-fore the Citee, and
ledde a-wey alle theire prayes, and alle theire townes a-boute
brente and exiled.  And as soone as kynge Ventres was come, he
stuffed it wele with vitaile and with peple, and sesed the beste
tour and the beste fortresse.  Than sente he for sowdiours thourgh
the londe, and in other contreyes, so that he hadde a vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> what
on horse-bakke and on fote men with hem of the contrey, where-of
were v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> defensable.  And so wele he kepte his marches that the
saisnes hadde but litill socour, and ofte sithes he faught with
hem where the saisnes loste more than wonne; ffor the kynge
Ventres was a noble knyght and hardy and enterpendaunt.  He
hadde a sone be his wyf, <MILESTONE N="60b" UNIT="folio"/>a yonge bacheler of xvj yere of age,
that was of merveilouse grete bewte; and the wif of kynge
Ventres was suster to kynge Arthur on his moder side, Ygerne, that
was wif to Vterpendragon, and wif also to Hoel, Duke of
Tintagell, that be-gat basyne, the wif of kynge Ventres.  And vpon this
basyne be-gate he his sone, that was so gode a knyght and hardy,
as ye shall here her-after, and how he was oon of the C.C.l.
knyghtes of the rounde table, and oon of the moste preysed, and
his right name was Galashyn, the Duke of Clarence, that the
kynge Arthur hym yaf after he hadde wedded his wif
Gonnore.  This Galashene of whom I speke, whan that herde tidinges how the
kynge Ventres his fader hadde foughten with kynge Arthur, his
oncle, and he herde the grete prowesse and the grete debonertee
that was in hym, he com to hys moder basyne, and seide.  "Feire
moder, ne were not ye doughter to Duke Hoel of Tintagell and
to the quene Ygerne, that after was wif to Vterpendragon, that
be-gat, as I herde sey, thys kynge that is cleped be his right
name, Arthur, that is so noble and worthi a knyght that xj
princes hath disconfited with so small a peple as he hadde as I
haue herde sey?  I pray yow telle me the trowthe yef ye can,


<PB REF="" N="178" ID="pb.178"/>

how it is, for I may not trowe that he sholde be of soche herte
as it recorded of hym, but yef he were sone unto Vterpendragon,
that in hys tyme was oon of the beste knyghtes of the worlde."</P>
<P>  Whan the moder vndirstode here sone that so here a-resoned,
hir yen be-gonne to water, that the teers wette her
chekes and hir chyn, and seide, sighynge and wepinge as
she that was hevy and tender for her brother that hir sone
remembred, "Ffeire sone," quod she, "knowe this truly that he
is youre vncle and my brother and cosin to youre fader on the
modirside of Vterpendragon, as I haue herde my moder sey many
tymes whan she here complayned prively in her chamber for her
sone that the kynge Vterpendragon made it to be delyuered to a
cherll as sone as it was born, and how all the matere hath sethe
be discouered of Antor, that hym hath norisshed, be-fore the
barouns to whom that Merlin tolde the trouthe, and how that
Vlfin dide witnesse this thinge for trewe, that so wele was
trusted of Vterpendragon, and how he ordeyned the mariage of
my moder and the kynge; but the barouns of this londe ne will
not knowe hym for her lorde, and oure lorde, that is so
mercyfull, hath hym chosen thourgh his high myracle that he hath
shewed many sithes."  And than she tolde hym of the ston and
of the swerde, and alle the auenture as it was be-fallen.  And
whan Galashene vndirstode his moder, he prayed god that thei
sholde neuer wele spede that hym were ageyns, "and," quod he,
"god lete me neuer dye till that he hath made me knyght.  Ha
now god yeve me grace to do so moche that he may me girthe
with my swerde, and I shall neuer departe fro hym while I may
lyve yef he will me with-holde a-boute hym."  With that he
departed from his moder and yede into a chamber, and be-gan to
stodye howe he myght spede to go to the kynge Arthur.  Than
he be-thought hym to sende a messenger <MILESTONE N="61a" UNIT="folio"/>to Gaweyn, the sone
of kynge loot, his cosin, and sende hym worde that he sholde
come to speke with hym at newewerke, in brochelonde, as
pryvely as he myght, and that he be there the thirde day after
Phasche with-oute eny faile.  Than Galashene com oute of the
chamber and gat hym a messenger and sente to his cosin Gaweyn.


<PB REF="" N="179" ID="pb.179"/>

But now rested the tale of the message of Galashene and speke
of the kynges, how thei departed fro Shorhant, and wheder thei
wente, and telleth of the auentres that to hem be-fillen.</P>
<P>  Now, seith the boke, that after that kynge ventres, of Garlot,
was departed fro the Citee of Sorhant, and the other
barouns also, as ye haue herde, That than the kynge loot wente
to the Citee of Gale with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> knyghtes and fightynge men of
hem that were lefte in the bataile where thei hadde be
discounfited.  And whan he com thider the Cetizenis made of hym grete
ioye, ffor gretly thei were affraied of the saisnes that eche day
rode and renne thourgh the contrey, and toke prayes and putte
fire in townes <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> vilages all a-bowte as thei wente, and dide grete
damage.  And whan the kynge was come thider he sente and
somowned all the peple that he myght, bothe fer and nygh, of
sowdiers, and with-Inne a monethe he hadde assembled mo than
viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> on horse and on fote, alle defensable, with-oute hem of the
Citee, where-of were iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> for to kepe the Citee.  And he kepte
right wele the Citee and the contre environ that noon that entred
ne myght but litill it mysdo; and ofte tymes he faught with the
saisnes whan that he herde telle that thei come to forrey, and
ther wan the pore bacheleres that ther-to hadde grete myster;
and ther the kynge loot ne toke neuer thinge fro hem that thei
dide wynne, but frely yaf hem all, and ther thourgh encresed
his grete loos that the peple hym yaf.  And therfore com to
hym moo than iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men for the grete bounte that thei herde of
hym speke, whiche ne wolde neuere haue hym seyn but for the
high renoun that was of hym spoken, and that he was manly and
wise and full of largesse, and ther-of shewed wele his sones after
hym, but oon yet more than another, after the gode lynage that
thei were come of, and I shall telle yow how.</P>
<P>  This is trouthe that the wife of kynge lotte was suster to
kynge Arthur by his moder side, in the same manere as was
the wif of kynge ventres.  And of the wif of kynge loot com
Gawein, and Agrauayn, and Gaheret, and Gaheries; these iiij
were sones to kynge loot.  And of hir also com Mordred, that
was the yonghest, that the kynge Arthur be-gat.  And I will

<PB REF="" N="180" ID="pb.180"/>

telle yow in what manere, for so moche is the storye, the more
clere that I make yow to vndirstonde in what wise he was
be-geten of the kynge; for moche peple it preyse the lesse that
knowe not the trouthe.  Hit be-fill in the tyme that the barouns
of the reame of logres were assembled at Cardoell in walys, for
to chese a kynge after the deth of Vterpendragon.  And the
kynge loot brought thider his wif, and so dide many a-nother
baroun.  Hit fill so that the kynge loot was loigged in a faire
halle, he and his meyne; <MILESTONE N="61b" UNIT="folio"/>and in the same loigynge was Antor
and his sone Kay and Arthur, in the pryvieste wise that he
myght.  And whan the kynge knewe that he was a knyght, he made hym
sitte at his table, and Kay, that was a yonge knyght.  And the
kynge lotte hadde do made a cowche in a chamber, where he and
his wif lay.  And Antor lay in myddell of the same chamber,
and kay and Arthur hadde made her bedde atte the chamber
dore of kynge loot, in a corner, like as a squyre sholde
ly.  Arthur was a feire yonge squyer; and he toke grete hede of the
lady and of hem that were a-bouten hire.  And he saugh that she
was feire and full of grete bewte, and in his herte he covetted
her gretly and loved; but the lady ne knewe it not, ne toke
ther-of noon heede, for she was of grete bounte and right trewe to
hir lorde.  Hit fill that the barouns hadde take a counseile for to
speke to-geder at the blak crosse.  And whi it was cleped the
blake crosse ye shall here her-after, and the names of the knyghtes
of the rounde table, but yet the tyme is not come to speke ther-of
more.  At this crosse the barouns toke a day for to assemble erly
on a morowe; and so it fill that on the nyght before that the
kynge loot sholde go to this counseile, and he comaunded that
previly his horse were sadeled a-boute mydnyght and his armes
were alle redy.  And thei dide all his comaundement so secretly
that noon it perceyved, ne not the lady her-self.  Thus a-roos the
kynge a-boute mydnyght, that his it ne wyste ne a-percyved it
nought.  And he wente to the parlement to the blake crosse, and
the lady lefte a-lone in the chamber in her bedde.  And Arthur,
that alle this toke gode kepe, sawgh well how the kynge was
gon.  And he a-roos as stilliche as he myght, and yede to bedde


<PB REF="" N="181" ID="pb.181"/>

to the lady, and lay turnynge and wendynge, that noon other
thynge durste do leste the lady sholde hym a-perceyve.  And hit
fill so that the lady a-woke and turned hir toward hym, and toke
hym in her armes as a woman slepynge, that wende verely it
hadde ben her lorde.  And that nyght was be-gete Mordred, as
ye haue herde.  And whan he hadde don his delite with the
quene, a-noon after she fill on slepe.  And Aurthur a-roos sleyly
that he was not a-perceyved, till on the morowe, that he
hym-self it tolde at the dyner, whan he serued her at table
knelynge.  And so it happed that the lady seide, "Sir squyre,
arise vp, for longe I-nough haue <CHOICE><CORR>ye</CORR><SIC>y</SIC></CHOICE> be knelynge."  And he
ansuerde softly, and seide that he ne myght neuer deserue the
bountees that she hadde hym don.  And she hym asked what
bounte it was that she hadde hym don.  And he ansuerde he
wolde not in no wise telle it here but yef she hym ensured that
she sholde hym not discouer to no pesone, ne purchase hym no
blame, ne harme.  And she seide that it sholde not hir greve, and
ensured hym with gode will, as she that of this thynge ne toke
noon kepe.  And than he tolde hir how he hadde leyn by her
that <MILESTONE N="62a" UNIT="folio"/>nyght; and than hadde the lady grete shame, and wax all
rody, but noon ne knewe the cause.  And than the lady lefte her
mere vntterly.  And thus lay Arthur by his suster, the wif of
kynge loot, but neuer after it fill her no more.  And so the lady
vndirstode that she was grete by hym; and the childe that she
hadde at that tyme was of hym with-oute faile.  And whan the
childe was born, and also the tidynges spredde a-brode that he was
the sone of Vterpendragon, she loved hym so moche in her herte,
that no man myght it telle.  But she durste make no semblant,
for the kynge loot hir lorde; and she was sory for the werre that
was be-twene hym and the barons of the reame.</P>
<P>  Upon a day Gawein com fro huntynge, and clothed comly in
a robe that was warme as a robe for the wynter, and
ledde in honde a leeshe of grehoundes, and ledde also two brace
folowinge hym.  And it be-com hym full wele all thynge that
he dide:  and he also was of the feirest makynge that eny man
myght be as of his stature.  But the tale ne of hym deviseth no


<PB REF="" N="182" ID="pb.182"/>

more here saf only of a tecche that he hadde, that whan he a-roos
that he hadde the force and myght of the beste knyght that
myght be founde, and whan he com to the houre of pryme he
doubled, and at the houre of tierce also; and whan it come
to mydday he com a-gein to his firste strength that he hadde
at the houre of tierce; and whan it come to the houre of
noone he doubled, and alle houres of the nyght, and in the
morowe he com a-gein to his firste force; this was the
custome of Gawein.  Whan Gawein entred the halle, as ye harde,
his moder lay in a chamber by a chymney wher-ynne was a grete
fiere, and she was right pensif for her brother the kynge Arthur,
and for the barouns that were departed fro hym in euyll will, and
of the grete mortalite of peple that was come by the foly of the
barouns of the londe, and also of the saisnes that were entred
in to the londe, wher-fore thei were in a venture to be distroide;
and ther was she sore dismayed.</P>
<P>  And whan the lady saugh Gawein, that was so feire a yonge
squyer and noche of his age, and thought it tyme for
hym to a knyght, and than she be-gan to wepe and that hevied
moche Gawein, and asked wherefore that she dide wepe, and she
ansuerde and seide, "Feire sone, that I haue grete cause, for I
se yow and youre bretheren that spende youre tyme in foly, that
fro hens-forth ye oughten to be knyghtes and bere armes, and ye
sholde be at the court of kynge Arthur, for he is youre oncle,
and is the beste knyght of the worlde as it is seide, and ye sholde
hym serue, and purchase the pees be-twene hym and youre fader,
for it is grete damage of the euell will be-twene hem and the
other barouns of the londe that sholde hym love and serue, but
for their pride thei dyne not hym to knowe for her lorde, and
wele it sheweth that it displeseth our lorde, for more haue thei
loste than wonne in here stryf; and on the tother side <MILESTONE N="62b" UNIT="folio"/>the saisnes be
entred in to the londe that vs will distoye but yef god vs helpe,
and ne we ne shull no helpe haue of hym that sholde hem alle
enchace oute of this londe that is the kynge Arthur, and therfore
ar ye moche to blame and youre <CHOICE><CORR>bretheren</CORR><SIC>betheren</SIC></CHOICE>, for now sholde ye
bere armes and seche the acorde of youre oncle and of youre


<PB REF="" N="183" ID="pb.183"/>

fader by what wey thei myght be made frendes, and yo do
nought elles euery day but hunte after the hare thourght the
feldes, and so lese ye youre tyme, and ther-fore me semethe ye
ought ot haue blame."</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein vndirstode his moder, he seide, "Moder, sey
ye for trouthe that this Arthur that now is kynge that
he be youre brother and myn oncle?"  "Feire sone," seide she,
"ne doute yow nought, for youre oncle is he trewly."  And than
she tolde hym, fro the be-gynynge to the ende, all how it
was.  And whan Gawein hadde all vndirstonde, he seide full debonerly,
"Feire moder, ne be not ther-fore so pensif, for, be the feith that
I owe on to yow, I shall neuer be girde with swerde ne bere
helme on myn hede till that the kynge Arthur make me knyght,
yef in me be so moche valoure that he will me a-dubbe, and we will
go to courte for to fecche oure armes and helpe to mayntene his
lordship a-gein alle tho that hym will greve or anoye."  "Feire
sone," than seide the lady, "for me shull ye neuer be letted, ffor
grete gladnesse sholde it be to me yef oure lorde wolde graunte
that ye might do so moche that youre fader and youre oncle were
gode frendes, for than sholde I haue gladnesse at myn herte, and
I ought wele aboue alle other."  "Dame," quod Gawein, "cesseth
now at this tyme, for wete it well, by I ones oute of my fader
house, I will neuer returne ne entre ther-ynne a-gayn till that
my fader and myn oncle be acorded, though that I sholde do right
moche a-gein my fader will."  "Feire sone," seide the moder,
moder, "god graunte yow grace this to performe."</P>
<P>  In the tyme that Gawein and his moder spake thus to-geder
com in Agravayn and Gaharet and Gaheries, and com
be-fore theire moder, that heilde stille her talkynge with
Gawein.  And than seide Agravain to Gawein, "Ye be more to blame than
eny other, for ye be oure eldeste brother, and ye ought to lede vs
forth, and that we sholde be knyghtes, and serue hym that all the
worlde of speketh that a-boute hym repeire.  And we ne do but
as musardes, and ne a-wayte nought elles but whan we shall be
take as a bridde in a nette, for the saisnes be but a iourne hens,
that all the contre robbe and distroye.  Ne we ne haue not peple

<PB REF="" N="184" ID="pb.184"/>

to chase hem hens but by the prowesse of the kynge
Arthur.  But lete us take oure armes of hym, and helpe to defende his
londe a-gein his enmyes; ffor that is the beste that I can se, for
here ne may we nought gete.  And, ther-fore, better it were for
vs to do some prowesse in his servise, yef we myght be of soche
valoure, than here to be take to prison as cowardes, and lese oure
time of oure ages."  And whan Gawein vndirstode the speche of
his brother, he hadde of hym hertely ioye, and moche he hym
preysed, and ansuerde that so wolde he do; "and, therfore, in
haste lete vs a-pareile vs, for we will meve <MILESTONE N="63a" UNIT="folio"/>hens with-ynne xiiij
dayes."  And whan the moder saugh that hadde this
vndertaken, she was full of ioye, and thanked god hertely.  And to
hem she seide, "Dismay yow nought of no-thynge, for I shall
ordeyne yow horse and harneys."  And ther-of were thei gladde
and merye.  But now here resteth the tale of the moder and of the
childeren, and speketh how the kynges departed fro Sorhant, that
be yet sorowfull and wroth for theire discounfiture and losse, and
also for the saisnes that be entred in to her londes and Contrees.</P>
<P>  Now seith the story that whan these thre kynges were
departed fro their felowes fro Shorhant, that thei a-bode till
sowderes com to hem grete plente.  And than departed Clarion,
the kinge of Northumberlonde, and rode to his Citee I-cleped
bellande, that is grete and so feire, and garnysshed it wele with
thre<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, with-oute hem of the Citee self, that were
wele v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> or mo.  And he kepte wele the marches a-boute hym,
and many tymes faught with the saisnes like as ye haue herde
tolde.  And some tyme he wan, and many tymes he loste, as is
the fortune of werre.  And right moche he greved the saisnes,
for he distrued the prayes and the vitaile, so that the foreyours
myght nought fynde in the contrey for to take.  After that
departed the kynge de Cent chyualiers fro the Citee of Sorhant
with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and wente to the Citee of malonant,
where he hadde a gentill lady.  This Cite marched to his londe,
but for it was nerre the passages where as the Saxons dide passe,
that was the cause that he com thider, for he was full of high
prowesse, and also right a wise man and a noble knyght, and


<PB REF="" N="185" ID="pb.185"/>

hadde euer-more in his company an hundred men on horsebak
armed whan he hadde leeste peple; and ther-fore was he cleped
le Roy de Cent chiualers, that is to sey, kynge of an hundred
knyghtes; but his right name was cleped Aguysans.  And he
kepte right wele the marche and the contrey ther-a-boute, that
litill wonne the sarazins vpon hym.  After that departed the
kynge Tradylyuans, of North wales, fro the Cite of Sorhant, and
wente in to North walis to his City with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of
armes.  And his peple were of hym gladde, for thei hadde be in grete
drede of the Saxouns, that wente thourgh the londe and dide
hem grete harme and damage, ffor the passages were ther to go
to the roche of saisnes, where-of thei were sore a-noyed and
greved.  And he sente thourgh his londe, and somowned alle
tho that myght armes bere, and for sowdiours bothe fer and nygh,
so that he assembled to-geder what on hors and on fote with the
peple that he hadde brought fro the bataile vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> with-oute the
men of the Citee, wher in was iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of dwellers.  And so he hym
defended the beste wyse that he myght, and moche he hem
greved toward the Castell that Carnyle, the suster of hardogabran,
kepte in her baillye.  Ne that passage ne myght not these thre <MILESTONE N="63b" UNIT="folio"/>kynges kepe for no power that thei hadden; but that ther com
socour be that wey to the saisnes of vitaile and of men be that
castell that was stronge, and by the enchauntement of Carnile,
that moste cowde of that art, but yef it were Morgain, the suster
of kynge Arthur, and Nimiane, that Merlin dide love so moche,
that he taught here alle the merveiles of the worlde as this boke
shall declare yow here-after.  And by that Castell where-of I
speke hadde the saisnes all her recouerer and all her socour of the
contrey, wherthurgh thei myght neuer be put oute of the londe
till that kynge Arthur drof hem oute, and the kynge Ban and
the kynge Boors of Gannes, and the sones of kynge lott, as ye
shull here telle here-after, and of theire merveilouse prowesse of
dedes of armes.  After that departed fro Sorhant the kynge
Brangore, of South Walis, with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and wente to
Strangore, his chief Citee, for that was nexte to the roche of
Saxouns, ant sente after soudiours vp and down, and assembled


<PB REF="" N="186" ID="pb.186"/>

vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men defensable, and moche thei greved the hethen peple
with alle theire power.  This kynge Brangore hadde a gentill
lady to his wif, that was doughter to kynge Adryan, the
Emperour of Constantynenoble, that was myghty and riche.  And
he hadde no mo childeren by his wif but two doughteres, where-of
the kynge Brangore hadde oon, and the tother was in
Costantynnoble.  In that tyme ther was a riche lorde and a myghty, that
was kynge of blagne and of hungre; but he deyde with-ynne
v yere after he was wedded, and lefte a sone, the feirest creature
of man that was formed.  And this childe dide wex moche and
semly, and right wise and hardy.  And at that day that kynge
Brangore was departed fro Sorhant, he was so well waxen that
he was able to be a knyght; and his right name was
Segramore.  This Segramore that I of speke dide after-warde many high
prowesse in the reame of logres, whereof the tale shall declare
yow here-after, and I shall tell yow how it fill.</P>
<P>  Renomee that thurgh alle the worlde renneth yede so
thourgh euery londe, so that euery contrey spake of the
kynge Arthur and of his grete largesse.  And so his renoun
spredde thourgh euery contre, so that in Costantynnoble it was
in euery mannes mouthe; So that Segramore herde ther-of speke,
and was but xv yere of age, and was oon of the feirest men of
the worlde, and of large stature, and beste shapen of alle
membres, and ther-to hardy and wise.  And whan he herde tidynges
of the kynge Arthur he desired gretly to se the day and the houre
that he myght be made knyght of hys honde, and seide often to
hem that were of his counseile that who so myght take ordere of
chiualrye moste in eny wise be a gode knyght.  And whan his
graunt-sire, the kynge Adrian, that tho was livynge, counseiled
hym to take the ordere of knyghthode, for he was the next heire
male to the Empere after his deth.  And he hym ansuerde that he
wolde neuer be knyght till that Arthur, the kynge of grete
breteyne, hadde made <MILESTONE N="64a" UNIT="folio"/>hym a knyght with his owne
hondes.  And so here-of spake thei day be day till that the kynge Adrian
appareiled Segramore, and sente hym to the grete breteyne
richely arayed.  But now cesseth of hym to speke more at


<PB REF="" N="187" ID="pb.187"/>

this tyme, and turneth to telle how these other knyges departed
fro Sorhant.</P>
<P>  Now seith the storye that as soone as kynge Brangore was
departed fro Sorhant, that the kynge Carados made hym
redy to ryde; and with hym he hadde iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men armed, and yede
to Eastrangore, his chief Citee, and hit garnysshit vigorously, as
he that was full of prowesse and grete hardynesse, and sente
after knyghtes and sergeantes, alle that he myght haue he hadde
assembled, vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> speres and gode men of werre.  And in tho
partyes the saisnes ne soiourned but litill, for often were the
foughten bothe even and morowe as thei saugh tyme.  And often
Carados and his company lay in the forestes, that were large and
depe; and whan he herde telle that the saisnes com in forrey
thourgh the contrey, he lepe hem a-geyns and faught with hem,
so that ofte tymes he gat vpon hem and mayntened so the werre
longe tyme, as the tale will reherse here-after whan the mater
cometh ther-to.  And after that these vj kynges were departed
fro Sorhant, departed than Aguysans, the kynge of Scotlonde.</P>
<P>  This Aguysans, the kynge of Scotlonde, that departed out of
Sorhant, was the richest kynge of alle the xj kynges,
and was also the yongeste; but of armes he cowde not so moche
as the other kynges.  And he assembled his peple, and were
v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and wente to Corenge in Scotlonde, that tho was a grete
Citee and a riche, and moche were greved with the saisnes that
repeired ther-a-bowte, for it was but xx scotyssh myle fro the
Castell of Vandesbires, ther-as was the sege of saisnes, that
repeyred ther-a-boute so grete peple that noon myght hem nombre
that ther assembled euery day.  And as soone as that the kynge
Aguysans was sette in the Citee of Corenges, thei were gladde
that were in the Citee of whiche were v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And he sente alle
a-boute for sowdiours on hors and on fote, so that he hadde x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
with-oute hem of the Cite.  And so he faught many tymes with
the saisnes as thei ronne thourgh the Contrey; and so he bothe
loste and wan many tymes.  And he made to a-mende and fortyfie
the wallis of the town ther as, as thei were most feble; and thus
he mayntened the werre longe tyme.  After that these kynges

<PB REF="" N="188" ID="pb.188"/>

were departed, the Duke Escam assembled his peple, and hadde
with hym iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes; and he iourneyde so till he com to
Cambenyk, his stronge Citee, that was grete and riche and full
of alle maner godes, and with-ynne the Cite were iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men
defensable, that of the Duke made grete ioye when thei hym saugh, for
gretly hadde thei be affraide of the saisnes that thei hadde
seyn come towarde a Castell that is cleped Arondell, that was in
the marche of Cambenyk, and the roche of Saisnes, that the
kynge Arthur hadde well garnysshid er he wente in to <MILESTONE N="64b" UNIT="folio"/>the
reame of Tamelide.  And as soone as the Duke com to Cambenyk
he comaunded and somowned all his power fer and nygh, and
assembled wele viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men with-oute hem that were in the Citee;
and thise greved the saisnes at theire power.  In this maner the
Duke hym contened in this maner richely as ye haue herde.  Thus
departet the xj barouns fro Sorhant; and the kynge Vrien leffte
in his Citee, and sente thourgh euery londe and contrey a-boute,
and sowdiours so that he hadde to-geder ix<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, with-oute the peple
of the Citee, where-of were wele vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the sege was thens
but a iourne.  And so thei fought to-geder many tymes, and loste
and wonne as is the fortune of werre.  And thus this stryfe lastid
longe tyme, so that the contrey was wasted and made pore so sore
that in v yere ther in was nought to gete.  And in the contrey
they lived by nought elles saf by that oon myght take of a-nother
by-twene the cristen men and the saisnes, but yef eny ship by
aventure a-rived at eny port in the londe.  In this manere were
thei sustened that other-wise ne laboured not, but werred that
oon a-gein that other right harde.  And the saisnes ronne thourgh
the londe of kynge Arthur, and þer-Inne dide grete damage, for
ther was noon that hem dide lette, till that by a-uenture, as god
wolde, he sente feire yonge squires and gentill it to socoure.  And
I shall telle yow what thei were that so longe kepte the londes
of kynge Arthur, till that he com a-geyn oute of the londe of
Tamelide; so that the saisnes loste more and the barouns, that
were his enmyes, than dide Arthur.  And now returneth the tale
a-gein to Galashyn, the sone of kynge Ventres.





</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.13"><PB REF="" N="189" ID="pb.189"/>
<HEAD> CHAPTER XIII. 
<LB/> THE ADVENTURES OF GAWEIN, AGRAVAYN, GAHARET, GAHERIES, AND GALESHYN; AND THEIR BATTLE WITH THE SAXONS.</HEAD>
<P>  Now, seith the boke, that as soone as Galeshene hadde lerned
of the tydinges of kynge Arthur, and knewe that he
was his oncle, he toke a messenger, and sente to Gawein his
cosyn, and prayde hym to speke with hym at newerk in privy
wise, and to brynge with hym his bretheren, and that he faile not
to be ther the thirde day after Pasche.  The messenger iourneyed
forth till he com in to walis, in the marche af Orcanye, and spake
with Gawein and his bretheren, and seide how Galeshene grete
hym wele, and sente hym worde and praide hym as dere as he
hym loved, to mete with hym at newerk, in brochelonde, the
thirde day after Pasch, for ther he wolde be with-oute faile yef
he were in hele of his body.  And whan thei herde this message
they made grete ioye, and seide ther wolde thei be with-oute
faile, for thei wiste wele he ne sente not for hem with-oute
grete cause.  And thei yaf the messager a gode stede, and sente
hym a-gein glad and mery.  And he spedde hym till he come to
Galeshene, and tolde hym his ansuere that he hadde of his
cosyns.</P>
<P>  Whan the messengere com be-fore Galeshene, his lorde, he
seide how his cosyns grete hym wele, and that thei
wolde be at newerke, in brochelonde, the thirde day after Pasch
with-oute faile.  Than Galeshene dide hym appareile, and wente
the   <MILESTONE N="65a" UNIT="folio"/>nexte day after pasch to newerke, in brochelonde.  And
whan he com thider, Gawein ne hys bretheren were not yet
I-come.  And ther he a-bode till they were come.  Whan Gawein
and his bretheren were come, Galashin made to hem grete
feste.  And than seide Gawein to Galashin, "Feire cosin, ye sente for
to seche me this othir day by youre message that I and my
bretheren sholde come speke with yow; and trewly ne were that
I wolde take my leve of yow, I wolde elles by this time haue be
elles where, that I haue moche for to do, and so moche I desire


<PB REF="" N="190" ID="pb.190"/>

to be there a-bove alle other thynge."  "Sire," seide Galeshin,
"whider sholde ye haue gon, for with-oute me ne sholde ye not
go, but that I therof sholde haue wytinge; and ther-fore telle
me what wey ye purposeth yow to go, and after I shall telle yow
my corage, and why I have sente for to speke with yow and my
cosins youre bretheren."  Than seide Gawein, "Trewly, cosin, I
will go se the grete prowesse and largesse of the free and
deboniere <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>   the moste worthi knyght of the worlde, of whom I haue
herde reporte the moste wurship and honoure."  "A god
mercy!"  quod Galeshyn, "who is that?  god graunte that it be he that
causeth me to come speke with yow."  "Forsothe," seide Gawein,
"his name ne ought not to <SUPPLIED>be</SUPPLIED> hidde, but to be publisshed
a-fore eny worthy man, for it is the kynge Arthur; but with grete
wronge and a-gein right do the barouns of this londe a-gein hym
werre, and in especiall thei that ought hym to love and holde
moste dere; and wite ye well, so god me helpe," seide Gawein,
"that I shall neuer be with swerde girte till that he me
girde."  Whan Galashyn hadde herde that Gawein hadde seide, he was
neuer er so gladde, and ran to Gawein with armes spredde,
and made to hym soche ioye and feste as all the worlde hadde
ben his, and seide that for noon thynge ellis hadde he sente
to hym fore, and tolde hym worde for worde all his corage, and
the wordes of his moder that she hadde seide; and ther a-gein
Gawein hym tolde the wordes of hys moder.  Whan the
childeren hadde spoke to-geder, thei acorded to meve with-inne xv
dayes.  Than thei departed, and made redy theire horse and
theire armes, as was convenient to so high men sones; and, to
sey brefly, Galashyn purchesed in his company CC of the beste
knyghtes that he cowde chese, and than departed with-oute
witynge of his fader, and rode be the moste vn-couthe weyes
that thei myght till he com to newerke, in brochelonde, and ther
a-bode the comynge of Gawein and his bretheren, that brought in
her company v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> men of knyghtes and squyres that alle were
knyghtes sones; but ther ne were lx knyghtes, and amonge hem


<PB REF="" N="191" ID="pb.191"/>

that com with Galashin but xx knyghtes.  And whan thei were
all assembled thei made to-geder grete ioye.  And than thei toke
counseile to-geder how it was to do; and thei a-corded to go to
logres in bretein, the <CHOICE><CORR>chief</CORR><SIC>chif</SIC></CHOICE> Citee of kynge Arthur; and ther
sholde thei here speke of the kynge her oncle, and also of the
sarazins that repaired ther-a-boute.</P>
<P>  Now, seith the boke, that a-boute the entre of may, in the
tyme whan these briddes syngith with clier voys and
all thynge reioyseth, and than these wodes and medowes beth
florished grene, and these medowes full of newe tendir erbys and
entermedled with   <MILESTONE N="65b" UNIT="folio"/>dyuerse colours that swote be of odoures, and
these amerouse yonge lusty peple reioyse be-cause of the lusty
seson, it be-fill that Gawein and Agrauayn and Gaharet and
Gaheries and Galashyn, and thei that be-come in here companye,
ben risen erly, for the heete that dide hem grete anoye on the
day, as they that wolde <CHOICE><CORR>ride</CORR><SIC>ride ride</SIC></CHOICE>   in the cole of the mornynge that
was feire and stille and a softe weder, and thei were yonge and
tender to suffre grete trauayle, and thei were wele armed, and
hadde on hattes of stile as squyres vsed in tho dayes, and theire
swerdes hangynge at the pomell of theire sadeles be-fore, for the
contrey was not sure for the saisnes that rode and ronne thourgh
the contrey for vitaile and for to robbe and distrye the londe that
was so plentenouse and riche er the mysbelevynge peple were
entred, wherof was grete pite that so goode a londe sholde be
distroyed for synne and for myslyvinge, as god hath ofte sithes
chastysed diuerse remes.</P>
<P>  The thirde daye that thise childeren rode to-geder lyke as
that ye haue herde, thei mette the kynge leodobron and
the kynge Segagan and the kynge Mandalet and the kynge
Sernagut, of the londe of yroys, that hadde the contre a-boute logres
brent and wasted, and ledde with hem grete plente of vitaile, so
that the hoste for longe tyme was refresshed of brede and wyne
and of flesh, for thei hadde so piled and robbed thourgh the
contrey and the portes where the shippes were a-ryved, and the


<PB REF="" N="192" ID="pb.192"/>

marchaundise was so grete, that v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> someres were charged, and xxv
cartes and vij carres, and the cariage and the multitude of peple
was so grete, that the duste a-rose so huge, that vn-nethe oon myght
knowe a-nother; and also the fiere and the smoke so grete in the
contrey that half a iourney a-boute men myght knowe what peple
ther were.  And whan thise childeren approched to this
chyuachie, and herde the playntes and the cryes that the mene peple
made for the saisnes that hem so distroyed, that were well x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of
horse-men, with-oute the putaile that ronne vp and down and
robbed the peple and brente the vilages as they passed thourgh
the Contrey.</P>
<P>  Whan the childeren saugh this doloure and this sorowe, thei
asked of hem that passed by that thei saugh so affraied
where that kynge Arthur was, and they seyde he was gon in to
Tamalide at mydlenton, and hadde wele garnysshed alle the
forteresses of his londe that noon ne myght not gretly forfete,
and thei were so doilfull that the sarazins so distroied the londe
as ye haue herde.  And whan the childeren herde that the kynge
was not in the contrey, thei seide thei wolde the londe and the
contrey for her oncle, and also the pray that the saisnes ledden,
and that thei wolde kepe the londe and it deffende till here oncle
were come home.  And whan the peple of the contrey herde hem
speke thus, thei asked of hem what thei were that so wolde
deffende the londe   <MILESTONE N="66a" UNIT="folio"/>of kynge Arthur, as thei seiden; and thei lete
hem be knowen what thei were.  And whan the peple knewe
what the childeren weren thei hadde grete ioye, for by hem thei
trowed that the kynge Arthur sholde be lorde of all the reame
of logres, and the love of the fadres he sholde haue thourgh the
childeren that ther were come, with thise v cosins, and with
other that were ryche mennes sones, as Castelleins and
vauasours of the londe, that after were of grete prowesse in the house
of kynge Arthur, and of soche as were moste preysed.  And as
soone as the childeren saugh the grete damage, theire hertis
begonne to ryse, and cried, "As armes, gentill squyres, for now
shall it be sene how is goode and hardy and worthy to bere
armes, for we be in oure heritages, and ther-fore we sholde deffende


<PB REF="" N="193" ID="pb.193"/>

 oure right a-gein these mysbelevynge peple, that thus this
londe robbed and wasted."</P>
<P>  Hastely ronne these squyers to armes, and lepen to horse,
and hem renged and distreyned, as the knyghtes hem
taughten, whereof were xxiiij that were noble men and right gode
knyghtes and trewe.  And whan the peple of the contre saugh
that thei hadde socoure, ther com to hem more than v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> what on
horse and on fote.  And than thei yede to-geder as starlynges,
and mette firste the cariage and the vitaile that the saisnes ledden
towarde the hoste, and were moo than iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> with the cariage.
And, as the storye seith, it was passed mydday and was right hote
weder.  And the duste a-rose so thikke that scantly a man myght
se fro hym-self the caste of a stone.  And as soone at that the
childeren saugh theire enmyes, thei lete theire horse renne, and
overthrewe and slowgh alle that thei ateyned, that ther ne
ascaped oon ne other.  That day Gawein slowgh many a sarazin
of the saxouns more than eny of his felowes, so that he was all
blody, bothe he and his horse.  And he heiled an axe in his
honde, and he was so crewell and fiers that whom he a-raught a
full stroke neded hym no salue.  And his other bretheren dide also
right wele, so that noon of hem ne durste a-bide of hem a
stroke.  And Galashyn was all day with Gawein, that merveilously dide
wele, for ther myght noon endure his strokes that he ne smote of
arme, or legge, or heede, or other membre; but, a-bove alle othir,
it was merveile to se the martire that Gawein made, for a-gein
his strokys ne myght not endure Iren ne style, ne no mannys
body, were he neuer so myghty ne stronge.  And so the
childeren smyten vp and down a-boute hem that of iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that ledde the
pray towarde the hoste, ne ascaped not xxx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI>.  And x of hem
that ascaped returned vn-to her chiuachie, that were comynge after
with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, but thei were not wele armed, for thei hadde made it
to be trussed for the grete hete that hem greved.  And whan the
x that fledden com in to the hoste <CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> cryed that all was deed
that were lefte with the cariage.  Whan thei herde that all was
loste, thei ronne to theire armes alle they that eny hadden,   <MILESTONE N="66b" UNIT="folio"/>and
hem armed in the beste wise that thei myght.  And the thirde


<PB REF="" N="194" ID="pb.194"/>

part of hem ne myght not come to theire armoure, for theire
squyers were gon be-fore with the cariage that the childeren
hadde wonne, and let it be ledde to logres, and lete it be
condited by men of the same contrey, that the were dwellynge and
weren fallen in to theire company; and after thei pursude the
saisnes that fledden in to the tyme that thei were fallen in
amonge the rerewarde.  Ther than was fierce bataile and stronge
stoure, and harde and crewell, that merveile it was to haue
seyn.  Ther Gawein slowe the kynge noas, of Iselonde, for he smote hym
with an axe with bothe hondis, that he cleft hym to the briste
bon.  And Galashyn smote so the kynge Sarnagut with a swerde
trenchaunt that he made his heede fle in to the feilde.  And
Agrauayn, that was plonged in to the presse, smote on bothe
sides hym a-boute, and began yeve so grete strokes that sore thei
hym douted.  And Gaheries hadde chased Gynebande the length
of a bowe draught from his felowes, for that he hadde smyte
down <CHOICE><CORR>his</CORR><SIC>his his</SIC></CHOICE>   brother Gaheret with a spere, but he hadde noon other
harm; and, therfore, wende well Gaheries he hadde be slayn;
and, therfore, he pursude vpon hym with swerde drawen, as
fiercely as a wilde boor.</P>
<P>  Whan Guynebans saugh Gaheries so fiercely come, he turned
to flight, for he ne durste not a-bide for the grete
merveilouse occision that he hadde seyn hym do; and,
withoute faile, he was of merveilouse prowesse, for, as the story
reherseth, it failed but litill that he was even like of bounte
to Gawein his brother, whan he com to his right age and was
knyght.  And whan Gaheries saugh the sarazin thus fleynge,
he swore be god that he sholde neuer cesse ne leve hym, for
playn ne wode, till he were a-venged of his brother deth.  And
so he hym chased as faste as his horse myght hym bere till
he hadde lefte his felowes be-hynde the space of an
arblaste.  And so he hym overtoke a-monge the meyne of Guynebans,
that com redy to fight, and gladde were they of the pray
that thei hadde so ledde.


<PB REF="" N="195" ID="pb.195"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan Gaheries hadde overtake Guynebans, he stroke hym
so sore vpon the helme that he kutte a-wey a quarter
that he made hym to stope, and the swerde swarued be-twene the
shelde and the nekke, and kyutte the gyge of the shelde with all
the arme so that he dide it falle in to the felde.  And whan this
kynge saugh hym-self so dismembred he fill in swowne; and than
Gaheries was gladde of the vengaunce of his brother, and turned
his horse hede.  But the saisnes that this stroke hadde sein ne
contented not to lete hym passe; and than thei hem renged by
hundredes and by thowsandes, and closed hym in on alle
partyes, and smote vpon hym with theire speres at ones, and
ouer-threwe hym and his horse.  And whan the tymbir of theire
speres were broken, he lepe vp-on his fete vigerousely, as he that
hadde I-nough of breth; and myght that ther was noon so hardy
that durste put to hys honde hym to take, and launched at hym
fro fer speres and swerdes   <MILESTONE N="67a" UNIT="folio"/>and knyves, that thei made hym falle
on his knees two tymes or thre; but so myght he not longe
endure but that he sholde haue be take or deed.  Than a squyer that
saugh hym chase so the hethyn kynge, com cryinge and betynge
his hondes to-geder, and rendinge his heer to Gawein, that hadde
remounted Gaheret vpon a-nother horse, that hadde smeten down
the kynge Sernage fro.  Than the squyer cried, "Ha,
Gawein!  where-a-boute arte thow?  for thow hast loste thy brother Gaheries
but thow hym socoure delyuerly; for he chased a saisne that he
hath ouertake in this derke valey, and hath hym smetyn down;
but the sarasins haue be-sette hym on all partyes, and haue hym
ouerthrowen, and slayn his horse, and made hym falle vpon his
kne I wote not how often; and yef ye hym thus lese it is grete
doel and grete damage."  Whan Gawein vndirstode hym that
made soche doel for his brother, he seide, "Ha!  seint Marie
Virgin and moder of Jeshu criste, ne suffre not that I lese my
brother, for than myn herte shall neuer be gladde; and yef I hym
thus lese, shall ther neuer shelde hange a-boute my nekke."  Than
he asked of the squyer whiche wey it was.  And he shewed hym
the valey be the wode side.  And he cryed to his felowes with
high voys, "Now shall it be sein who that shall me serve."


<PB REF="" N="196" ID="pb.196"/>
</P>
<P>  "Feire cosyn," quod Galashyn, "whider will ye go in so
grete haste, shall noon a-bide from yow, and therfore
set forth smartly, for I drede lest we tarye to longe?"  Than the
childeren hem renged and priked as faste as quarelles of arblast,
and perced the presse with his gode horse and heilde an axe
in bothe handes wherewith he made soche martire and soche
slaughter, that thei fly from hym on alle partyes; and it lasted
the space of a myle a-boute of the peple that thei hadde leide to
grounde, and thei sought vp and down till thei founde Gaheries,
that was lyggynge at erthe vp-right, and thei hadde pulled of his
hatte of stiell and his coyf of mayle for to smyte of his heed, but
thei thought to haue take hym quyk, and lede hym to Bernage,
the kynge of Saxon.  Than thei fillen vpon hym at ones, and
wolde bynde his hondes be-hynde hys bakke.  Than com Gawein
prikinge gripynge a spere, and sprange in a-monge hem so full of
ire and maltelent for that he sawgh his brother so vileinliche
a-raide, that ny he yede out of witte, and than he leide a-boute
hym so grym strokes and rude that noon durste hym a-bide, but
disparbled a-brode fro hym as from a wode lyon in rage.  Whan that
thei that heilde his brother saugh the merveile that he dide, thei ne
durste not a-bide ne holde his brother no lenger, but yef thei wolde
haue receyved the deth, but turned to flight and made hym
wey.  Whan Gaheries saugh his brother Gawein, he lepte vpon his feet,
and sette on his heed his hatte delyuerly, and hente a-gein his
swerde, and appareilede hym to diffende.  And Agrauayn hym
brought an horse, and seide, "Brother, now lepe vp lightly, for
grete foly haue ye do to go so fer oute of oure company, for full
nygh hadde ye more loste than wonne."  Whan Gaheries saugh
hym-self hooll and sounde, and that he was a-gein I-horsed and
delyuered, he was right gladde.  Than the bretheren drough
hem to-geder to relied her peple; and the saisnes blewe hornes
and trumpes, and armed hem and assembled hem thourgh all the
contrey, and ordeyned theire batailes.  But now cesseth   <MILESTONE N="67b" UNIT="folio"/>a-while
to speke of thise childeren and of the saisnes, and speke of the
men of the contrey that ledde the pray that the childeren hadde
conquered, and the cariage to the Cite of logres.


<PB REF="" N="197" ID="pb.197"/>
</P>
<P>  Here seith the storye that full gladde were the peple of the
contrey of the wynnynge that the childeren hadde geten,
and wente ioyfull and mery with the vitaile, for thei were but
two scottissh myle fro the town, and therfore thei peyned hem
faste to come to the Cite saf, for well thei knewe that the saisnes
were to moche peple to fight a-geyn the childeren and her feliship;
and therfore thei douted that the pray sholde be rescued, and
take a-gein be strength; and therfor thei hasted to come tymely
to saf garde.  And whan thei that kepte the Cite saugh come the
riche pray, thei asked how it was geten.  And thei tolde how
Gawein, the kynges sone loot, and his bretheren, and Galashin,
the kynges sone ventreȝ, that is cosin to Gawein, be come to
helpe the kynge Arthur, and haue lefte theire londes and theire
contrey, and sey thei will neuer faile the kynge Arthur while that
<CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> be lyvinge, for thei be come with xxvij felowes, and mette
with thre thousande forrayoures that this pray ledden, and foughten
with hem till thei haue hem alle slayn and discounfited, and sesed
vs with the pray to brynge to this Citee saf; and, therfore, open
the yates and receyve it in; and after we shull returne hem for
to socoure, for grete pite it were yef thei were deed or taken in so
tendre age, for thei ben of high valoure and grete worthynesse.</P>
<P>  Whan the Cetezeins vndirstode these wordes of the childeren
that were come in soche manere, a-noon thei opened the
gates and receyved hem in to the Citee; and after thei seiden
that a parte of hem sholde go helpe the childeren.  Thanne thei
lete blowe an horn in the maister toure, and than ronne to armes
thourgh the town.  A-noon they were armed with grete spede,
and Issed oute at the maister gate.  And than a-bode the Castelein
of Cardoell, that was a noble man and a trewe.  And whan he
was come, he fonde oute of the town vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and than he seide
"Sirs, it were no wisdom to leve the town vn-garnysshed of
peple, for we knowe not what shall falle ne what peple we
shall mete."  And than þei ansuerde that he seide well, ne
thei wolde not go but soche as he wolde haue.  Than he toke
oute v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and two thousande he lefte for to kepe the town,
that it were not surprised.

<PB REF="" N="198" ID="pb.198"/>
</P>
<P>  Than thei rode forth and renged close that wey where as the
childeren foughten full sore, ffor the saisnes were mo
than vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> in a flote.  And as soone as thei hem saugh, thei ne
douted nothinge so small a peple that were so ynge.  And ther
was of hem but xxiiij knyghtes, and v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> squyers, and xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> that
were not yet a-dubbed, and CCC men what on horsebak, and of
fote-men of peple of the contrei that were falle to hem, and seide
thei wolde rather be deed than thei wolde forsake her
companye.  But Madelans and Guynehan hadde departed her men in two
partyes, and eche was iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, for alle the saisnes   <MILESTONE N="68a" UNIT="folio"/>were assembled
to hem two.  Than come Guynehan first with a grete spere, for
he was myghty and stronge, and moche oute of mesure, and
ther-to right hardy; and ran vpon hem so fiercely as he
hymself alone all wolde haue confounded.  And Gawein, that was
be-fore his felowes, and heilde an ax trenchaunt, and com a-gein
hym fiercely.  And Guynehan, that com formest, ran a-gein hym,
and smote Gawein so harde with his spere that it fley all to peces,
for the haubreke was so stronge of dubble maile, and the squyer
so full of prowesse, that he ne meved not for the stroke, but yaf
Gynehans soche a stroke with his ax vpon the helme that he bente
ouer his horse croupe; and the stroke of the ax glenched, and
smote the horse bakke a-sonder, that thei fill to the grounde bothe
vpon oon heepe.  Whan the saisnes saugh that stroke, thei shodered
a-boute hym, for thei wende that the kynge Guynehan hadde ben
deed; and than thei pressed faste to the rescowe.  And Gawein
smote amonge hem, and thei smote hym with theire speres and
slow his horse vnder hym.  And he lepte lightly vpon his feet,
and yaf so grete strokes that noon durste hym aproche.  Than
com the socours on bothe sides, and ther be-gan the bataile a-bowte
Gawein fell and longe lastinge, for the saisnes coueyted to
remounte Gynehans and for to take Gawein; and his felowes so
hym defended that it was merveile for to be-holden.</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein saugh that thei desired so hym to take and
holde, he griped hys axe and com to a saisne that
hadde made Agrauayn to stoupe in his sadill, and moche he hym
payned for to smyten of the heed.  And whan Gawein saugh


<PB REF="" N="199" ID="pb.199"/>

this he wax ny wode for ire.  Than he threste thourgh the
presse to that saisne, and for to yeve hym a gret stroke he reysed
his ax; and the saisne saugh he myght not voyde the stroke,
and caste his shelde ther a-geins.  And Gawein hym hitte so
harde that he slytte the shelde in two partyes.  And the stroke
descended on the lifte shulder so grete that he slyt hym to the
girdill, and than he fill to grounde.  Than Gawein sesed the
stede and lepte in to the sadill, and than he cryed to his felowes,
"Now shewe youre hardynesse, that these Sarazins not vs ascape,
and that nother wode ne playn hem shall warante, for ye shall
se my strokes and my prowesse double."  Than he smote the
stede, and rode in a-monge hem, and made of hem soche martire
that thei lay vpon hepes in the feilde, as hey in a medowe; but
for all that the saisnes haue horsed Guynehans.  And whan he
was remounted a-monge the saisnes, he hente a stronge spere and
a rude, and com to Agrauayn, that hadde his nevewe slayn be-fore
hys iyen.  And he hitte Agrauayn with his spere so sore that it
preced two folde thurgh his haubreke, and therto he shof ther-on
so harde that Agravayn fill to the erthe bothe he and his horse
on an hepe.</P>
<P>  Whan Gaheries and Galashin saugh Agrauayn falle, thei
hadde grete drede that he were slayn; and Galashin
come formest and smote Guynehans with his swerde   <MILESTONE N="68b" UNIT="foliio"/>vpon the
helme, that he made hym enclyne on his sadill bowe; and
Gaheries smote hym with his swerde vpon the arme, that it fly
in to the feilde; and Gaheriet smote hym be-twene the nekke
and the shulders as he was stopynge, that he made the heed
fle in to the playn, and Galashin with his fote spurned his body
to grounde, and laught the steede, and ledde it to Agravayn that
sore hym deffended on fote.  And whan Agravayn hadde the
horse, he lepte vp as soone as he myght, and than be-gan the
meddelynge amonge hem full crewell and fell; but of Gawein
knewe thei no tidynges, for he was so depe in a-monge the
saisnes that it was no light thynge hym for to fynde.  Whan
the saisnes sawgh the kynge Gynehans deed, thei were so a-masid
that thei wiste not what to do, but turned to flight vpon the


<PB REF="" N="200" ID="pb.200"/>

bataile of kynge Madelen that was theire chief lorde, and there
recouered thei that fledde; and Gawein, that hadde gon here and
there, that nothynge cowde here of his bretheryn, and wiste not
whether thei were discounfited or noon, he hovid stille till he
saugh his felowes comynge, and whan that he knewe it were
thei, he was gladde; and thei renged hem aboute Gawein, for of
hym thei hadde be in grete feere.  And Madalen rode with grete
plente of peple, and were vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and it ne myght not longe endure
but the Gawein sholde haue ben loste, wher-of it hadde ben
grete damage and harme to all the londe of logres, but as the
socoure com oute of the Citee, and were v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes.  Whan
the childeren saugh the socour that com oute of logres, and the
baner that doo of Cardoell brought, The men of contrey that were
with the childeren badde hem be of gode counforte, for "loo!  heere
cometh the Citee of logres yow for to helpe and to socoure."  Whan
the childeren vndirstode that thei of logres were come hem for to
helpe thei were gladde and ioyfull.  Than thei refresshed theire
horse, and girde hem newe agein, and lepten vp, and hem renged,
and after rode streyte and close, and the saisness com hem ageins
full Irouse and crewell for the deth of Guynehans.  Than thei
braste theire speres in theire counterynge vpon sheldes and
helmes, and be-gan a bataile full fell and merveillouse, whiche
myght not be with-oute grete losse on bothe partyes.  Than com
in a-monge hem the socour that com out of logres as faste as
theire horse myght renne, and ther sholde ye haue herde grete
crasinge of speres, and than thei drowgh oute swerdes, and
begonne ther a stronge bataile and mortall, ffor ther was shedde so
moche blode that it ran like stremes doun the valey.</P>
<P>  Full grete was the stour and the medle in the playnes be-fore
logres of the childeren and the socoure that com oute of
logres, and of the saisnes, and dured all the day till it was
nyght.  Ther dide Gawein soche merveiles in armes that wondirfully was
he be-holden of hem of logres, for he smote down men and horse,
and slow so many, that noon ne durste hym no stroke
a-bide.  Than fill it that he mette with the kynge Madelen, that hadde
ouerthrowe Doo of Cardoell, that was the captein of logres, and

<PB REF="" N="201" ID="pb.201"/>

heilde hym be the helme at the erthe, and peyned sore hys heede
of to smyten; and ther-with com Gawein,   <MILESTONE N="69a" UNIT="folio"/>but ther tho was grete
stoure and hidouse, for that oon part bisied for the rescew, and
the tother hym for to sle or with-holde; but the kynge ther
myght thei not take, for he hadde so grete plente of peple; and
ther-with Gawein smote so grete strokes a-monge hem that he
made hem alle to disseuer, and it fill so that Madalen com in his
wey, and he smote hym so with bothe hondes with his axe vpon
the helme that he slitte hym to the brayn, and he fell ded to
the erthe.</P>
<P>  Whan the saisnes saugh the kynge Madalen deed, thei were
so mased that they turned to flight, oon here and a-nother
there, and toke the wey to Valdesbires ther the sege lay.  Than
a-roos the duste and the powder so grete that vn-nethe oon myght
knowe a-nother, ne noon ne a-bode his felowe; but there were
many ouerthrown in that chase, for as soone as Doo was
remounted he hem chased vigerously, but the childeren were euer
to foren, that made soche martirdom vpon the saisnes, that fyve
myle lay the wey full of hem that were wounded and caste to
grounde, and thourgh the helpe of god and of hem that come
oute of the Citee, thei slough of hem so many that of xij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> ne
ascaped not iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that ne were deed or wounded, and thus were
the saisnes discounfited, and the chase endured till nyght.  Than
thei turned gladde and ioyfull to the Citee, where as thei founde
merveilouse richesse that thei hadde rescued fro the saisnes of
that thei hadde robbed and piled thourgh the londe and the
contrey, whiche was all ledde in to the Cite of logres.</P>
<P>  Whan the childeren were alle come to logres, the Citee made
of hem grete ioye whan thei hem knewe.  Than thei
brought be-fore theym all the riche prise that thei hadde geten,
and seide vnto Gewein, that thei heilde for the chief lorde, that
he sholde it departe at his voluntee; and he ansuerde that he
wolde ther-of medle in no manere before Doo of Cardoel, "for," he
seide, "he can it beter departe and yeve than can I, ffor he
knoweth beste the pore and the suffretouse, and ther-fore do his
volunte."


<PB REF="" N="202" ID="pb.202"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan the Citezins herde Gawein thus speke, thei hym
comended and preysed moche, and seide he myght not
faile to be a worthy man; and thei hym loved hertely a-bove alle
thynge, and preised the grete gentilnesse that thei hym
founden.  Thus restede the childeren and soiournede in the Citee of logres,
that the saisnes ne dide hem no forfete.  But now cesseth the
story of the childeren at this tyme that ne speketh a gret while,
aud returneth to kynge Arthur and kynge ban and kynge boors,
and her companye, that be gon in to the reame of Tamelide for
to serue the kynge leodogan.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.14">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XIV. 
<LB/> EXPEDITION OF ARTHUR, BAN, AND BOORS TO SUCCOUR LEODOGAN AT TAMELIDE.</HEAD>
<P>  Right here, seith the frensch booke, that whan the kynge
Arthur was departed fro Bredigan, he and the kynge Ban,
of benoyk, and the kynge boors of Gannes, his brother, that
thei rode so her iournes till thei com to Tarsaide, and after to
Tamelide, where as the kynge leodogan soiourned vpon the Pasche
euen; and whan thei entred into the Citee, Merlin rode with hym
vpon a grete stede as he that wolde not hym leven in no
manere.    <MILESTONE N="69b" UNIT="folio"/>Than thei com to the paleise, and fonde the kynge leodogan
gretly affraied, ffor the kynge Ryon was entred his londe vpon
hym with xv kynges crowned, and hadde hym discounfited and
dryven oute of the feilde; and thei were loigged at a seige be-fore
a Citee cleped Nablaise, that was a grete town and a riche, and
plentevouse of alle goodes.  Of this thynge was the kynge leodogan
gretly a-baisshed and dismayed, ffor his enmyes hadde brought
vpon hym soche a grete puyssaunce of peple, and he ne kowde
no counseile how he myght his londe deffende agein the kynge
Ryon, ffor he hadde not peple in his reame sufficient to a-reyse
hem fro the sege, ne to chase hem oute of his reame, and so ther-of
he counseilled with his knyghtes that were with hym be-lefte,
and asked of hem counseile and her advys.


<PB REF="" N="203" ID="pb.203"/>
</P>
<P>  In the while that kynge leodogan toke thus his counseile of his
knyghtes, entred in the kynge Arthur and his companye
in to the Paleise, and com be-fore the kynge leodogan, holdynge
eche othir be the honde, two and two to-geder; and the storye seith
that with arthur were xl, and hym-self and Merlin made xlij,
and thei weren alle right wele clothed and richely arrayed, and
alle yonge bacheleres at pryme barbe, excepte the two kynges that
yede be-fore, that somdell were in age, and thei were feire knyghtes
and semely, and thei were be-holden of grete and smale of alle
that were ther-Inne, ffor thei were of freissh aray and riche atire;
and whan thei com be-fore the kynge leodogan, a-noon he a-roos
and yede hem a-geins, for hym semed thei weren high men and
of grete astate.  Than spake the kynge ban first, and salued the
kynge leodogan as soone as he myght, and the kynge seide thei
were welcome yef thei come for goode.  "Certes, sir," seide he,
"for noon euell ne be we not entred in to youre reame, but we
be come to serue yow, with this condicion, that ye desire not to
knowe oure names in to the tyme that we lete yow wyte of oure
voluntee, and but it plese yow in this maner, we commaunde
yow to god, that he yow deffende from all euell and disese, ffor
we shulde fynde I-nowe that vs will resceyve in soche forme as
we yow demaunde, but we haue herde sey that ye with-holde
alle the sowdioures that yow will come.  Now sey vs youre
pleysier."</P>
<P>  Than ansuerde the kynge leodogan that he wolde a-vise hym
by his counseile, and besekynge hem ther-with not to be
displesed, and thei ansuerde agein to be at his leiser.  Than
cleped the kynge leodogan the knyghtes of the rounde table, and
asked how hem semed of that the knyghtes hym demaunded, and
what was her counseile; and thei ansuerde that to with-holde
hem myght he haue no damage, ffor thei semede to be of grete
wordynesse, "and resceyve hem in goddes name, and pray hem as
soone as thei may to sey what thei be, and to make hem to be
knowen."  Than departed the   <MILESTONE N="70a" UNIT="folio"/>kynge fro the counseile, and com
in to the halle where the barouns hym a-biden, and than he seide
to hem, "Feire lordynges, me merveileth gretly of that ye haue


<PB REF="" N="204" ID="pb.204"/>

me requered, that ye will not that noon knowe what ye be, ne
what be youre names, and of soche thynge herde I neuer speke,
but by youre semblaunte ye seme alle worthi men, and therfore
I will in no wise with-sey that ye requere, and be ye right
welcome, and I yow with-holde as my lordes and felowes in soche
forme that ye shull me ensure to helpe me feithfully and trewly
while that ye be in my companye; but thus moche I will yow
hertely prayen, that as soone as ye godely mayen, ye will lete me
wite what ye be; and I shall telle yow wherfore, for ye may be
soche that I sholde haue shame that I haue yow not serued as ye
ought for to be, for par-a-uenture ye be of higher astate than
am I."  And thei ansuerde that he ne sholde to hem do nothynge
but thei wolde it gladly take in gre; and the kynge Ban hym
graunted for to telle her names as soone as tyme requered, and
than thei made theire suerte to the kynge leodogan hym trewely
for to serue.</P>
<P>  Than thei departed from the kynge, and wente in to the town
for to take the beste loiggynge that thei myght knowe;
and Merlin hem ledde to the house of a vauasour, that was right
a gode man and a yonge bacheler, and the herberowe was right
godely and esy, and the wif was right a noble woman and a feire,
and goode to god and to the worlde.  The lorde of the house was
a worthy man and of gode livynge, and his name was blaires and
his wif leonell; and whan thei com be-fore the place, blaires lepe
oute hem a-geins, and seide thei were welcome, and thei hym
thankeden.  A-noon thei lighten and yede vp in to the halle that
was right feire and welle seyn, and the yomen dight her horses
well at ese.  Thus thei soiourned in the town viij dayes full, and
nothinge dide but ete and dranke and made hem mery, and wente
to the courte euen and morowe whan thei wolden; and the kynge
leodogan hem serued and wurshiped in all that he myght, and
yet he will more whan he knoweth what thei be, he will not
holde his trauayle nothinge loste; and more-ouer the kynge
leodogan somowned his peple thourgh-oute his reame, alle tho that
armes myght bere, that at the ascencion thei sholde be at Toraise
redy armed hem-self to deffende in bataile a-gein theire enmyes;

<PB REF="" N="205" ID="pb.205"/>

and alle tho that ne wolde not come, he lete hem well wite that
thei sholde haue as streyte Iustice as longed to theuis and
traytoures; and also the kynge leodogan sente after hys frendes and
sowdiours ouer all where he myght hem gete for golde or siluer,
and ther com so grete plente of oon and other, that thei were
assembled on the ascencion euen in the medowes vndir Toraise,
and loigged in teyntes and pavilouns, xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, what on horse bakke
and on fote, with-oute hem that were in the town, where-of ther
were vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; but the story seith that in tho dayes fyve hundred   <MILESTONE N="70b" UNIT="folio"/>was
cleped a thousande.  In the tyme that kynge leodogan hadde
somowned so his peple, it be-fill on a tewisday, at euen, in the
entreynge of May, That the kynge Ryolent and the kynge
Phariouns, of Irelonde, and the kynge Senygres, and the kynge Serans,
were departed fro the hoste with xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and ran
thourgh the contrey for vitaile, whereof thei hadde grete nede;
and it be-fill that thei com wastynge the contrey toward Torayse,
where the kynge leodogan of Tamelide soiourned, and a-bode his
peple that he hadde sente after.  Than herde the kynge the noyse
of hem that gadered to-geder the pray, and robbed the londe and
the contrey a-boute Torayse, and thei of the town hem perceyved,
and than thei closed the yates, and the knyghtes that were
with-ynne at soiourne ronne to theire armes and lepe to theire horse,
and assembled hem to-geder with-ynne the yates.  Than were
alle the knyghtes of the rounde table armed, and the gouernaunce
of hem hadde hervy the Rivell and males ly bruns, and thei were
two hundred and fifty that alle were noble gode knyghtes and trewe,
and were so worthi in armes, that vndir sonne men myght fynde
noon better: these were alle in a wynge by hem-self, for thei
wolde not be medled a-monge noon other; and on the tother side
side the knyghtes and the peple of the Citee arayed hem, and
thei were iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and of these hadde the stiward the gouernaunce
hem to lede, that was cleped Cleodalis.  This cleodalis was wonte
to bere the chief baner of the kynge, but euer after that the
knyghtes of the rounde table were come, hervy the Rivell it bar;
but he bar a smal ganfanon of two smale losenges of goules, and
the feelde of golde and crownes of ynde; and the grete baner that


<PB REF="" N="206" ID="pb.206"/>

hervy bar was of iiij losenges full of crownes of golde.  Whan thei
were well armed, thei renged hem be-fore the portes, and a-bode
the comaundement of the kynge; and whan the kynge was armed,
he lepe on a grete stede of greet bounte, and rode to the baner
that hervy bar, and ther he hoved still till thei saugh come the
sarazins, and were mo than vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> on horsebak.</P>
<P>  And on the tother side was arthur well armed, and alle his
his companye, and thei were alle richely horsed.  And
Merlin bar that day the baner, and he comaunded hem alle, that
as dere as thei heilden her owen bodies, that thei sholde sue that
baner all that day in what place that it yede; and thei seide alle
that thei so wolden.  Than thei set forth her wey thourgh the
town, so fresch and richely armed that no peple might be better,
and thei were xlj, with-oute Merlin that bar the baner, soche oon
that for a grete merveile was be-holden of oon and other that
day, for he bar a dragon that was not right grete, and the taile
was a fadome and an half of lengthe tortue, and he hadde a wide
throte that the tounge semed braulinge euer, and it semed sparkles
of fier that sprongen vp in to the heire out of his throte.  With
that com Geauntes, and the Sarazins, and smote theire speres vpon
the yates of the town, and after   <MILESTONE N="71a" UNIT="folio"/>turned down the medowes, for
thei fonde no man that yaf hem ansuere, and gadered to-geder
alle the prayes of bestes that were in the medowes.  And Merlin
eschuwed alle that were in the stretes of the town, and rode
thourgh hem euen to the yates with his meyne, and seide than
to the porter, "Lete oute, for it is tyme;" and the porter seide
thei sholde not oute of the yates till the kynge hadde
comaunded.  "What," seide Merlin, "makeste thow daunger of that I haue
as grete power as thow."  Than Merlin caught the flayle of the
yate and plukked it to hym and yede oute as lightly as it hadde
not haue ben lokked, and than departed oute <CHOICE><CORR>magre</CORR><SIC>mage</SIC></CHOICE> how it
grucchid.  Whan these xlij felowes weren oute of the town, than
the gate was as close as it hadde neuer be opened at that tyme,
and of that merveile blissid the kynge ban and the kynge boors
his brother, and alle the tother.  And Merlin priked faste his
horse till he ouer-toke a grete company of sarazins that were two


<PB REF="" N="207" ID="pb.207"/>

thousande or mo, that ledde grete plente of beestes, and Merlin
frusht a-monge hem with his banere, and his companye with hym,
and leyde on sore strokes, and in her metynge ouer-threw alle that
thei countred, and in lesse than an hour thei hadde hem so slayn
and chased, that thei toke the pray and ledde it to the gates of
the town; but thei hadde gon but a-while when thei saugh iiij
kynges com with xv thousande men of armes, that ledde so grete
cariage of robbery that thei hadde piled thourgh the contrey, and
were towarde the see.  Whan Merlin hem saugh, he seide to his
felowes, "Suweth me," and thei so diden; and it fill so that
a-noon, as Merlin hadde caste a charme, there rose soche a wynde
and storme so grete, that the powder and the duste a-rose with
the wynde, and smote in the visages of the Geauntes and sarazins,
that oon myght not right wele knowe a-nother.</P>
<P>  And a-noon as the xlij felowes were in a-monge hem, thei
slowe and ouerthrewe so many that it was wonder to
thinke; and than comaunded the kynge leodogan to open the
yates.  Than Issed oute first the stiwarde Cleodales formeste (with iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men of armes), and fonde the yate close where as thei yssed oute,
that foughten agein xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men so harde that it was merveile.  Than
com Cleodalis with his banere, and smote in a-monge the presse right
hidously; ther sholde ye haue herde grete brekinge of speres, and
grete noyse of swerdes vpon helmes and vpon sheldes, that the
sownde was herde in to the Citee clerly; ther was grete defoulinge
of men and horse; but there the xlij felowes shewed merveiles
with her bodies.</P>
<P>  Whan these iiij kynges saugh that these were a-monge hem
medelinge, thei departed her peple in tweyne, and lefte
viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> fighting stille; and vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> rode a-gein the banere of kynge
leodogan that thei saugh come oute of the town, and the ton rode a-gein
the tother full fercely; and whan thei neighed nygh, thei lowed ther
speres, and   <MILESTONE N="71b" UNIT="folio"/>yaf to-geder so grete strokes vpon sheldes, that thei
perced haubrekes, and dismailed, and many ther were throwen to
grounde sore bledynge with stroke of speres, and many ther were
that passed thourgh with-oute fallinge.  Whan the speres were
broken, thei leide honde to swerdes, and be-gonne the bataile grete


<PB REF="" N="208" ID="pb.208"/>

and merveilouse; but ther sholde ye haue seyn the knyghtes of
the rounde table do wondres, and thei were but CC and fifty, and
thei that were fightinge with hem were vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and so were the
knyghtes of the rounde table at gret myschief, for thei be-hoved
to disparble, whethir thei wolde or noon, and voyde the place;
but thei heilde hem to-geder so close and streite, that noon myght
hem perce ne entyr in amonge hem.  Whan the kynge Riolent
and the kynge placiens saugh that so litill a peple withstode so
grete a power as thei were, thei hadde ther-of grete merveile and
grete dispyte; than thei cried theire ensigne, and swore that
neuer oon of hem sholde ascape.  Than thei yaf hem a grete shoure
and a felonouse, for at that shofte thei ouerthrewe mo than xl,
and moche thei hem peyned hem to diffoule and to maymen, but her
felowes were vpon hem arrestynge, and hem deffended from theire
enmyes with her swerdes with all theire myght; and than it fill
that the kynge leodogan was throwen fro his horse full lothly,
and thei token hym with strengthe and ledde hym toward prison,
with moo than v<HI REND="sup">C</HI>, in to the hoste of kynge Rion of Irlonde, and
thei hym ledde full fiercely, for thei wende wele that alle here
werre hadde be fynysshed.  And so thei ledde the kynge leodogan in
alle the haste that thei myght, and whan the kynge leodogan
saugh hym so mysfallen, and that his enmyes hadde hym taken,
he sowowned often tymes and made grete sorowe; and thei that
hym ledden spedden hem so faste that thei were fro the town two
myle.  Full grete was the noyse of the vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and the
CC l. knyghtes of the rounde table that were full hevy and wroth for
the kynge that thei hadde loste, and than seide a-monge hem and
assured to-geder seth it was com ther-to, and that thei saugh all
sholde be loste, than thei wolde avenge her shame and deth as
longe as they myght lyven.  Than thei sette her bakkes eche to
other, and hem deffended merveilously, and <SUPPLIED>made</SUPPLIED> soche slaughter
of men and horse a-boute hem with-oute remevynge oute of place,
and so moche peyne and traueile thei suffred, that thei that were
at the wyndowes of the palise that saugh the merveile wepte for
pite; and Gonnore, the doughter of kynge leodogan, whan she
saugh her fader ledde a-monge his enmyes, she made so gret

<PB REF="" N="209" ID="pb.209"/>

sorowe that nygh she slowe hir-self for doell.  But now lete vs
cesse to speke of hem till tyme cometh a-gein, and speke of the
kynge Arthur and his felowes, how that thei haue spedde in the
bataile a-gein the viij thousande with the stiwarde Cleodalis of
Tamelide.</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="72a" UNIT="folio"/>Now, seith the storie, that stronge and crewell was the stour
ther as the bateile was, where as the xlij felowes and the
iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml </HI>that were with Cleodalis, the stiwarde, that foughten a-gein
viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> Sarazins; and many ther were slayn that lay grennynge on
the grounde.  And whan thei hadde longe tyme fought to-geder,
Merlin rode a grete walop oute of the bataile, and cried to his
felowes that thei sholde sue hym, and thei so dide in grete haste,
and rode as faste as the horse myght hem bere, till that thei were
passed all theire peple, and than thei encresed her pas gretter, and
rode towarde the siege the right wey ther as the Geauntes and
the sarazins were, till that thei come in a valey that was right
depe, and ther thei ouer-toke the v C sarasins that ledde the kynge
leodogan; and as soone as Merlin hym saugh, he cried, "Now
lordinges, vpon hem, for ye be by-trayed and deed yef eny of
of hem ascape."  Than thei drive in a-monge hem as tempest of
thunder, and kilde and slough all that thei raught a right stroke
in her comynge, and ther ne was noon of the xlj but he slowe or
maymed whom that he mette.  Ther sholde ye haue seyn soche
martirdom, and soche slaughter of men and of horse, that noon ne
myght ascape, so were thei supprised and a-stonyed, saf oonly
fyve that ascaped, fleinge thei rought neuer what wey.  Thus
haue thei rescowed the kynge leodogan; and whan the kynge
saugh the grete martire and the occision that so fewe peple hadde
don a-gein so many, he merveyled gretly what thei myght be;
than he be-heilde and knewe it was the dragon that Merlyn
bar.  Than knewe he wele that it were the sowdiours that he hadde
with-holden, and than he thanked god of the socoure that he hadde
hym sente.  Than com Merlin to hym, and than he rested; whan
saugh the kynge leodogan bounden he alight, and so dide Bretell,
and hym vn-bounden, and right his armoure, and sethen made
hym to lepe on a steede that was stronge and swyfht; and the


<PB REF="" N="210" ID="pb.210"/>

kynge hem thonkeden hertely of the servise thei hadde hym
don.  Than cried Merlin, "Gentill knyghtes, what tarye ye heere
so long?  suweth me!"  Than he rode a grete raundon towarde the
town, where the knyghtes of the rounde table were at gret myschief,
that of CC l. ne were but xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> on horsebak, but deffended hem on
fote as wilde bores; and Merlin bar the baner be-fore, and rode as
faste as he myght, and his felowes also, that theire horses swetten;
and the dragon that Merlin bar caste oute gret flames of fiere,
that it sparkeled vp in the ayre, that thei vpon the walles of the
town saugh the clernesse of the light half a myle longe.  Whan
thei of Citee saugh the kynge that was her lorde, and saugh it
were the xlij felowes, and with hem the kynge leodogan that
thei hadde rescued, thei hadde grete ioye; and whan Gonnore
this saugh, she spronge for ioye, and merveiled what the knyghtes
were that com in that company; and thei com as faste as thunder
so harde a-monge her enmyes, and in her comynge ech   <MILESTONE N="72b" UNIT="folio"/>threwe
oone to grounde; and as soone as the xlij felowes were smyten
in a-monge hem, ther be-gan a grete bataile, and soche slaughter
of men and horse, that the maiden that was lenynge oute at the
wyndowes of the paleise herde the grete strokes.  Ther yaf the
kynge ban, of Benoyk, many strokes with corchense, his gode
swerde, ffor whom he a-rafte a full stroke, ther waranted hym
neither shelde, ne haubreke, ne noon armure, that he kutte all
thourgh-oute at oon stroke, and many sithes he smote bothe horse
and man to grounde at a stroke, and so dide hys brother, the
kynge Boors, of gannes.  And the sarazins hem be-heilde for grete
merveile that thei saugh hem do; and the kynge Arthur dide
soche merveiles with Calibourne, his gode swerde, ffor ther a-gein
myght noon armure endure, were it neuer so stronge, ffor what
he a-raught was at his endynge for euer.</P>
<P>  Grete was the bataile be-fore the town of Toraise ther as the
CC l. knyghtes of the rounde table and the xlij felowes
<SUPPLIED>foughten</SUPPLIED> agein the sarazins; but thei haue so foughten that of
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> beth lefte but v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, wherfore thei beth sory and wroth for the
kynge Canlent that thei haue loste; and than fill it so that the kynge
ban mette with kynge Clarion, that was the moste man of the


<PB REF="" N="211" ID="pb.211"/>

hoste of alle the Geauntes; and the storye seith that the kynge
ban was a moche knyght of body, and a stronge, and coragous
and hardy.  The kynge heilde corchense, his gode suerde, and
smote the kynge Clarion so sore vpon the helme that he slit it
dowon to the eere, the stroke fill vpon the lifte shulder, that he
slitte hym to the girdell; and the kynge Boors so smote Sarmedon,
the ganfanoner, that he kutte of the arme with all the sheilde,
and the baner fill to the erthe.  This stroke saugh the kynge
leodogan, and seide, "Now be there no knyghtes but these that
so well conne helpe at nede."  And whan the Geauntes saugh
theire lorde deed, and her baner fallen, thei turned to flight, oon
here another there; and than com oute of the town knyghtes and
sergeauntes two thousande, and be-gonne the chase vpon hem that
turned to flight; but Merlin turned not that wey as thei fledde,
but wente to the bataile ther as Cleodalis faught fercely with
iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men a-gein viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  Whan Merlin com to the bataile, he fonde
Cleodalis was on fote fightinge, and heilde yet the baner vp right,
and his men a-boute hym renged, that well hym deffended as
worthy men; but thei were at grete myscheif, and in poynte to
haue hadde grete losse in short tyme, whan Merlin com drivinge
amonge hem with his dragon and his xlj felowes, of whiche ye
haue herde that in her comynge ferde as tempeste, and ther-to
thei were alle so well horsed that no men myght be better, and
the kynge leodogan was euer with hem that in no wise wolde
hem leten; and whan these xlij felowes were in a-monge the
Geauntes ther was soche marteleise and soche noise as so many
Carpenteres in a wode.  Ther was stronge stour and fell and
dolerouse, for ther sholde ye haue sein knyghtes and sergeauntes<MILESTONE N="73a" UNIT="folio"/>
  falle as thikke as it hadde be reyn: ther sholde ye se stedes and
horse renne maisterles, their reynes trailynge vndir fote, wher-of
the sadeles were all blody of knyghtes that ther-ynne hadde be
slayn: ther sholde ye haue herde soche bruyt and soche noyse
and cry that it was merveile and grete doell to here.  Ther dide
the xlij felowes so well that it was spoken of longe tyme after
her deth in that contrey; and the storye seith thei mangled and
slow so many, that by the traces oon myght haue sued half a day


<PB REF="" N="212" ID="pb.212"/>

euery wey of the deed bodies and horse that thei hadde wounded,
as thei that nought ne cessed ne rested; and therfore me semeth
reson to reherse the names of tho worthi men.</P>
<P>  The first was kynge Ban of benoyk, and the seconde was
kynge Boors of Gannes, and the thirde was kynge Arthur,
and the forthe was Antor, the v<HI REND="sup">e</HI> was Vlfin, the vj<HI REND="sup">e</HI> Bretell, the
vij<HI REND="sup">e</HI> was kay, the viij lucas the botiller, the ix<HI REND="sup">e</HI> was Gifflet, the
x<HI REND="sup">e</HI> maret de la roche, the xj drias de la forest sauage, the xij
belias de amerous of maydons castell, the xiij<HI REND="sup">e</HI> flaundryns le bret,
the xiiij ladynas de benoyk, the xv amoret le brun, the xvj
Anticolas le rous, the xvij blois del casset, the xviij blioberis,
the xix Canade, the xx Meliadus le bloys, the xxj Aladan the
crespes, the xxij Placidas ly gays, the xxiij leonpadys of the
playn, the xxiiij Ierohas lenches, the xxv Christofer de la roche
byse, the xxvj Ayglin de vans, the xxvij Calogreuaunt, the
xxviij Aguysale de desirouse, the xxix Agresianx, the nevew of
the wise lady of the foreste with-oute returne, the xxx Chalis
the orphenyn, the xxxj Grires de lambal, the xxxij kehedin de
belly, the xxxiij Meranges de porlenges, the xxxiiij Gosnayns
cadrus, the xxxv Clarias of Gaule, the xxxvj the lays hardy, the
xxxvij Anmadius the proude, the xxxvij Osenayn cors hardy,
xxxix Galescowde, xl Gales, the xlj bleoris the sone of kynge
Boors, the xlij was Merlin, and the xliij was the kynge leodogan
that in no wise wolde hem leve.  These xliij worthi knyghtes
wente to the rescew of Cleodalis, the stiwarde of Tamelide, that
was a noble knyght, and right trewe, and full of grete hardynesse,
and well it shewde that for noon vnkyndenesse that the kynge
leodogan hadde don a-gein hym he wolde hym not forsake, ne
leve hym in his myscheif in no nede that he was in, but
therynne he dide moche more than many other wolde haue don, and
I shall sey yow the cause why.  This was the troweth, that the
kynge leodogan hadde a wif, a lady of grete bewte and of high
lynage, and whan he hadde brought here in to Tamelide out of
her fader londe, after that he hadde her wedded, this lady brought
with hire a mayden that was of grete bewte.  This maiden loved
the stiward so moche that on a day he asked hir of the kynge

<PB REF="" N="213" ID="pb.213"/>

leodogan for to haue her to his wif, that many a day hadde hym
serued, and the kynge hym graunted for his gode servise; and
whan thei were maried and she satte at the table a-monge other
ladyes, and she was richely arayed, the kynge liked moche hir
bewte, and soche a fantasie fill  <MILESTONE N="73b" UNIT="folio"/> in his herte that he cowde not it
remeve, and he hym covered in the beste maner that he cowde,
and she was with-oute faile oon of the feirest of the worlde; till
it fill on a feste of seint Iohn that the kynge sente Cleodalis vpon
a iourney a-gein the saisnes that vpon hym werred that tyme,
and the lady that was lefte with the quene for companye, that
moche her lovid with grete love, hit fill on a nyght that the
kynge leodogan lay by the quene, and that nyght vpon hir he
begat a doughter, that was cleped Gonnore whan she was
baptised, the whiche after was of merveilouse bewte and the wif of
kynge Arthur; and this lady that was wif to kynge lodogan was
a goode lady and holy of livinge, and hadde an vsage to a-rise on
nyghtes and go to chirche to sey matyns and to heere all seruyse
to messe.  That nyght that the quene hadde conceyved Gonnore
her doughter, she yede to matyns, and com by the stiwardes wif,
and fonde her slepynge and wolde not her a-wake, but wente and
lefte her lyinge a-slepe, and wente forth a-lone to the cherche,
that was faste by, with hir sawter in her hande; and the kynge,
that longe had desired to speke with that lady, a-rose as soone as
the quene was gon, and dide oute the taperes that were
brennynge, and than wente to ly by the stiwardes wif, and whan the
lady felte oon lyinge by her, she asked what he was, all affraied;
and than he ansuerde how it was he, and bad hir be stille, and
seide yef she made eny noyse she sholde be deed.  The lady her
deffended I-nowgh as with speche, but she durste not crye ne
make no noyse; but litill a-vailed her defense, for the kynge by
hir lay, and on hir he gat a doughter the same nyght that he
had geten Gonnore on his wife.  And whan the quene was
delyuered ther was founde vpon the childes reynes a litill crosse
like a crowne for a kynge; and as soone as the quene was
delyuered, the stiwardes wif be-gan to traueyle, and hadde a
doughter of feire bewte, and was so like the quenes doughter,


<PB REF="" N="214" ID="pb.214"/>

that oon cowde not knowe oon from a-nother but by the crosse
vpon her reynes, and eche of hem hight Gonnere in bapteme, and
were norrisshed and brought vp to-geder till that the quene was
deed; and the kynge yet was not keled of the love of the
stiwardes wif, and he her toke and shet her in a Castell, for he
wolde not the stiwarde sholde speke with hir.  In soche maner
he heilde her more than v yere, till that the stiwardes frendes
spake vn-to hym, and he seide he wolde not faile the kynge
while he hadde werre, and yet the same tyme that kynge Arthur
com for to serue, he hir heilde in the selue maner, and yet for all
this the stiwarde neuer feyned to serue.  But now lete vs retourne
to speke of the stiwarde ther he is fightynge on fote amonge the
Gyauntes, for all be tyme we shull speke of the twey Gonnores
whan the mater fallith ther-to.</P>
<P>  Now, seith the storye, that grete was the bataile, and
mortall, ther as the stiward   <MILESTONE N="74a" UNIT="folio"/>Cleodalis was on fote
a-monge the Geauntes and the saisnes, and as soone as the xlij
fellowes were entred a-monge hem, thei disparbelid the renges
harde; ther myght ye se oon fall deed after a-nothir as thikke as
haile, and many a stede renne thourgh the feilde at the rescewe
of the stiwarde, for ther was many a grete stroke yoven that
made many a gentill lady to wepe for her bretheren and for her
childeren, but magre hirs thei were driven bakke.  Whan
Sonygrenx and Sorfrains saugh the damage and the grete occision that
so litill a peple dide, thei toke it in grete dispite.  Than thei
blewe theire trumpes and theire tymberes to assemble theire
peple, and Sonygrenx restreyned his peple a-boute hym, and as
he hadde hem assembled a-boute hym, kay the stiwarde, and
lucas the boteller, and Gifflet, hem renged, and smyten in a-monge
hem, and eche of hem griped a stronge spere, and kay smote
sonygrenx so that he fill from his horse that he lay a starke while
with-oute sterynge of hande or foote, and lucas and Gefflet smote
down othir towe deed.  Whan the saisnes saugh Sonygrenx at
erthe, thei shoff to the rescewe, and the xlij felowes sterten a-boute
hym with swerdes drawen, and the saisnes pressed to releve the
kynge Sonygrenx, but the xlij felowes hem deffended so that thei


<PB REF="" N="215" ID="pb.215"/>

myght hym not nyegh, and so was he foule troden vndir horse
feete er he myght be remounted, ffor the grete presse of saisnes
were ther assembled.  And Merlin that bar the baner come to
socoure the thre felowes that I haue named, that right soone elles
myght haue hadde damage.  Here assembled agein all the
turnement, and Cleodalis was horsed vpon a grey steede, and he yet
heilde the kynges baner stille.  Than he cryde his ensigne fierscely
and rode in to the presse, he and his men, as faste as the horse
myght renne; and ther was than merveilouse stour and harde,
for than ther sholde ye see many a knyght ly ded vnder the horse
feet; but the saisnes were so many that they myght not be perced
lightly thourgh, but stode stiffly a-gein the crysten.  Than fill it
so that the vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that were discounfited be-fore Torayse fill to the
peple of Sonygrenx and Sorfrain, and ther a-bode all tho that
fledden so thikke that thei putte the cristen bakke more than the
draught of an arblast; but the xlij felowes ne remeved neuer
a foote londe fro the place, and ther Sonygrenx was vn-horsed, but
with grete peyne was Sonygrenx remounted, that foule and
dispitously was diffouled vnder horse feet, and than was the stour
renewed, for sore he hym peyned to a-venge the same that he
hadde resceyved, and ran vpon the cristen, he and his men, and
smote hem sore with swerdes and speres, and enclosed hem rounde
a-boute.  Than Merlin smote in to the presse vigerously with the
baner in his honde, and the knyghtes of the rounde table, that
were remounted and newe araide, com to that medle a softe pase
streite and clos, and whan thei saugh be-fore hem the signe of
the dragon that Merlin bar, thei dressed that wey, for wele
hadde thei ther-by be   <MILESTONE N="74b" UNIT="folio"/>socoured ther thei were in grete a-venture
of deth.</P>
<P>  Whan the knyghtes of the rounde table approched the bataile
thei sprongen in a-monge hem so felly, that thei bare
down all that thei mette in her comynge, and whan the speres
were broken thei drough oute theire swerdes and be-gonne the
stour all newe fresshly and full fiercely; and on the tother side
faught Cleodalis and his men full strongely, but for power that
thei hadde thei myght holde no grounde, ffor the kynge fforfrain


<PB REF="" N="216" ID="pb.216"/>

ledde hem felonously towarde the town, and fro the town com
hem to helpe two thousande of hem that hadde chased theym
that fledde; and whan thei saugh the baner of stiwarde, and the
gret peple that hem suwed, they turned that wey, and sette so
fiercely vpon hem, that moo than a thousande thei leid to the
erthe in her comynge; and tho a-bode the peple of Cloedalis, and
kepte her grounde, and be-gonne a-gein the stour so grete, that
half a myle of men myght heere the noyse; and so thei heilde
grete while the ton agein the tother, and that was a-gein the
kynge Sofarin that hadde moo than viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, a-gein Cleodalis that
hadde ner vj<HI REND="sup">M</HI>l, and than thei heilde hem well peringall.</P>
<P>  And on the tother side faught the knyghtes of the rounde
table right sore, and the xlij felowes, a-gein Sonygrenx
and his men that were vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and so thei were at grete myscheif,
for thei were but CCC saf viij, and the sarazins were moo than
iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; and than Merlin cleped the kynge Ban, and seide to alle
the tother, "Sirs, wher-after a-byde ye that ye ne put hem to
disconfiture?" and thei ansuerde, "How?"  "Sirs, I shall telle
yow," quod Merlin; "ther be but v Geauntes in the place that
all this sustene, and yef ye may delyuer of hem thre, the place
a-noon shalbe voyde."  "Wher be thei, sir?" seide the kynge
Ban.  "Trewly," quod Merlin, "Vlfin and Bretell and Gifflet
and kay and lucas the boteller be with hem medelinge, and
therfore folowe after me, for a-noon shull we se who shall do beste
of this companye."  Than smote Merlin the horse with the spores
that swyftly hym bar, and smote in to the medle that was right
grete of fyve knyghtes a-gein x Geauntes grete and stronge out of
mesure; and the kynge Ban, that was an huge knyght and an
hardy and a stronge, com formest of alle, and fill hym wele that
he mette first with the kynge Sonygrenx, and the kynge Ban
gript his swerde, that was all be-soyled with blode and brayn,
and hitte Sonygrenx on the helme of stele, and in the swarvinge,
the stroke, that was grete, descended be-twene the shelde, and
kutte a-sonder the gyge with all honde that it fly in to the
feilde; and whan Sonygrenx saugh hym so araide, a-noon he turned
to flight, and caste a grete brayt and an orible, and wente makinge

<PB REF="" N="217" ID="pb.217"/>

grete sorowe.  And the kynge Arthur hitte Margalyuaunt thourgh
the helme euen down to the teth; and the kynge Boors smote
so Seleuaunt that he slitte a quarter of his helme, the swerde
glenched vpon the lifte shulder and smote it clene a-sonder, and
he  <MILESTONE N="75a" UNIT="folio"/> fill to grounde; and Vlfin smote so balan that he fill to
grounde all blody, and Bretell smote also down Cordaunt, and
kay dandevart, and lucas smote Malet, and Gifflet mynadap, and
merangis slow Saduc, and Gosenaym slow doulas; and as soone
as the saisnes saugh these down, thei were so dismayed, that of
a grete space thei meved not, and seide to hem-self that grete
foly it were to fight with hem lenger but yef he wolde be
slayn, ffor thei seide "these be no peple like other men, <CHOICE><CORR>but it </CORR><SIC>but it but it</SIC></CHOICE> 
be fendes of helle, for a-gein her strokes may noon armoure
endure."</P>
<P>  Whan the knyghtes of the rounde table and the xlij felowes
saugh the saisnes that thei were so a-baisshed, thei hem
slowen and mangeled, and yaf hem a fressh a-sawte as faste as
the horse myght hem bere, till that thei were smeten in to the
medle that kynge Sorfarins faught a-gein Cleodalis the stiwarde,
and thise rode in a-monge them so fiercely, that thei made hem
alle to remeve oute of the place; ne neuer thei stynte till they
come be-fore the yates of Toraise.  Thus were thei of the town
gretly affraide whan thei saugh not the baner of kynge leodogan,
and therfore thei supposed he was other taken or deed, and also
thei ne saugh not the dragon that the Sowdiours bar, and that hem
fered gretly, ffor now thei wende wele that all hadde be loste,
for thei saugh hir enmyes be-fore the town, and grete drede thei
hadde lest that thei hadde hem discounfited; but thei myght
not, for thei were at grete myschef, for thei were but vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and
the saisnes were viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and on the tother side thei were so
affraide for the knyghtes of the rounde table, and for the xlij
felowes of whom thei herde no tydinges; and these fledde till thei
come be-fore the yate; ther thei stynte be-fore the brigge and
hem renge, and these other come vpon hem that right straytly


<PB REF="" N="218" ID="pb.218"/>

hem required, here was than a merveilouse stour <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>   mortall, and
longe it endured; and wite ye well that a thousande ther were
ouer-throwe that neuer hadde power to a-ryse.</P>
<P>  But as soone as the sowdiours were come, and the knyghtes
of the rounde table, the peple of Sonygrenx were
discounfited; but thei wolde not hem enchase, for Merlin hem
with-heilde, and drough hem a-parte in to the feilde, and seide,
"Feire lordinges, now lete hem gon, and besye ye not hem to
enchase, ffor ther-to shall come tyme here-after; but drawe yow
a litill a-bakke, and a-light down on fote, and drawe to-geder
yowre peple, and refresshe yowre horse, and lete hem reste, and
than girdeth hem newe a-gein;" and thei dide his
counseile.  And whan the knyghtes of the rounde table saugh hem a-bide,
than seide hervy de ryuell that he wolde go be-fore
theym.  Than thei a-light, and araide hem right wele, and hem refresshed
as thei that ther-to hadde grete nede.  And the kynge leodogan
com to Merlin, and seide, "Sir, will ye not that these worthy
men come in youre companye?"  "Certes," seide Merlin, "sir,
we will right wele, and þei be right welcome,   <MILESTONE N="75b" UNIT="folio"/>for we be the
better that thei be with vs in felisship."  "Sir," seide the kynge,
"gramercy."  Than yede the kynge leodogan to hervy de rivell,
that bar the baner, and seide, "Feire frende, come ye and youre
felowes with me, and ye shull be in feliship of these worthi
men, and so moche shull ye be the more worthy."  "Sir," seide
hervy, "with right gode will yef it hem plese."  "Certes,"
seide the kynge, "it hem lyketh wele that ye be fro hens-forth
felowes and in companye to-geder."  "In goddes name," quod
hervy, "for the feliship of so worthi men is not to be
refused."  Than thei lepe to horse, and gedered to-geder on a soppe; and
than Merlin toke firste the wey; and thei alle hym folowen
wheder that euer he rode.  And as thei rode in this wise as ye
haue herde, Cleodalis, the stiwarde, faught with vj<HI REND="sup">Ml </HI>men a-gein
Soffarin, that hadde in his companye moo than x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; but thei
were not well sette in rule, but schoved heir and there where as


<PB REF="" N="219" ID="pb.219"/>

thei semed beste to sette here strokes.  And so the peple of
Cleodalis were moche greved, for thei were at grete myschief, and
hadde so moche suffred that nere thei were turned to the flight;
but whan thei saugh come the dragon that Merlin bar, that caste
oute of his throte so grete raundon of fiere in to the aire, that
was full of duste and powder, so that it semed all reade.  And
whan the ladies vpon the walles this saugh, thei cryed alle with
oon voys, "Now, sir Cleodalis, haue mynde to do well, and
be-holde towarde the valey, and se the socour that cometh."</P>
<P>  Whan Cleodalis vndirstode that the ladies seiden, he
be-heilde and saugh that he hadde so moche desired.  And
whan the knyghtes that were with Cleodalis saugh this socour,
it nedeth not to aske yef thei be gladde and ioyfull.  Than
Cleodalis dide renne to the saisnes, bothe he and his peple, for to
lete hem vndirstonde that thei hadde counfort; and be-gonne
freshly vpon hem as it hadde be at the comencement.  And these
other com ridinge a softe pase till thei com as nygh as the caste
of a ston.  And than thei ffrusshed in so rudely that thei threwe
CCC at the firste shoffe in theire comynge; and many ther were
that neuer roos after.  And than thei plonged in a-monge hem so
depe, and neuer thei stynted till thei come to the baner of Cleodalis.</P>
<P>  And whan thei were there alle assembled, than cryed Merlin,
"Lordinges!  worthy knyghtes!  now let see youre
cheualrye, for now be ye come to the assay."  whan the kynge
Arthur vndirstode the wordis of Merlin, he seide to kynge Boors
and to kynge Ban, laughinge, that neuer hadde ther be so fyn an
olde man.  And Merlin ther-with cried, "Lete be your Iapes,
for all this woke more ye shull haue leiser to laugh and to
pley."  And whan thei herde hym sey so, thei rode in a-monge theire
enmyes wroth and matelentif; ther was tho a merveilouse stour
and creuwell, and encresed more and more than it hadde do all
the day be-fore.  Ther dide the kynge Arthur wonderes, for as
the boke   <MILESTONE N="76a" UNIT="folio"/>seith, so he labored by the entycement of Merlin, that
all peple hym be-heilde for the merveile.  And Gonnore, the
doughtere of kynge leodegan, and the ladyes and the maydenes,
heilde vp here hondes a-gein heuene, and praied god to deffende


<PB REF="" N="220" ID="pb.220"/>

hym fro deth and pereile, and wepten for pitee of the traueyle
that thei suffred; and ther-to thei merveillede that so yonge a
man myght that endure, and namely the kynge Arthur more
than eny other, for he smote with Calibourne his gode swerde on
euery side; for he smote of handes, and armes, and heedes, and
thyes; and he smote down knyghtes, and horse, and men; he
made sheeldes shiver fro nekkes, and helmes from hedes, that the
serkeles fly a-sonder, and hadde euer goode wardeyns a-boute
hym, that gretly hym helped in eche nede; for full noble men
were the two kynges that ben in his companye, ffor a-geyns hem
myght noon armoure endure, ne presse, were it neuer so grete,
but that thei it brake with trenchaunt swerdes; and so dide wele
thoo prise knyghtes in her companye, and also the knyghtes of
the rounde table, that ne ought not to be for-yeten.  Ffull harde
and stronge bataile was be-fore the yates of Toraise, and many
feire chivalryes shewed on the oo parte and on the tother, and
dured all the day, and was so nygh the walles of the town that a
man myght haue caste a ston a-monge hem vpon here helmes.</P>
<P>  Whan sorfarin saugh how he hadde so moche loste of his
peple, he swore by his creaunce that he wolde neuer
departe thens till he hadde done hem as grete damage.  Than he
called Sortebran, and Clarion, and Gaidon, and Senebant, and
malore, and ffreelant, alle these were his kynnes-men, and bolde
knyghtes and hardy, and than he seide to hem, "Now be it sene who
is a knyght."  Than soche ix knyghtes that were grete and huge,
ran in a-monge the cristen as faste as the horse myght hem bere,
and Sorfarin smote hervy the rivell so rudely that he fill of his
horse to grounde, and after he smote Antor that he fill to the
erthe, bothe he and his horse on an hepe, and after he smote
Gifflet thourgh the side that he fill to the erthe wounded all
blody, and eche of his felowes bar oon to the grounde, but ther
nas noon that was wounded to deth; and of these that fellen
was lucas the botiller, that oon, and Meranges a-nother, and
Gosnayns Cardus, and Grires de lamball, and Gosnayn de strangot,
and the ixe was Bretell, and alle these fill by stroke of spere for
defaute of horse.  Than a-rose a grete showte, and the duste so

<PB REF="" N="221" ID="pb.221"/>

thikke that vnethe myght oon see a-nother, for the saisnes rested
alle vpon hem, that gretly hem peyned hem for to slee; but thei
were delyuer and hardy and lepten vp on foote, and theire swerdes
naked in theire hondes, and deffended hem right harde, but thei
were so many and so thikke, and ther-to sought vpon hem so
straitely; but litill it hem a-vailed   <MILESTONE N="76b" UNIT="folio"/>whan Merlin com to socoure,
and the baner in his honde; and Sorfarin, that moche hym peyned
hem to do damage, smote so the kynge leodogan thourgh the
shelde, and he bar his spere so lowe that he hurte hym in the
flanke, and to grounde yede bothe the kynge and his horse, the
toon vpon the tother.  And when thei in the town saugh the
kynge falle, thei hadde grete drede lest he were slain, and
ther-with thei pressed fercely to the rescue.  Whan the kynge Arthur
saugh the Geaunt so Iuste that iiij so noble men hadde
ouer-throwen, he swore that he wolde hym assayen.  Than he rode
oute of the renge, and caught a grete spere with an hede
trenchaunt, and rode a grete walop, and the kynge Ban com hym
a-gein and seide, "Sir, what will ye do, ne Iusteth not a-gein this
grete Geaunte, for he is to stronge for yow that be so yonge and
so tender to take soche and entirprise, but lete me goo that am
more growen and of more strengthe than be ye."  Qoud Arthur,
"Than God helpe neuer yef I sende eny othir than my-self, for
the more that he is to doute, the rather I will hym assaien, ffor
I shall not elles knowe my self but I assay hym at this
tyme."  </P>
<P>And whan Merlin saugh that he dide a-bide, he cried lowde,
"What, coward, wher-fore a-bideste thow?  whi doste thow
not that thow haste vndirtaken, for it is sene that thow arte
a-ferde."  Whan Arthur vndirstode how Merlin cleped hym
cowarde, he was sore a-shamed of that he hadde seide, and smote
the horse with the spores in to the renges.  And the kynge Ban
seide to Merlin that he hadde don euell whan so yonge a man as
is the kynge Arthur sholde be sente to Iuste a-gein so gret a
deuell.  "No force," qoud Merlin, "he shall do right wele;
but take a spere, and folowe after, ye and youre brother and
Vlfin."  And thei dide as he badde, and rode after Arthur as
faste as the horse myght hem bere.  And whan the kynge


<PB REF="" N="222" ID="pb.222"/>

Sorfarin saugh Arthur come, he com hym a-geins full fercely;
and whan thei in the renges saugh hym come so a-gein Arthur,
that was so yonge and litell to hym, thei stynte alle, and hadde
grete drede for hym.  And thei ronne with all the might that
the horse myght yelde, and smote to-geder with speres so grete
strokes vpon the sheldes that thei made hem breke and perce;
and the stiell of the speres stynte at the haubrekes, that were
stronge and sore-holdynge.  Sorfarins brake his spere but a
litill; he wounded the kynge Arthur in the lifte flanke; and
Arthur smote hym a-gein so sore that he perced the shelde and
the haubreke that the shafte shewed thourgh the chyne be-hynde
an arme lengthe; and he shof so rudely that he bar hym from
his horse to the erthe vp-right; and he passed forth with-oute
more styntynge, and the spere fly on peces that no lenger myght
sustene.</P>
<P>  This Iustinge saugh Gonnore, the doughter of kynge leodogan,
that was at the windowes in the paleise that ioyned to the
walles of the town, and she preised moche the yonge knyght, and
asked of hem that were a-boute her what he was; but thei ne
cowde not sey,   <MILESTONE N="77a" UNIT="folio"/>saf that he was oon of the sowdiours that her
fader hadde with-holden.  "Trewly," seide the mayden,
"what-so-ever he be, hym semeth that he is come of high lynage; ffor
no man of lowe berthe durste not vndirtake no soche dedes, but
yef it com of high herte; and he and these worthi men ther haue
this day don many faire dedes of armes."  Longe tyme heilde
this mayden her tale of the sowdiours.  And the kynge ban and
the kynge Boors were in the renges, and ech of hem a grete
spere.  Than thei smote theire horse with the spores, and the
kynge Ban smote Sortebran, and the kynge Boors smote Clariel,
and Vlfin smote Iaisdon; and ech of these thre bar his felow to
the erthe deed fro theire horse; and with the same cours oon
smot moras, and a-nother hitte laidon, and the thirde Senebant
so sore, that deed thei moste nede be er thei myght oute of the
feilde.  And the kynge Arthur drough oute his swerde, and
smote so malore vpon the helme that was restinge vpon the
kynge Ban, ffer he and frelent were besy to smyte of his heed,


<PB REF="" N="223" ID="pb.223"/>

ffor that oon heilde hym by the helme, and the tother smote hym
be-twene the shulderes with a grete axe.  And whan Arthur
saugh this he hasted thider with his swerde in his honde, and
smote so harde malore that the heed fill in to þe felde.
  </P>
<P>Whan ffreelent saugh his felowe deed, that was his cosin, he
toke the axe with bothe handes, and reised it for to
smyte the kynge Arthur vpon the helme.  And he kepte the
stoke vpon his shelde, but the stroke com so harde that it fill fro
hym in to the feilde; and the stroke descended vpon his lefte
sholder so sore that he bente on his horse nekke.  And Geaunt
reised his axe to recouer a-nother stroke, but Arthur was ther-of
ware, and smote the horse with the spores and passed forth, and
than returned with his swerde, and smote so ffreelent with soche
myght that he slyt hym to the teth.  And than a-roos the showte
and the noyse of the saisnes, that sore were affraide of that
encounter, and saugh that thei hadde no more socoure but of
Randoul, that bar here baner.  And the kynge Ban smote so
Randoul that the arme fill fro the body, and the baner anoon fill
to the erthe.  Than a-roos a showte and so grete noyse that alle
thei tho turned to flight, and the chase be-gan that longe endured,
for from euensonge it lasted vn-to nyght; and ther was grete
occision, for of the ix<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> ne lefte but iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, that fledde to siege to
kynge Rion, and tolde hym the losse and damage that thei
hadde resceyved, and the grete mortalite that vpon hem was
turned.  And whan the kynge it herde, he swor his oth that
neuer he wolde departe oute of the londe till that he hadde take
the kynge leodogan and put hym in prison.</P>
<P>  Than he sente in to the londe of Denmarke that alle high
barouns sholde come to hym, and brynge with hem plente
of vitaile for two hundred thowsande men for two yere, for he
seide now he wolde encrese his werre more vigerously than ever
he hadde don   <MILESTONE N="77b" UNIT="folio"/>be-fore.  And thei com and assembled euery day
that in shorte tyme were ther with hym assembled CC l.<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; and at
this assemble were xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> kynges crowned; and the kynge Rion
hym-self was the twentithe kynge.  And with hem com huge
carriage of vitaile oute of alle parties, wher-with the hoste was


<PB REF="" N="224" ID="pb.224"/>

stuffed, that thei rode not on forroy for no vitaile, ffor grete
plente thei hadden of the londes of the xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> kynges that weren
in the hoste; and ofte tymes thei assailed the Citee, that was
right stronge, that nothynge ne dowted, saf only for famyn.
And thei sente to kynge leodogan for socour, that he sholde come
hem to helpe, for sore were thei greved.  But now resteth the
tale of kynge Rion, and of his seige that was grete, and of hem
that were in the Citee of Daneblaise, and returne for to speke of
kynge Arthur and of his companye.</P>
<P>  Now seith the booke that gladde and ioyfull were thei of the
town of Toraise for the discounfiture of the saisnes, that
were chased of so small a peple, for thei were at the bygynnynge
but vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and iij hundred, and the saisnes were more than xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and were discounfited be the counseile of Merlin, that moche
hem helped, and by the knyghtes of the rounde table, and also
of the xlij sowdioures.  And, as the booke seith, whan thei
hadde chased the saisnes vnto nyght, that than thei returned to
Toraise gladde and mery, and fonde the kynge in the town, that
his men hadde remounted, and sette on horse.  And whan he
knewe that the sowdiours com, he wente hem ageins, and made
of hem the grettest ioye that eny man myght, and founde Antor
and Gifflet, and kay, and lucas the botiller, and alle the other
felowes hool and sounde, of whom thei hadden had grete drede
that thei hadden be deed or elles taken.  And there was founde
grete wynnynge; and the kynge made it to be take and
presented to the sowdiours that he hadde with-holden.  And he
seide he myght it no better employe, for thei hadde it alle
wonne; "and my-self," seide the kynge leodogan, "haue thei
rescued fro deth and fro prison."</P>
<P>  And whan thei saugh the grete worschip that the kynge hem
dide, thei thanked hym hertely, and seide that thei
wolde it not, for in tyme comynge thei resceve his yeftes and
take of hym other fee.  And the kynge seide, seth thei wolde it
not resceyve that thei sholde it departe, and yeve ther as thei
wolden.  Than com Merlin to the thre kynges, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>   bad hem take


<PB REF="" N="225" ID="pb.225"/>

it; and thei it token, and yaf it ther as Merlin hem assigned,
that thei ne lefte not to hem-self the valewe of a peny.  And
thei that it hadden, thanked and preised moche the sowdiours, alle
tho that hem knewen, and also thei knewe hem no-thynge; and
that so moche were thei be-loved in the contrey for her largesse
be the counseile of Merlin, that nought was spoken of in the
contrey but of the sowdiours.  And the kynge Arthur yaf so
moche to his Ooste and to his wif of horse, and palfreyes, and
robes,   <MILESTONE N="78a" UNIT="folio"/>that alle thier lyves after were thei riche.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Arthur hadde departed the richesse that
was wonne of the saisnes, thei entred in to the town;
and the kynge leodogan wolde not suffre hem in no wise to
a-light but at his paleise with hym, ne neuer after wolde he lete
hem be oute of his companye, and with the knyghtes of the
rounde table.  And whan thei were vn-armed, the kynge made
his doughter to aray hem in riche robes, and made her take
warme water in basyns of siluer, and bare to the thre kynges and
hem serue; but Arthur wolde not take her seruyse till that the
kynge leodogan and Merlin commaunded hym and made hym to
take it.  And the maiden her-silf wosh his visage and his nekke
and dried it full softely with a towaile, and than after to the
tother twey kynges.  And the tother Gonnore, that was of the
stiwardes wif, and the other maydenes, serued the othere
knyghtes.  And whan the kynges doughter hadde serued the thre kynges,
than she serued hir fader; and whan thei were waisch the
maiden put on ech of hem a mantell a-boute her nekkes.  And
the kynge Arthur was right feire; and the maiden hym be-heilde
moche, and he her; and she seide softely to her-self that well
were that maiden that so feire a knyght wolde requere hir of
love, and, namely, so gode a knyght as is this; and well ought
she to be shamed euer after that hym denyed.</P>
<P>  A-noon were the tables set, and whan the mete was redy
thei satte alle the knyghtes ther-ynne; but the knyghtes
of the rounde table seten with the sowdiours at table be hem-self;
and the kynge Ban and the kynge Boors sette the kynge Arthur
be-twene hem two, and dide hym grete honour as affiered to so


<PB REF="" N="226" ID="pb.226"/>

high a man; and ther-of toke the kynge leodogan goode hede,
that by hem satte side by syde at the heede of the table, and
thought well in his corage that by the honour and the reuerence
that thei to hym bar that he was lorde ouer alle, and merveiled
sore what he myght be, and grete desire he hadde for to knowe
the trowthe what he was, and thought in his herte that "and it
were pelesynge to god that he hadde my doughter spoused, for
trewly I can not thynke that so high prowesse myght be shewed
in soche a childe, but yef he were come of right high lynage,
other elles I trowe that it be som spirituell man that god hath
me sente for to deffende this reame, nought for me but for
Cristynte and holy cherche to mayntene;" and ther-to he seide ne
yede he not oute of this town with-oute leve of the porter.</P>
<P>  At this soper the kynge leodogan sat stille in a grete stodye,
and lasted longe, and it fill in his mynde how that he
hym rescued in the depe valay with the xlj felowes a-gein v C
knyghtes, that ledde hym to prison, and remembrede alle the
  <MILESTONE N="78b" UNIT="folio"/>prowesses that he hadde sein hym do, and so sadly he sat in that
thought that alle thei were troubled, and lefte theire mete.  Of
this was war hervy de ryvel, and was ther-fore sory in his herte,
and a-roos and yede to hym full wroth to the heede of the table,
and seide, "Sir, I saugh neuer yow so mys-take youre-self, ne
neuer I saugh yow so a-baisshed, ffor ye ought well to make ioye
to these worthi men; and ye thenke as that ye were in a dreme,
and I merveile moche of youre grete wisdome where it is
be-come."  Than the kynge yaf a grete sigh, and loked on hervy,
and seide "Hervy, frende, I thought vpon the most worthi man
of the worlde, fro the whiche I myght not me with-drawe; and
yef thow knewe what my dought were thow woldest not me
blame."  And he seide, "Sir, it may well be so, but now at this
tyme cesseth till efte-sones, for this is no place now ther-to, but
maketh ioye to these barouns and disporte yow, for ye haue at this
tyme to moche yow mystaken saue youre honoure."  "Gramercy,
feire frende," seide the kynge, "I knowe well that I haue
mysdon."  Then hervy yede, and satt down by his felowes; and
the kynge tho spake to the barouns merily.  And the maiden


<PB REF="" N="227" ID="pb.227"/>

that was the doughter of kynge leodogan serued Arthur vpon
her kne of wyne with hir fader cuppe.  And Arthur hir be-heilde
full debonerly, and plesed hym wele that he saugh hir so nygh,
ffor she was the feirest lady that was in all Breteigne in that
tyme; and the mayden was fayre, and hadde on hir heede a
riche chapelet of preciouse stones, and her visage fressh and wele
colowred, so entermedled white and reade so naturally that it
neded nother more ne lesse, and her shulderes streyghte and
euen, and merveylously well shapen of body, for she was sklender
a-boute the flankes and the haunche lowe and comly well sittynge,
and of alle fetures the feirest shapen that myght be founde in eny
londe; and yef she hadde grete bewte ther-to she hadde as moche
bounte of valour, of curtesie, and nurture.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur saugh this mayden that hadde so grete bewte,
he be-heilde her with a gladde chere, and saugh her
pappes smale and rounde as two smale appelis that were harde;
and her flessh whitter than snowe, and was not to fatte ne to
sklender; and he coveyted her gretly in his herte, that he waxe
all pensif, and lefte his mete, and turned his chere a-nother wey,
for he wolde not the two kynges ne noon other hym
a-perceyved.  Than the mayden profered hym the cuppe, and seide, "Sir,
drynke, and <CHOICE><CORR>displese</CORR><SIC>dispelse</SIC></CHOICE>   yow not, though I clepe yow not be youre
name, and be ye not a-baisshed at youre sopere, for at armes ye do
not faile at no nede, and well it shewed this day, where ye were
be-holden of v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, that nothynge yow dide knowe but by
sight."  And he turned and seide, "Feire lady, with goode will, and
gramercy of youre seruyse; and god graunte me power that I
may yow this guerdon yelde."  "Sir," seide she, "ye haue quyte
  <MILESTONE N="79a" UNIT="folio"/>it double more than I may deserue, ffor ye haue rescued my
lorde my fader, ye and youre companye, that was a-monge so many
of his enmyes that ledde hym to prison."  And he satte stille
with-oute ansuere.  "And," quod the lady, "was ther moche
more, for here be-fore the yates at the brigge foote ye shewed
well sembelant that it yow greued, and that ye were sory for his
a-noye ther as he was vn-horsed a-monge his enmyes, and his horse


<PB REF="" N="228" ID="pb.228"/>

vndir hym slayn, for ye slow hym that hym dide ouerthrowe, and
ye youre-self were in auenture of deth hym to rescuen, and so
wele ye dide that thei were fayn to leve the feelde."</P>
<P>  Thus spake the doughter of kynge leodogan to Arthur, but he
spake no worde a-gein, but toke the cuppe and dranke
with goode will, and after commaunded the mayden to a-rise, for to
longe hadde she kneled, but the kynge her fader ne wolde
not.  Thus were thei serued right highly of alle thynges that man
myght devise.  And whan the clothes sholde be taken vp the
kynge ban seide to kynge leodogan that satte next by hys side,
"Sir," seide the kynge Ban, "I haue grete merveile of yow that
be so wise and worthy a man that haue not maried youre doughter
to som high prynce that myght yow helpe in youre werres, ffor
she is now wele woxen and ther-to right wise; and as me semeth
ye haue no mo heyres to whom youre londe shall descende after
youre deth, and therfore ye sholde here be-fore haue her sette to
some noble prynce."  "Certes, sir," seide leodogan, "I haue be
letted by the werre that me sore hath greved and longe dured,
ffor it is vij yere passed that the kynge Rion of Denmarke and of
Irelonde ne cessed neuer vpon me to werre; ne neuer seth com
ther no man in this londe to whom I ought hir to yeve; but, so
helpe me god, yef I myght fynde a yonge bacheler that were a
worthi man of armes that myght wele endure peyne and trauayle
to meyntene my werre, To hym wolde I yeve my doughter yef he
wolde her take, and alle my londe after my desesse, that neuer
shall I spare for high lynage ne grete richesse of lordeschip; and
that it plesed oure lorde Ieshu that it myght ben he that I thynke
now in my mynde, and trewly than sholde she be maried
withynne these thre dayes vnto a feire yonge bacheler that is full of
high prowesse, and trewly I suppose in my corage that he be of
hiher astate than am I."  And Merlin be-heilde the kynge Boors
and be-gan to smyle, and made hym a signe that it was seide for
the kynge Arthur, and with-oute faile for hym was it seide.</P>
<P>  Than be-gonne thei to speke of many thynges, and turned her
tales other weyes, for more wolde thei not speke ther-of
at that tyme.  That perceyvede well the kynge leodogan that

<PB REF="" N="229" ID="pb.229"/>

thei heilde no cure to mayntene that tale, and ther-with he yaf
a sore sigh, for fayn he wolde that oon hadde hym more ther-of
a-resoned; and so he heilde his pees and herkened yef he myght
eny thynge a-perceyve in eny manere what thei were and of what
londe, and saugh the ioye and the honoure that the worthi men
  <MILESTONE N="79b" UNIT="folio"/>made to Arthur, and that was a thynge that brought hym more
mys-ese, and so moche the worthy men of the rounde table more
than the xl felowes that were of her companye, that alle that it
saugh hadde ther-of merveile, and weren a-basshed; but a-bove
alle hym coveyted the kynges doughter, and right hertely she
hym loved, and mused here-on so moche that she was sore
troubeled, and fayn wolde she haue hym to be her lorde, and
make a-bove alle tho that euer she hadde seyn be-fore; and the
storyes seyn that she was the wisest lady of all the bloy breteyne,
and the feirest and the beste be-loved that euer was in the londe
or in the contrey, saf only Helayn that was with-outen pere, that
was the doughter of kynge Pelles of lytenoys, of the Castell of
Corbenyk, that was nece to the kynge Pesceor, and of the seke
kynges wounded, wher-of the name of the ton was <CHOICE><CORR>cleped</CORR><SIC>clped</SIC></CHOICE> alain
de lille in lytenoys.  This kynge alain was seke of the woundes
of the spere vengeresse, wher-of he was cleped mehaignyes, for
he was wounded thourgh bothe thyghes with that spere; and his
right name was kynge Alain, and the kynge Pellynor was his
brother germayn, and this maiden of whom I speke was theire
nece and doughter to kynge Pelles, brother to these two kynges
that I haue yow named.</P>
<P>  This mayden was the feirest lady that euer was in eny londe;
this same maiden hadde in kepynge the blissed seint
Graal vn-to the tyme that Galaad was vpon here be-geten; but
at this tyme cesseth the storye of hir, but it shall here-after be
declared how that she was discesed of the seint Graal and
wherfore, and how the aventures of the seynt Graal were brought to
fin; and speketh of the companye that be at the table at soper at
Toraise in the paleise of kynge leodogan.</P>
<P>  Full richely were these lordes serued at soper of wyne and
vitaile; and whan the tables were vp Merlin toke the


<PB REF="" N="230" ID="pb.230"/>

thre kynges a-part, and seide, "Will ye that I tell yow what
is be-fallen in breytene la bloy?"  "Certes," seide Arthur,
"right moche I desire to wite, yef it yow plese."  Than seide
Merlin, "I do yow to wite that thei haue had stronge bataile
be-fore logres in the playn a-gein the saisness, that all the contrey
hadde robbed, and all the maryne and the portes toward Dover;
and whan thei come thourgh the feldes, thei ledde huge cariage
towarde the hoste of the saisnes; and thei were moo than x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
horse-men; and as thei rode in soche maner thei mette fyve
childeren that be youre neuewes;" and than he tolde hym how
the childeren were comen and fro whens, and how they were
departed fro theire moderes with-oute witynge of theire fader,
and how that thei mette the forryours, as ye haue herde be-fore,
and how the bataile was grete ther, as the saisnes were
discounfited, and of the grete richesse that ther was wonne, and the gret
ioye   <MILESTONE N="80a" UNIT="folio"/>that the Citee of hem made after the bataile, and how the
childeren wolde neuer be knyghtes till that he made hem
knyghtes with his owne honde; "and drede yow not," quod
Merlin, "of youre londe, for thei shull it well deffende in to the
tyme of youre comynge.  Now thinke for to do wele, and be
mery and gladde, for youre helpe encresith euery day, for ther is
comynge in to youre londe the nevew of the Emperour
Costantynnoble, with CCC squyres, that be all sones to grete princes and
high lordes for to do yow seruise, and for that ye shull hem make
knyghtes."  "Merlin," seide the kynge, "what be the childeren
that be at logres, and what be their names?"  "Sir," quod
Merlin, "that oon is cleped Gawein, and the tother Agravayn,
and the thirde Gaheret, and the forth Gaheries, and these foure
ben bretheren, and be youre suster sones, the wif of kynge loot;
and the tother is cleped Galashin, the sone of kynge ventre of
Garlot, and also of thi suster; and the nevew of the Emperour
is cleped Segamoure, the whiche shall be a knyght of merveilouse
prowesse; and for hym ther cometh many other that shulle alle
be youre frendes and do yow servise in euery nede."  And while
Merlin tolde these tidynges com the xl knyghtes of her companye
and stoden a-boute hym, and whan thei herde the tale of Merlin thei


<PB REF="" N="231" ID="pb.231"/>

made grete ioye and thanked god; and than departed the knyghtes
of ther ynne, and yede to theire ostelles, and yede to bedde, and
rested hem till on the morowe, and soiourned in the town right
longe, that nothynge elles thei diden but ete and drinke, and
encreced her peple that assembled euery day; but now cesseth the
tale to speke of the kynge leodogan and of the sowdiours that be
in ioye for the tidynges that Merlin hadde hem tolde, and
returneth for to speke of the kynge Tradylyuant of North Walys.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.15">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XV.  
<LB/>EXPLOITS OF THE REBEL KINGS AGAINST THE SAXONS.</HEAD>
<P>  Whan the kynge Tradilyuant was come in to North Walys to
his chief Citee, and hadde somowned to-geder his peple,
that he hadde x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and he kepte his londe and his contrey the
beste wise that he myght; and on an euen com a spie, that com
fro the roche of the saisnes, and seide ther com x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes with
grete cariage of vitaile, that were entred his londe and wente the
streight wey to the grete Oste.  And whan the kynge that
vndirstode, he asked how fer thei myght be; and he seide thei
myght be wele be-twene the roche and Arundell.  Than
comaunded the kynge his peple to arme hem hastely, and lepe to
horse at the first Cok crowinge, and issed oute of the town alle
armed; and whan thei were oute in the feilde thei were well
x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and rode forth cloos, and renged a softe paas till thei com in
to the hoste of the saisnes; and than departed her peple in
tweyne, of which Polydamas condited the ton, that was nevew to
the kynge, and was a yonge knyght of grete hardynesse.  And as
sone as thei were departed the firste parte yede towarde Arundell,
that the kynge Arthur lete garnyssh er he departed   <MILESTONE N="80b" UNIT="folio"/>oute of the
contrey, whan Polydomas was departed from his vncle he and his
peple, and were nygh the tentes, thei rode in as faste as the
horse myght renne.  That tyme the saisnes made euell waich, for
thei were nothinge war till these were euein a-monge hem; ther


<PB REF="" N="232" ID="pb.232"/>

were many mangled and slayn of the saisnes, for thei fonde hem
vn-armed and slepinge, for thei were wery of traveyle, and
therfore was a-monge hem grete occision, for on twey partes were
thei a-baisshed, and thei hadde no leiser to take their armour, but
turned to flight on horse and on foote towarde the roche and in
the forestes that were nygh; and these other hem slowgh and
martered all that thei myght reche, so that thei hadde slayn er
thei myght come to the Castell of the roche more than
xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And whan the knyghtes of Carnyle saugh the grete disconfiture
as thei were a-risinge, and saugh theire peple fle on euery side,
and the grete slaughter that these made, thei cried "as
armes."  Than thei armed hem that were in the Castell with all theire
myght, and com oute in all haste; and thei were moche peple
and riche lordes of grete puyssance, and ther-to were thei well
horsed; and whan thei were alle come oute thei were
xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  Than thei lete theire horse renne, and smyten to-geder right
harde the ton a-gein the tother; and ther be-gan a stronge bataile
and harde; and many ther were leide to grounde of horse and
men.  And while thei foughten thus to-geder thei of Arundell com
oute that were longinge to kynge Arthur, and were well v C, and
thei sesed the vitaile wher-of thei founde in the hoste grete
foyson; and ther thei wonne grete richesse, and repeyrede agein
to the castell, and shetten the yates, and lokede how the bataile
sholde ende, and alwey was the kynge Tradelyuant and his
nevewe Polydomas sore be-sette on alle parties, and foughten
sore a-gein the saisnes; and the kinge was at grete myschef, ffor
ther com oute of the Castell the roche xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> wele armed, and
ronne vpon hem vigerously, for thei were full anguysshouse for
the grete losse that thei hadden; and thie drof the kynge bakke
more than the space of a bowe draught, ne neuer after myght
thei holde grounde till thei com vnder Arundell, ther as where
they moste a-bide by fin force, or elles playnly dye.  Ther thei
hem deffended harde and sore, but ther was grete slaughter of
men and horse vpon bothe partyes, but at that enuaye loste the
kynge Tradylyuant moche of his peple, for of x<HI REND="sup">Ml </HI> he loste vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and the saisnes losten iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of the beste that were in the Castell

<PB REF="" N="233" ID="pb.233"/>

of the roche.  And the kynge Tradilyuant faught sore; he and
his peple were ar grete myschef, and it a-bode not longe er thei
were alle disconfited; whan hem con to socour the kynge de
Cent Chyualers, that hadde herde tydinges that the saisnes com
robbinge the contrey.</P>
<P>  As soone as the kynge de Cent Chiualiers com half a myle fro
the bataile, he mette the peple that fledde from the kynge
Tradilyuaunt, for nygh was he returned to disconfiture.    <MILESTONE N="81a" UNIT="folio"/>Whan
the kynge de Cent Chiualliers mette with hem that fledde fro
the bataile, he askede whens thei come; and thei abode and tolde
hym the a-uenture that was fallen, and how he was dosconfited;
and whan the kynge vnderstode that Tradilyuaunt was at so grete
myschef, he cried, "Gentill knyghtes!  now suewith me," and
seide, "Seynt Marie, blissed lady, graunte me that I may hym
fynde with-oute mayme."</P>
<P>  Than the kynge rode formest hym-self a grete walop, for sore
hym longed to wite how the kynge Tradilyuaunt hym
contened; but he hadde be disconfited longe er than, or deed, or
taken, hadde not be that thei of the castell of Arundell, that were
Arthurs men, that hadde so grete pite vpon hem that were
cristen, that thei com oute more than iiij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> vpon a sop, and
be-gonne to helpe hem vigerously, and slowe many of the saisnes
in her comynge; and thei recounforted moche the kynge
Tradilyuant, for moche thei hym sustened.  And ther was the crie and
the noyse right grete; but whan the kynge de Cent chiuallires
com be-gan the noyse to a-rise so grete that noon myght heren
other, for he and his men leide down the saisnes with so grete
randon, and smote hem so harde in her comyge, that thei leide
iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> to grounde that neuer roos after hool ne sounde.  Ther was
a stour anguysshouse and mortall bataile, and so grete slaughter
of men and of horse, that the horse feet were couered with blode
and brayn, ffor so moche hadde they foughten con a-gein a-nother,
that of xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of the saisnes ne was not lefte ix<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And the kynge
de Cent chiualers was noble knyght and a sure, and maganors
his stiwarde.  Than thei ronne vpon the saisnes so fiercely that
the shoute and the noyse a-roos so grete and huge that the


<PB REF="" N="234" ID="pb.234"/>

saisnes were alle a-baisshed, that thei for-gat all her defence; and
whan thei saugh hem that were newe comen all fressh of here
in-busshement, and saugh thei myght haue no socoure ne helpe on
no partee, ffor thei were fer fro valdesbiry, where the siege was,
and at the Castell of the roche thei wiste well nere not past CC
defensable, for alle were issed oute for the cry; and saugh also
well that nede moste hem dye but yef thei ascaped be flight.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge de Cent chiualers, and Tradilyuaunt,
and marganors, and Polydomas saugh the saisnes so
a-baisshed, thei settte vpon hem fresshly; and whan the saisnes
saugh hem come thei durste not a-bide, but turned to flight to
the castell of the roche; but er thei com thider thei were hasted
to nygh, that of ix<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> ne ascaped not iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, that alle were slayn
and mangeled.  But whan thei of the castell of Arundell saugh
the saisnes discounfited, and saugh hem chased, thei with-heilde
hem be the counseile of a yonge knyght was cleped Ewein
with the white handes, and returned thider as the bataile hadde
be, and toke horse, and somers, and golde, and siluer, and vitaile
as moche as hem liked,   <MILESTONE N="81b" UNIT="folio"/>and of armour of the beste that thei
founden, and stuffed hem so wele of alle thinges that neuer after
hadde thei no suffraite ne nede of nothinge durynge the tyme of
her beynge there; and whan thei were entred thei shette the
yates and reyses vp the brigge, and after yede vpon the walles an
high for to se how thei diden that made the chase, for the two
kynges chased the saisnes till thei come to the castell of the
roche full sore affraide, and smyten in ther as thei knewe the
entre, but er thei were alle ynne ther were many slayn and for
hewen; and whan thei were with-ynne the two kynges saugh
thei were ascaped thei drough hem a-bakke, ffor moche thei
douted the shotte of quarelles and of arowes; and whan thei
were come fro the castell half a myle and the two kynges mette
to-geder, thei made grete ioye, and dide of theire helmes, and
kysten to-geder, and eche acoled other in armes for grete love,
whan thei hadde longe tyme made her ioye in fere.  Than seide
the kynge Tradilyuant to the kynge de Cent chiualers, "Sir, I
haue grete merveile how ye com this day hider, and therfore I


<PB REF="" N="235" ID="pb.235"/>

haue grete cause to thanke oure lorde god, for yef ye hadde
taried eny lenger I myght not have ascaped, but that I sholde
haue be taken or deed, and also alle my men that were me be
lefte."  "Sir," quod Aguysanx the kynge de Cent chiualers,
"Oure lorde that is so gracious, ne foryeteth neuer his seruaunt
in what he be, but paraventure it hym plesith that we shull
suffre this martire for to enhaunce his lawes, and therfore hath
he sent thise saisnes in to this londe, that euery day ne do but
encrese more and more; and also we se well that for no peple
that we haue in this contrey thei will not be chased oute; and
therfore while that we may lyve lete vs avenge oure dethes, ffor
that semeth me the beste; what-so-euer falle lete vs do so I sey,
and wite it well that so shull we sonnest come to an ende than
eny other way."  "Why," quod Tradilyuaunt, "how is youre
advys?"  "That shall I well telle yow," quod Aguysanx, "we
<CHOICE><CORR>shull</CORR><SIC>shull shull</SIC></CHOICE>   sende to alle oure fellowes, that ech of hem come with alle
his hool power as privyly as thei may to the castell of wyndesore
in brochelonde, and we also to assemble alle oure peple and ride
vpon the saisnes, and yeve hem bataile in the name of god, that
he graunte vs the victorie, ffor better is a gode ende and to dye
with honour, than longe to endure and after all lese, and than
dye with dishonour."  "A god mercy, sir!"  quod
Tradilyuaunt, "what is it that ye sey?  we knowe wele that thei be so
grete plente of peple that for oon that we haue in oure remes thei
haue euer xx a-gein oon of oures, and therfore in that manere ne
may we not spede.  Not-with-stondinge, I sey not, but as for me
I will do as ye and alle the other will ordeyne; I am all redy it
to pursue."  "Certes," seide Aguysanx the kynge de Cent
chiualers, "I will sende to hem my message on my be-halue,
like as I haue yow siede, and that thei do me to wite what is
is here willes, whether thei will do thus or noon."    <MILESTONE N="82a" UNIT="folio"/>"In goddes
name," seide Tradilyuant, "for as for my part I will do as ye and
alle other will assente, ffor I am but oon sool man as be ye, and
ye ne shull nothinge do but I therto will acorde,"  With that


<PB REF="" N="236" ID="pb.236"/>

thei rode forth to Arundell ther the firste bataile hadde be, and
ther thei fonde grete richesse of all that neded to mannes body;
and ech man toke at his wille of that hym liked, and made noon
other departynge.  Thus was comen all the richesse and the vitaile;
and in this maner departed the two kynges, that no more ne dide
not at this tyme.  And the kynge Tradilyuaunt rode in to North
wales with vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that were hym be lefte of the bataile; and
the kynge Aguysanx rode to malohaut <CHOICE><CORR>with</CORR><SIC>wit</SIC></CHOICE> vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and after
toke his messagers, and sente to the lordes as he hadde seide to
the kynge Tradilyuant.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Aguysans was come to his Citee of
Corenges in Scotlonde, he assembled his peple on
horsebak and on foote, that he hadde xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And it fill on a
monday in the morowe that the saisnes were more than xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and
rode be-twene Corenges and lanneriur, and brandons a-gains the
pray that Oriels, and meniadus, and Sorbaries, and margoires, and
brandons, and Poigeres, and pyncenars, and Salubrius, and
magloras, and Gondoffles the grete, diden condite towarde the
hoste be-fore Valdesbiry; and as thei come, <CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> brent and
distroyde all the londe, and brent bourghs, and townes, and
castelles, and sette all on fier and flame, as thei that all the
londe wolde haue brought to nought; and ther-to thei made so
grete martire of peple thourgh the contrey, that ye myght haue
hadde grete pite were youre herte neuer so harde, for ladies and
maidenes that thei slowen and her childeren in her armes; and
ther as the mene peple were fledde in to caves for socour, thei
putt in fier, and brent hem ther-ynne; and the tidinges ran so
thourgh the contrey that the kynge aguysanx it herde; and than
he comaunded alle his barouns to armen hem; and thei dide his
comaundement, and lepe to horse, and rode two myle er day; and
than thei rode forth a softe pas till it was passed pryme.  Than
thei loked towarde lanneriur, and saugh the eyr trouble, and
thikke of duste, and flames of fier that thei hadde sette in the
contrey, and herde the noyse and the cry that the peple made
of her losse and damage, and for her frendes þat thei saugh
martired be-fore her yen; and thei ther-fore were full anguysshouse, 

<PB REF="" N="237" ID="pb.237"/>

and rode forth a grete spede, and were well xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; and
hem condited the kynge Anguysans in the formest fronte with
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, that were yonge bachelers and hardy.  This Gaudius was
cosin germain to Aguysans on his fadir side; and he dide after
many feire chiualries be-fore the castell, for the damesell of
brulent, that he wolde haue hadde be force to his wif, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>   was
be-fore the riche town that was so moche preised er that Gaudius it
conquered by his prowesse, as the storie shall telle here-after, for
it is yet no tyme ther-to, but returne to the kynge aguysans of
Scotlonde, that rode to-geder, he and Gaudius, till   <MILESTONE N="82b" UNIT="folio"/>thei fill
a-monge the forriours and a-monge the cariage; and a-noon thei
smote to-geder fercely, that ther was many oon ouerthrowen
bothe horse and man; and thei dide the saisnes grete losse of her
peple at the be-gynnynge, for thei were oute of aray and spredde
a-brode in the contrey, oon here, a-nother ther; and the kynge
aguysans and Gaudius and her peple slowe of hem moo than
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And whan the kynge of the saisnes com in to the bataile
where-as thei were fightynge, than was Gaudius and his
companye at grete myschef, for the saisnes were moo than xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, what
oon and other and of the cristen were but xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  Neuertheless, thei
deffended hem right longe, but euer the saisnes encresed, that it
was wonder to be-holde, for fro the bataile was but x myle fro
the hoste; and the x kynges that I yow nempned com on
the tother side wele horsed and armed with so grete plente
of peple that all the contrey was couered on euery side,
and thei drof the cristin a-wey whether thei wolde or
noon.  Ffull grete losse hadde ther the kynge Aguisans, and grete
damage of his knyghtes and of his men, ffor er none was
passed the saisnes mette hem so sharply that of xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that he
brought in his companye ne myght he not assemble vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that alle
ne were dede or taken, and ne hadde be oon a-venture that fill,
ther hadde neuer of hem ascaped oon a-wey; but the kynge Vrien
was comen oute in the morowe for the hete, he and his nevew
Bandemagn, that was a noble knyght and an hardy and sure,


<PB REF="" N="238" ID="pb.238"/>

and lefte Ewein his sone in the Citee, that was a feire chielde and
of high prowesse, that hadde be-geten on Arthurs suster, that
was so goode a lady a-gein god and also to the worlde.  With
Ewein also was Meliagans, that at that tyme was a young childe,
and was the sone of Bandemagn by his firste wif.  These two
childeren kepte the Citee right wele, but knyghtes were thei
noon, for thei were to yonge of age; and with hem also was
Ewein a-voutres, that was the kynges sone Vrien be the stiwardes
wif, that was of grete bewte; and therfore the kynge lefte his
<CHOICE><CORR>owne</CORR><SIC>owe</SIC></CHOICE> wif more than fyve yere, and kepte her in his house maugre
his stiwarde till that he hadde this childe.  Whan that the childe
was born ther rose so grete a scentence of cursinge that he most
nedes leve her wheþer that he wolde or noon; but the childe he
kepte and norisshed till it was feire well woxen and that he myght
ride after to court; and the kynge that loved hym moche in his
herte yaf hym of his londe grete plente, that he myght wele
mayntene goode meyne a-boute hym.  This Ewein, that was geten in
advoutry, was gentill and curteyse and full of hardynesse, and for
the grete love that the kynge hadde to hym, he brought hym
forth in the companye of his son Ewein the grete; and for that
he was geten in a-vouterye was he cleped Ewein the a-vouteres,
and the tother, that was his right heir be his wif, was cleped
Ewein the more; and this Ewein was a passinge feire childe
and bolde and hardy; but after that he hadde herde speke of
kynge Arthur he wolde not suffre that noon made hym knyght;<MILESTONE N="83a" UNIT="folio"/>
  ne his fader, ne noon other, but seide ofte to his counseile and
that was to Ewein his brother that he loved moche, and was
yonger than he; and he tolde hym that he wolde neuer be
knyght till that the kynge Arthur, his Oncle, yaf hym the
ordere, and girde the swerde be hys syde; and the tother Ewein
seide that right so wolde he do.  Thus lefte thei for to kepe the town,
and the kyng Vrien and Bandemagn hem spedde so till that thei
com to the bataile euen as the kynge aguysanx was discounfited,
and was merveillously sorowfull.  Ne noon myght telle the
maltalent that he hadde, and that after he shewde well semblant,
for as soone as it come to the chase he smote a-monge the saisnes


<PB REF="" N="239" ID="pb.239"/>

so fiercely as a wode lyon; and he was wele horsed as to soche a
man be-longeth, and hadde in his companye x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that were
wele horsed.  Than were the saisnes ascride a-lowde and harde
I-smyten.  Ther fill many in swowne that neuer after a-roos;
ffull sharp and crewell was this stour, for the meyne that com
with kynge Vrien were full profitable and hardy, and foughten
all the day longe, and suffred grete travaile.  And the kynge
Aguysans wente in to his Cite disconfited, ffor the chace lefte of
hym for to fight with the kynge vrien and his peple; and ther
was grete slaughter of men and of horse bothe, for neuer so small
a peple made so grete occision.  But longe the kinge vrien and
his men ne myght not endure, ffor a-gein hem were so grete foyson
of peple that hem nothinge ne spared, but dide hem the greef
that thei myght with all theire power; but the nyght com that
made hem departe.  And the kynge vrien wente to Sorhan, he
and his peple, alle for brosed and full wery of trauayle and of
strokes that thei hadde yeuen and resceyved; but the saisnes
lefte in the place ther the bataile hadde I be, and laye that
nyght stille armed; but to the kynge vrien com a feire a-venture
that ought not to be for-yeten in the tale, for he fonde a rowte of
saisnes in a launde a-boute mydnyght, that ledde grete richesse
towarde the hoste of vitaile, and also of other harneyse, as robes
and money and bestes, and were well iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that these richese dide
condite; and thei were sette to theire soper with grete foyson of
vitaile, and wende to haue hadde no drede of no man, ffor thei
knewe well the disconfiture of hem and the kynge Aguysanx,
and therfore were thei deseuered fro the grete companye for the
hastier spede, and for to come the soner to the siege that was
be-fore the town of valdesbery.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge vrien and Bandemagn, his nevew, saugh
the saines in this manere, and the teintes and pavelons
that thei hadde pight, and the gret light that was with-ynne the
pavilouns, thei made a-noon to aske what peple it were; and thei
that were with-ynne the pavylouns a-noon ansuerde, and seide
thei were with the kynge Brangore of Saxon.  Whan the kynge
vrien and Bandemagn, his nevew, herde that thei were saisnes

<PB REF="" N="240" ID="pb.240"/>

that thei hadde founden, thei cried "as armes;" and her peple
seide,   <MILESTONE N="83b" UNIT="folio"/>"Now as armes, for now it shall be preved who is goode
and who is cowarde."  And thei sette vpon hem, and founde hem
vn-armed, and therfore was in hem but pore deffense; and <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>the the</SIC></CHOICE>  
cristen be-gonne to ouerthrowe pavylouns vpon her heedes, and on
her mete.  Ther sholde ye haue sein grete trouble of tables
downcaste and the vitaile I-spredde wide, and cuppes and pecys of
siluer and bordclothes and towayles vnder the horse feet, but ther
was grete occision of saisnes that the cristin peple hem dide, that
hem hated of mortuall hate; and as the storie seith, that the cristin
were yet viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and  of the saisnes ne were but iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and alle
vn-armed, as thei that were sette at soper, and wende not to haue
hadde no drede.  And the nyght was feire and clere, and a softe
weder in the myddill of Aprill.  And the saisnes were so hewen
and martired in shorte tyme that of the iij<HI REND="sup">Ml </HI>ascaped not xl, and
that ne were slain with speres, and swerdes, and axes; and thei
that ascaped ronne in to wodes and in to grete forestes, and made
so grete sorowe that no man cowde telle.  And whan the saisnes
were thus disconfited and fledde, the kynge vrien and his peple
gedered vp that was lefte ther of the saines that was grete
richesse, and wente the right wey to Sorhant with-oute eny
other distrubier, and were gladde and mery after the aventure
that was hem be-fallen.</P>
<P>  After that the kynge vrien and Bandemagn were departed
fro the bataile, as ye haue herde, ther com tydinges how
that Gawein, and Agrauain, and Gaheret, and Gaheries, and
Galashin were departed from theire faders so yonge childeren for
to be made knyghtes with-oute takynge leve, and were goynge to
logres for to take her armes of the kynge Arthur; but thei haue
hym not founden, for he was gon in to the reame of Tamelide;
and the childeren were lefte at logres, and kepte right wele the
marches, and seiden thei wolde neuer remeve thens till theire
oncle were come home, and also how thei hadden gete the richest
prise that euer was sein in her comynge.  And so these tydinges


<PB REF="" N="241" ID="pb.241"/>

ronne thourgh the londe that Ewein herde speke ther-of, that was
Arthur suster sone; and than he seide to his moder in prive
counseile, "Ffeire moder, my cosins beth gon to the court of
kynge Arthur hym for to serue, and for to take theire armes of
hym; and we ne mowe not be in no gretter myschef than we
beth now ynne, and therfore I wolde haue youre counceile how
that I sholde do, ffor in no manere will I do no thinge that sholde
yow displese; and ye knowe wele that my fader hath yoven his
londe that be com on his syde to Bandemagn, his nevew, after
his discesse, in the tyme of Vterpendragon, and he may no more
thynge fro me be-reve what wratth that euer I haue of hym, for
the londe that cometh of youre be-halue ne may I not lese, but
yef it be youre will; and though I lese all I will go with my
cosins to serue myn oncle; and therfore a-ray me so that I go
with worship, for   <MILESTONE N="84a" UNIT="folio"/>how-so-euer that it be I will go, for I haue
lever ther to dye than here for to lyve as in prison, and therfore
sey me lightly what is youre pleiser."</P>
<P>  Whan the lady herde Ewein her sone so speke, she be-gan
to wepe for ioye and for pitee, ffor well she knewe
that the herte com fro the high lynage on hir syde, and seide,
"Ffeire some Ewein, wher haue ye take that talent and that
herte for to leve me and to serue another?"  And he ansuerde,
"Ha, dame!  for goddes love, mercy!  I reporte me to all the
worlde, and my herte also telleth me, that he is youre brother and
myn oncle, and also my cosins beth go in to his londe, and
therfore were I a grete cowarde to a-bide here, where as I may no
profite do ne availe, and yef I helpe not hym for to mayntene his
londe as my cosins do; and therfore, thaugh ye yeve me no leve
I will go; and now ordeyne so for me that I may go in soche
that it be youre worship and myn."  "Ffeire sone," seide the
lady, "a-bide a-while, and I shall a-paraile yow so prively that
youre fader shall it not wite, for and he it wiste, all youre iourney
were loste; and gete yow soche felship as ye will haue, and I
shall purveye for horse and armes, and robes and money I-nowgh
to spende."  "Madame," seide Ewein, "gramercy;" and than
he com to his brother Ewein a-voutres, and discouered to hym his


<PB REF="" N="242" ID="pb.242"/>

corage; and whan he hadde all seide, the tother ansuerde and
seide that he sholde neuer go in to no strange londe with-oute
hym yef god wolde, and that he was redy to move what tyme
that euer he wolde.  Quod Ewein, "I will that we departe
withynne these viij dayes."  And with that the bretheren departed,
and made hem redy; and Ewein the a-voutres so purchased as he
that was manly and wise, that he hadde in his companye an
hundred felowes, and Ewein the more hadde CC; and his moder
hym ordeyned robes, and money, and horse, and armure grete
plente.  And on an euenynge after soper thei departed a-boute
mydde-nyght, at the firste cok crowinge, by leve of the lady;
and hem condited ffragien, a yonge gentilman, that knewe alle
the estres of the forestes and the weyes; but now of hem resteth
the tale, and returned to speke of kynge ventres of Garlot.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ventres of Garlot vndirstode that he hadde
loste his sone Galashin, he was right hevy and wroth,
and in especiall toward his wif Basyne, so that he spake not to
hir all a moneth nother goode ne badde.  Than fill it on a
thursday at even in the moneth of Aprille, in the tyme that these
erbes and trees be-gynne to florissh, and the briddes singen with
ther voys for the swetnesse of the newe mery seson, that a
messanger com and tolde hym the grete distruxion where-as the
kynge Aguysanx hadde I-be, and how the saisnes hadde hym
disconfited, and how that he hadde be deed or take, ne hadde be
the kynge vrien that com hym   <MILESTONE N="84b" UNIT="folio"/>for to socour, wher-fore the
chase sessed of the kynge Aguysanx; and after com a-nother
messager, that tolde hym of the grete distruxion of the saisnes
that the kynge Tradyliuant and the kynge de cent chiualers hadde
don be-twene Randoul and the roche, where-as thei hadde riche
enprise.  And whan the kynge ventres herde these tydinges he
was right hevy for the distresse of the kynge Aguysanx, and on
the tother side he was right gladde of the kynge Tradilyuaunt
and of the kynge de Cent chiualers, than he be-thought in hys
herte <CHOICE><CORR>that</CORR><SIC>that that</SIC></CHOICE>   he wolde go serche the marches be-twene Northwalis


<PB REF="" N="243" ID="pb.243"/>

and Sorloys, where-as the passage was right grete; but he hadde
not longe be in this stodye whan in his owne contrey he herde so
grete noyse and clamor of peple that fledde on euery side.</P>
<P>  A noon the kynge lete aske what the peple eiled.  And thei
seide that alle the saisnes of the worlde were entred in to
his londe, and brente, and distroied, and slowgh alle that thei
myght atteyne.  And ther-to ther was of hem so grete
multitude that it was merveile, and were loigged vpon the river of
sourne be-fore the castell of brolende in the medowes; and ther
thei a-bide the grete carriage of vitaile, and of hem is captein the
kynge Magondes, that was cosin to Aungis; and the kynge
ffansobres, and the kynge Groales, and the kynge Pyngnores, and
the kynge fforreyours cometh be-fore more than with xx<HI REND="sup">MI</HI>, that
be spredde thourgh all youre londe, and brenne and distoie and
sle the peple; and yef ye will not this be-leve, ye may it bothe
heere and see.  And whan the kynge ventres saugh his londe thus
turne to distruxion, he knewe wele that he myght not a-bide
longe with-out grete damage.</P>
<P>  A noon the kynge cryed with high voys, "Gentill knyghtes,
now as armes, for now shall be shewed youre
worthynesses, ffor he nys no knyght that will not deffende his londe and
his contrey a-gein his mortall enmyes."  Than ronne thei to armes
knyghtes <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> squyres grete foyson bothe oon and other thourgh
the town; and when thei were redy thei were xij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And the
kynge ventres toke of hem vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and yaf hem to Doriax for to
lede, and moche hym requered for to well and to be gode knyght,
and so in trouthe he was a noble knyght, and right nygh cosin to
the kynge.  And he rode that wey as he saugh the mene peple
come fleynge, and spedde hym so that he com ther as thei made
the martire and the Occision of the peple, and were in the
formest frounte v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; but thei were not alle in array, for thei
were spredde a-brode in the contrey down by the river, that brent
and robbed.  And whan dorilas saugh with his iye that thei
dide so grete damage that were soche mysbelevynge peple, he
rode vpon hem full Irously.  And whan he com nygh bothe he
and his men lete reine as faste as the horse myght hem bere, and

<PB REF="" N="244" ID="pb.244"/>

smote hem so with sharp speres and trenchaunt, that many of the
saisnes   <MILESTONE N="85a" UNIT="folio"/>ther-with were throwe to grounde, and many slayn, ffor
thei were so supprised that thei were not ware till thei were ynne
a-myd monge hem that thei slowgh of hem more than two partes
er the kynge ventres was come; and the remenaunt turned to
flight in to the hoste of briolors, where as the iiij kynges were
loged.  And dorilas hem enchased and slough and martired, and
dide hem gret turment; and whan he hadde hem pursude to the
tentes and the pauylouns, and it was noone passed of the day, and
whan the saisnes saugh hem so fle, thei ronne to armes, but for
all theire haste thei myght not be so soone armed er ther were v<HI REND="sup">C</HI>
tentes and pavilouns ouer-throwen vpon theire hedes, and moo
than a thousande me slayn.</P>
<P>  Than thei be-gonne to blowe hornes and trompes nexte to the
teinte of kynge Margondre, and ther assembled and
gadered so grete plente of peple that thei were more than
xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And than rode the iiij kynges; and it fill that thei mette first
with the kynge Galagnes with iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men or moo, and mette with
dorilas, that moche hym peyned to greve the saisnes, and hadde
right wele do all the day; and heilde stronge spere that he hadde
take from a saisne.  And as sonne as dorilas and Maglans saugh
ech other, thei lette renne and mette to-geder so sore vpon the
sheldes that thei perced, and the haubrekes were stronge that no
maile ne brake, but the speres splyndered on peces; and thei
passed thourgh and hurteled to-geder so harde with the horse
myght that bothe fill to grounde, and their horse vpon theire
bodies.</P>
<P>  Whan dorilas and Maglans thus hadde eche other
ouerthrowen, bothe partess pressed to the rescu; and ther
were many hurte, and sharpe medle ther was a stronge bataile
and grete man slaughter on bothe sithes; and with grete labour
were bothe dorilas and Maglaans horsed; but grete losse of peple
fill vpon the saisnes side, ffor thei were many of hem vn-armed,
but yet hadde thei had gretter lose ne hadde the kynge ffalsadres
come with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, that faught with the cristin right
harde.  But the kynge ventres was a goode knyght and a sure a-bove alle


<PB REF="" N="245" ID="pb.245"/>

that were in the feilde, ffor he dide merveilouse prowesse in
armes, and gretly he hym peyned, for he saugh the grete
nede.  And so, thourgh the helpe of god and his knyght-hode, the vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
were discounfited and putt to flight; but as the kynge Pyngnores
com with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes, that hem recounforted and moche
sustened, for thei smyten in a-monge the kynge Ventres meyne and
made hem to remeve more than a bowe draught from the tentes
and the pavilouns be-twene the wode and the rivere.  And whan
the kynge ventres saugh his men go in soche manere, he cried his
ensigne, and seyde, "Gentill knyghtes, whether ar ye a-wey?
returne and selle your deth while that ye may lyuen, for neuer
shull ye comen to better pointe, and ther-fore haue   in mynde
what ye be, ffor better is it for yow for to deffend youre- <MILESTONE N="85b" UNIT="folio"/>
self manly than to be slayn shamefully in flight, for as me semeth
whiche wey that we turne ther nys but deth."  And whan thei
herde her lorde thus speke thei returnede and fill to-gedir on a
companye streite and close, that noon myght entre hem
withynne but a-noon he were slain.  And thus thei hem kepte
withoute remevynge, and suffred and endured till these other vpon
hem hadde broke theire speres and till thei hadde a-gein recovered
her breth; and so a-bode theire strokes that the to-ther were
somwhat wery and thei hem-self ther-with re-freisshed; and whan
thei saugh the saisnes well chased and short wynded, thei lete
renne at hem and be-gonne to do soche maistries that the saisnes
were alle a-baisshed of the merveile that thei saugh hem
do.  And on the tother side dorilas faught so a-gein the peple of
Maglaans that he droff hem a-wey discounfited, and made hem
to rebounde vpon the warde of ffalsabres and vpon the warde of
Pyngnoras, that right sore faught agein the kynge ventres and
his peple, so that the ton smote thourgh the tothers
companye.  Ther was a stour merveilouse and stronge bataile, and dured so
longe till it was euensonge tyme.  Than meved the kynged
Margondes with grete plente of saisnes, for thei were more than xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and he hadde grete dispite that so small a peple sholde endure so
longe agein so many as thei weren, for he saugh wele that thei
were not so manye by the haluendell as the saisnes.  Than Margondres


<PB REF="" N="246" ID="pb.246"/>

 cried to his men and comaunded hem that thei sholde
sette so sore vpon the cristen that ther sholde leve noon in the
feilde a-live.  And whan the kynge ventres saugh comynge
a-gein hym so many saisnes, he gedered his men a-boute hym
close, and drough hym litill and litill towarde the foreste.  And
the saisnes hem hasted faste as thei wende haue all taken and
confounded, and vpon them they brake theire speres; and the
kynge ventres and his meyne hadde gete the wode at her bakkes
at a streite weye that was right depe, and the forest high on
bothe sithes of the wey, and so thikke that nothinge might entre
but it were wilde bestes.  And the kynge ventres and Dorilas
haue hem so spedde that thei haue their men enbusshed in that
streite passage, and pight theire speres in the erthe, and the
sharpe hede of steil vpwarde, and <CHOICE><CORR>were</CORR><SIC>were were</SIC></CHOICE>   well a-raied hem to
deffende.  And the saisnes com vpon hem in grete haste full
wroth and angry for the grete damage that thei hadde don, and
assailed hem right sore; and these hem deffended right vigerously
till that it was derke nyght that vnethe myght oon se a-nother;
and more hadde the saisnes loste than wonne.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ventres saugh the saisnes gon, than he and
his men rode forth all the nyght till thei come to
wyndesore, and well it semed by their armes that thei hadde not
soiourned, ffor theire sheildes were hewen and to daissht, and
theire   <MILESTONE N="86a" UNIT="folio"/>haubrekes rente in many places, and hem-self all be-soiled
with bloode, and her brondes of stiell croked and bente for the
strokes that thei hadde smyten, that for a merveile thei were
be-holden thourgh the town, and ech seide to other that these
peple hadde not leyen at soiourne, and preide to god for hem
bothe ladyes and maidenes in the chirches vpon theire knees and
elbowes, that god sholde hem spede and defende fro deth.  And
thise yede to theire loginges, and hem vn-armed, and wente to
bedde, and rested hem, for longe hadde they waked.  And whan
thei hadde slepte the mete was redy, and thei that myght ete
yede to dyner.  But now cesseth to speke of hem a-while, and
retourne to the kynge Brangore.


<PB REF="" N="247" ID="pb.247"/>
</P>
<P>  Now seith the storye that whan the kynge Brangore was
come to Eastrangore, his stronge place, that he dide it
stuffe with knyghtes and vitaile, that he hadde of oon and other
xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; and longe he kepte wele the marches a-boute hym
that litill harme the saisnes dide.  Till on a tyme the saisnes
were entred in to the marche of Strangore and of south walis,
where-of kynge Belynans was lorde, that was brother to the
kynge Tradilyuaunt, that have herde spoken of be-fore.  And
this Belynans was a riche kynge, and hadde a riche contrey
that was feire and esy; and his wif was a feire yonge lady of
grete bewte, and her was Esclence, and she was doughter
to kynge Natan de lille perdue, and hadde a childe be his nece
that was of grete bewte, and was xiiij yere of age, that was
cleped by his right name, Dodynell the sauage.  And the cause
whi he was cleped Dodynell was for euer was in the feeldes
and forestes for to hunte at the herte and other deer and wylde
swyn, and for he haunted it so moche ther-fore, thei cleped hym
Dodynell the sauage.  And the kynge ventres was brother to his
moder Esclence, and Galaishin was cosyn to Dodynell on his
moder syde.  This Dodynell was after in the kynge house Arthur,
and was a knyght of grete prowesse, and oon of the rounde
table, and oon of the most preised; but at this tyme we shall not
speke no more of hym, but speke of the kynge Brangore and of the
saisnes that be entred in to hys londe, and was wroth and sory for
his frendes that he hadde loste be-twene Arondell and the roche of
saisnes that heilde theire wey from wynsore be the castell of the
streyte wey; and thei were grete plente of peple; and as thei
passed thourgh the contrey thei brente, and robbed, and wasted,
and dide grete harme to the lordes of the weyes and to the
lorde of the streite marche, and to the castellein of Wyndesore,
and to the kynge Belynant of sought walis, and to the kynge
Brangore more than eny other.  And whan he wiste it he gedered
all his peple, and armed hem, and lepte to horse for to a-venge
hem of the shame and of the harme that thei hem diden.  And
the saisnes com so many and so thikke that all the contrey was
of hem covered the length of a walshe myle, that brent and slowe

<PB REF="" N="248" ID="pb.248"/>

euer as thei come.  And on the tother syde the kynge Belynant
com   <MILESTONE N="86b" UNIT="folio"/>ridynge with grete plente of peple till he com to the
saisnes that thus distroied the contrey and made soche martire of
the mene peple that men myght se the smolder of the fire x myle
longe, so trouble ther-of was the aire.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Brangore saugh the distruxion and the
grete martire, he toke ther-of grete pitee, and gan to
wepe watir with his iyen, and than he requerid his men to haue
in mynde to do well, and to defende holy cherche and the cristin
feith; and the saisnes com faste ridinge with baner sprad, and
were moo than fifty thousande, and hem condited Barahans, and
Cornyax, and lydarus, and hardrans, and kyngnenans.  These v
kynges were riche and myghti, and eche of hem hadde in
company x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and alle were thei kyn to Aungis, that Vterpendragon
slough; and whan the kynge Brangore sye the grete nombre of
saisnes, he merveiled fro whens alle myght come.  And than he
gan to prey his men, and require to thynke vpon her worship and
to do well her devers, and a-bode hem at a passage at a brigge
ther thei moste come ouer that lay ouer the river of arson, that
was brode and dep?? and as soone as thei were mette, thei lete
theire horse renne, and smyten harde to-geder the toon vpon the
tother.  Ther was gret noise and crakkynge of speres, and many
oon throwe to grounde bothe horse and man, and that dured longe
till that thei come to the brigge, that may fill in to the water,
and many a tronchon of speres and sheldes that the sharpe streme
bar down the ryver, and it was not fully the houre of pryme.</P>
<P>  The booke seith that the river ran down be-fore Strangore
that the kynge Carados helde in his baile, and he was
lenynge oute at the wyndowes of the paleise a-bove, and be-heilde
the medowes and the river, and the gardins that were grene
florisshed, and saugh the water that was clier and sharp
rennynge brought down sheldes and speres fletynge grete foyson;
and he loked that wey that he saugh it come fro, and saugh the
aire all troble of the fire and duste, and vpon the watir fletynge
the harneys of knyghtes and of horse that were deed and drowned,
and dought a-noon how the kynge Brangore faught with the


<PB REF="" N="249" ID="pb.249"/>

saisnes.  Than he lepe hastely vpon his feet, and cried to his
men, "Now as armes, gentill knyghtes, ffor he that is not hardy
at this nede is not worthi to be a knyght," and ther was a
yonge squyre that was noble and hardy that brought the kynge
his armes.  This squyer was cleped Kay destranx, this squyer
hadde ofte Carados somoned to be a knyght, and he seide that
ther-to hadde he no talent, and that he seide for he purposed to
serue the kynge Arthur, and to take of hym the ordre of
knyght.  Whan the kynge was armede, he asked yef alle the other knyghtis
were redy, and thei seide how alle were an horse bakke a-bidynge
with-oute the yates.  And than the kynge asked his horse, and
ther-on lepte and rode oute of the town a grete spede, and come
to the bataile a-boute mydday.  And whan   <MILESTONE N="87a" UNIT="folio"/>thei come nygh thei
herde the noise and the strokes at the passage of the brigge, ffor
the kynge Brangore with-stode hem with xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the
saisnes were so many and so thikke that of fin force thei made
hym to remeve fro the brigge in to the playn feelde; but than
sholde soone the kynge Brangore haue hadde grete losse, but as
the kynge Carados com in fresshe with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men and leide in
a-monge hem fercely; and ther be-gan the stoure to encrese right
harde, and grete mortalite of the saisnes, for thei were not alle
right wele armed, and so thei foughten all the day, fro that it
was passed noone till evensonge, and than disparbled the cristin,
for thei were so sore over-leide with grete multitude of saisnes;
and than a-roos the shoute and the noise so grete, that iiij myle
of a man myght haue herde the sounde.  But longe myght not
the men of kynge Brangore ne of kynge Carados endure, but as
the kynge Belynans com with viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes wele horsed,
that ronne in a-monge hem fiercely, that made hem remove and
departe.  Whan the kynge Belynans com to the bataile, as was
grete nede to the kynge Brangore and to the kynge Carados, ffor
thei were so distrussed that thei were euen at flight; but whan
Belynans com he smote so fiercely vpon hem that these other
cristin myght well recouer be goode leyser, for with the kynge
Belynans were many goode men and noble knyghtes, ffor ther
was the lorde of Wyndesore and the lorde of the streite marche,


<PB REF="" N="250" ID="pb.250"/>

and the Castelein of Glocedon and the Castelein of Galeince, and
of the more, and of Rostok, and ther was Carados of the dolerouse
toure, and ther was drias le gais of the forest perilouse, and eche
of these hadde in his companye CC knyghtes of the beste of the
londe, and thei slough and made soche martire of the saisnes that
the river of arson be-com all reade of the blode and of the brayn
that was ther sheed of men and of horse, and hadde not the nyght
come on so soone ther hadde neuer a-schaped a-wey saisne, and
thei were moo than fifti thousande, and of the cristen ne were
but xxxiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; but the nyght com that made hem departe, and eche
partye drought fer from other, till on the morowe that thei wolde
be-gynne a-gein to fight, but the counseile of the kynge of
Saxoyne, the saisnes traueiled all nyght to-warde the roche, but
moche thei loste of her harneys, for thei hasted hem so faste oute
of the contrey, that thei hadde not with hem the half of her
thinges, and thus lefte it till on the morowe that it was day, and
than com the kynge Carados, and the kynge Belynans, and the
kynge Brangore, whan thei were redy armed, and alle the barouns
of theire companye were come to deffende the cristin feith, ffor
ther were many full noble men and trewe that hadden grete drede
that for the faute of her prowesse that holy cherche and cristin
feith were disavaunced; and thei renged and set their batailes in
ordenaunce, and rode that wey as thei trowed to mete their
enmyes, but whan thei founde that thei were goon, thei were
sorye and wroth that thei were so ascaped, ffor well thei wiste
that thei were gon to the   <MILESTONE N="87b" UNIT="folio"/>Castell of Vandesbyry, and whan thei
saught it myght be noon other thei returned, and eche lorde
made to other grete ioye and feeste, and departed togeder the
richesse that was lefte be-hynde of the saisnes in soche maner
that eche toke that hym liked, so that the moste pore of hem
was riche I-nowgh.</P>
<P>  And at theire departinge a-sonder, eche promysed other theire
seruyse yef nede were, and eche of hem sholde lete other
wite whan thei hadde eny mystere.  And the kynge Carados
repeired hom to his stronge place; and the kynge Brangore rode
to Estrangore, that was a goode town and a riche and full of


<PB REF="" N="251" ID="pb.251"/>

goode Burgeises, and dwelled ther in pees and in ioye longe tyme;
and than com tidinges that the sones of kynge loot hadde lefte
theire fader, and were go to logres to serue the kynge Arthur,
and the sone of kynge Ventres and the sones of kynge
Vrien.  And whan Dodynell herde these tithinges, he seide to hym-self
that he wolde do the same wise, and tolde to his prevy counseile
that he wolde go to court; and than he ordeyned to be redy in
the pryveest maner that he myght, and sente to seche kay destranx
with the kynge Carados his oncle, and sent hym worde to speke
with hym at Thorne Castell, and that he faile not in no wise to
come and bringe with hym his nevew kehedin.  The Messager
toke leve, and rode till he come to strangore, and fonde kay, and
seide to hym in counseile as Dodynell hadde hym comaunded,
and that he sholde com to speke with hym at the Castell of the
thorn, araiede redy to ride on his iourne.  And he ansuerde
that he sholde be ther redy with-ynne the thirde day.  Than the
messenger toke leve of kay destranx, and com to Dodynell the
sauage, and tolde hym the ansuere of kay destranx.  And whan
Dodinell herde what the messenger hadde seide, he vndirstode
a-noon what that kay ment, and made hym redy, and warned his
felowes as many as he myght haue, that thei were well xxiiij
alle yonge bachelers of xiiij or xv yere of age, and com to the
Castell of Thorn, he and his companye richely be seyn of golde
and siluer and robes, and ther a-bode till kay com and his nevew
kehedin li bens.  And thei brought in her companye xl yonge
gentilmen that alle were bolde and hardy.  Whan the childeren
were mette thei made to-geder grete ioye the ton to the tother as
thei that longe tyme ne hadde not mette.  And than seide
Dodinell, "Feire frende kay, I sente to yow for to come speke with
me, and I thanke yow that ye be now I-come, and I shall telle
yow the cause.  I haue herd tydinges that Gawein and Agrauain,
and Gaheret, and Gaheries, and Galashin, and Ewein ben gon to
the courte of kynge Arthur for to take theire armes, and
therfore I will go in the same manere; and I love yow so moche that
I will nought do with-oute youre leve, and that ye haue ther-of
wytinge; and ther-fore sey youre advise yef   <MILESTONE N="88a" UNIT="folio"/>ye will come also,


<PB REF="" N="252" ID="pb.252"/>

for to my fader I will not returne in no manere, ffor I haue made
redy all my purpos and am vpon my weye."  "Sir," quod
kay, "and ther-fore am I come to yow, ffor I supposed in partye
what ye ment, and I haue me so purveied that me nedeth for
nothinge returne, ffor I haue in my companye iiij yonge gentilmen
that be right hardy, and heire is also my nevew kehedin; and
ther-fore lete us meve whan ye like."  "Ye say well," seide
Dodinell, "for we shull meve to-morowe be-tyme."  Thus a-bode
the childeren all that nyght in grete ioye, and erly on the morowe
thei toke theire wey be the moste prive and disvsed weyes that
thei wiste, and wente to logres in this manere.  But of hem
cesseth the tale and returneth to the kynge Clarion of
Northumbirlonde.</P>
<P>  Now seith the booke that the kynge Clarion of
Northumbirlonde hadde gadered alle the peple that he myght, and he
stuffed well his Citee with vitaile and with men of armes, and
after he sente thurgh all his londe to hem that hadde oxen or
sheep or lambe, or eny other bestes, that thei sholde hem lede in
to the depe of the forestes, that were wilde and sauage.  And
thei dide as he hem comaunded, and sente with hem hierdes for
to kepe the bestes.  And whan thei hadde alle thus do, alle the
that myght bere armes or wepen defensable drowgh to the kynge
in Northumbirlonde, and thei were counted xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and gretly
peyned the kynge to kepe well the contrey, and lay many nyghtes
in the forestes to wayte vpon the passages, and a-noon as he myght
take eny asspye he lete hym take and put in prison.</P>
<P>  Upon a day the saisnes were assembled at the tente of kynge
Brangu of Saxoyne, and at the teynte of Maglaas the
riche kynge of Iselonde, that was cosyn germain to the kynge
of Denmark and brother to amadas, the riche kynge of Ostrich
and of a pertie of <CHOICE><CORR>Denmarke</CORR><SIC>marke</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.6">A small part of the MS. is here burnt out.</NOTE> and of Iselonde was he lorde.  And
ther thei complayned gretly of the losse and the <CHOICE><CORR>damage</CORR><SIC>amage</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.7">A small part of the MS. is here burnt out.</NOTE> that the
cristin hadde doon hem at the Castell de la roche, and the harme
that thei dide euery day; and on the tother side thei playned


<PB REF="" N="253" ID="pb.253"/>

gretly for defaute of vitaile that was scant in the hoste.  Than
sterte vp a yonge knyght vpon his feet, that was bolde and hardy
as of his age, and spake so high that he myght wele be herde, and
seide, "Ha! Brangue, feire oncle, yef ye will suffre me to go on
forrey in to a londe that I knowe, I shall bringe yow vitaile
plente, for the contre is full of all goode; and I shall take with
me soche of youre peple as I shall chese, yef nunadus my fader
will suffre that I goo, and maglaans myn oncle, for with-oute
theire leve I will not go in no manere."  "Ffeire nevewe,"
seide the kynge Brangue, "I here yow sey nothinge but well of
this that ye desire to vndirtake; but telle me now be-  <MILESTONE N="88b" UNIT="folio"/>fore in to
what londe desire ye for to go."  "That shall I wele telle yow,"
seide Orienx, "I desire to go in to Northumbirlonde, and to the
yates of the Citee of Cambenek, and witeth it wele that it is the
plentevousest contrey of this londe, and yef we shull fynde eny
vitaile in this londe ther shull we haue plente."  "And I grante
yow, feire nevewe," seid Brangue, "and ther-for cheseth with
yow soche as yow pleseth."  "Sir," seide he,
"gramercy."  Than Orienx chese oute of peple as many as hym liked, that were
wele xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> with-outen the petaile that after hem folowed, that
desired the wynnynge, and com right be-fore Norham, and robbed
and brent and distroied the londe; but of hem I shall stinte, and
telle of the parliament that kynge Brangue heilde.</P>
<P>  Whan that Orienx was departed fro the hoste, the kynge
cleped Sorioundes, his nevew, and seide, "Feire cosin,
how is it that ye will not go no wey.  Take of my men as many
as ye will, and go in to the londe of kynge ydiers, of Cornewaile,
and brynge with yow thens what yow liketh, and yef any man
yow with-stonde, take with yow soche peple that ye take of hem
vengeaunce."  And whan he herde his oncle thus speke he lepe
on his feet gladde and mery, for he was of grete prowesse, and
seide, "Sire, gramercy."  Than he chese at his volunte in the
hoste xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and whan thei were redy thei to theire wey towarde
cornewaile, and robbed the londe as thei wente, and distroied-the
contrey and brente.  But of hem ne speketh the boke no more yet
a while, but speketh of the parliament in the hoste of saisnes.


<PB REF="" N="254" ID="pb.254"/></P>
<P>Now whan Sorioundes, that was the nevew of maglaans, was
departed oute of the hoste as ye haue herde, that Mynadus,
the kynge, called hurtant, his nevew, and side, "Hurtant, nevew,
ye moste go in to leonoys, and in to Orcanye, in to the londes of
kynge loot, and take with yow of my men at youre wille, and
loke that ye do so, that I maye conne yow thonke."  And he
lepte vpon foote and seide, "Sir, gramercy," and toke soche
company as hym liste; and whan thei were redy thei were lx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and rode till thei come in to the londes of kynge loot, and
begonne to waste and distroie all that thei myght.  But here leventh
to speke more of hem and returneth agein to Br<GAP DESC="illegible" REASON="damage" EXTENT="1 letter" DISP="•"/>angue<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.8">A small portion of the MS. is here burnt out.</NOTE>, and
Maglaans, and mynadus and other.</P>
<P>  Whan Orienx, and Sorioundes, and hurtant were thus
departed fro the hoste as ye haue herde, the hethen kynges
helde a gret parliament how thei sholde take the town of
vandesbiry that was so stronge, ffor the booke seith that it stode
vpon a plain grounde, ne ther was nother hill ne mounteyne ny
it of two myle, and it was well diked, large, and well watered,
and depe, and the marysse grete and brode of a bowe shot, and
be-twene the town and the diche stode the walles, and the towres
of ston en-batailed rigth thikke, and in to the town were but two
entrees, and at eche entre two porte colyses and stronge yates
covered with Iren nailed, that shet with the two leves well and
strongly barred.  Wher-to sholde I longe devise yow the strenghe
  <MILESTONE N="89a" UNIT="folio"/>of the town, ffor ther-to it sat so esely vpon the river that com
rennynge vpon the oon side of the town be-twene the drie londe
and the maras, and envirouned the contrey on alle parties, that the
town myght not be made drie but on that oon part, and on that
syde were two paire diches so depe and brode, and the maras so
brode and depe as an arblast myght shete, and on that side was
the grete seege of saisnes, that it lasted more than iiij myle, and
thei wente be-holdynge on whiche side thei myght it beste take
and in what manere, and ther-of thei toke amonge hem grete
counseile how thei sholde do, ffor thei saugh that it myght not


<PB REF="" N="255" ID="pb.255"/>

be wonne but by famyn.  Ther was a knynge that was hight
Margoundres, that dressed hym vpon his feet and seide to the kynge
Brangue, "Sir, sir, me semeth than that ye most be so longe in this
londe that the town be take be famyn, and in the tyme that we
ly be-fore this town ther may be taken a-nother town other be
famyn or be other engyne, for as soone shall we take tweyne as
oon."  "Trewly," quod Maglaans, "ye sey trouth, and ther-fore
who that will assent to my counseile let vs sende the thirde part
of oure peple be-fore the town of Clarence, and alle tho that come
oute of oure contrey shull go with hem to the seege, ffor in this
reame is not the fowrthe part of the peple to oure that myght vs
remeve from that place."</P>
<P>  "Sir," quod Brangue, "who shall go with yow?  a-corde ye
who shall go."  "That shall I well telle yow," quod
Mynadus the kynge.  "Ther shall go thider the kynge
hardogobrans, and the kynge Synagons, and the kynge Sorbares, and
the kynge Margoundres, and the kynge Maglaans, and the kynge
Mycenes, and the kynge Pyngres, and the kynge Saphirus, and
the kynge Thoas, and the kynge Semptipres, and the kynge
Plantamore, and the kynge Sonygrex, and the kynge Mathucus,
and eche of these haue at his baner xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and holde the
seege be-fore the town that noon entre ne isse oute."  And this
was the ende of her counseile, and to this thei be alle a-corded;
and than thei a-raide hem meny and rode to the town of Clarence,
and distroied all the contrey a-boute as thei wente, and whan
thei were come be-fore Clarence thei pight teintes and pavilouns
alle a-boute the town, and a-bode there right longe.  But resteth
the processe of hem till efte soone, and speketh of kynge Clarion,
of Northumbirlonde.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Clarion saugh hem distroie his londe and
his contrey he was right wroth, and he toke aspie and
sente hym to wite yef thei were grete plente of peple, and whan
hadde hem alle sein he returned gretly affraied, and seide to the
kynge that thei were moo than fifty thousande.  Whan the kynge
herde these tidinges he toke a damesell and sente to the Duke
Escam, of Cambanyk, and sente hym worde to mete with hym at

<PB REF="" N="256" ID="pb.256"/>

the streite of the roche magot, vpon the river of Sauarne,   <MILESTONE N="89b" UNIT="folio"/>with
as moche peple as he myght assemble, ffor the saisnes be entred
in to the londe that alle distroieth.  Whan the Duke herde these
tidinges he somowned his people, all that the myght haue, so
that the hadde xij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> or moo, and rode forth till that he com to the
roche vpon the river of Sauarne, and whan he com there he fonde
Clarion, the kynge of Northumbirlonde, with thre thousande men
of armes; and whan thei were mette thei made grete ioye, and
soone ther-after thei saugh fire and flame lepe thourgh the
contrey, and the duste and the powder a-roos so grete that all the
aire ther-of semed trouble.  Whan the kynge Clarion and the
Duke Escam saugh this grete distruxion, it was no nede to aske
yef thei were wroth and angry.  Than thei rode that wey as thei
saugh the fire a-rise, and mette peple that fledde criynge and
makinge grete sorow for her losse, and ther-of hadde thei grete
pite, and rode forth till thei mette with hem that thei hadde
sought, but than thei made no lenger a-bidinge but mette
to-geder fiercely, and ther was grete slaughter bothe of men
and of horse, and the saisnes loste moche of her men <CHOICE><CORR>at</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE>
the firste metynge, ffor thei were spredde a-brode vpon and
down the contrey and gadered the prayed towarde the hoste, and
were of the forreyours xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and to hem the Duke Escam and the
kynge Clarion yaf grete bataile, and fought from prime to
mydday, and the frenshe booke seith thei slough x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of the saisnes of
the pytaile; but whan grete chiualrie com thei were gretly
affraied, ffor thei were so grete nombre.  And whan the kynge
Clarion and the Duke saugh the saisnes come so grete foyson it
was no nede to aske yef thei were affraied, and yet hadde thei in
her company noble knyghtes grete plente, ffor with Clarion was
ladris de la dolerouse garde with a C of gode knyghtes, and ther
was Sensadoyns the Castelien of Nohant with a thousande men
of armes, and Bruns saunz pitee that heilde the Castell of the
depe slade in Northumbirlonde; and with the Duke Escam was
Serebruns, the lorde of Salerne, with viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men wele horsed, and
with hym also was marke, the lorde Roestok, that brought a
feire companye of two thousande men of armes, and ther was also


<PB REF="" N="257" ID="pb.257"/>

the lorde of Taumdes with viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men noble and hardy, and ther was
also the lorde of the white tour, that was a noble knyght and an
hardy, with vij hundred knyghtes vpon startelinge stedes, and
ther was Canagus, the nevew of kynge Arthur, wele armed and
richely, with thre hundred felowes, and ther was also Agrauadins,
lorde of the stronge Castell, with foure hundred knyghtes wele
horsed, and whan thei alle assembled thei were aymed what
oon what other xxxv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and thei heilde hem alle cloos to-geder
vpon the river of Sauarne, and the saisnes com rennynge vpon
hem with so grete foyson that   <MILESTONE N="90a" UNIT="folio"/>litill while sholde thei haue
dured ne hadde be the straytenesse of the grounde ther thei were,
ffor the saisnes were of grete pride, and grete lordes, and the
beste knightis of all the hoste, and ther-to of hem were so grete
foyson, that litill thei sette be the cristin, and hem assailed full
harde.  Ther was anguyshous medley and harde stour, and on
the tother side thei defended so well that on hem thei gat no
grounde, and thei launched at hem speres and dartes sharp grounde,
and eche of hem hurte and wounded other dispiteously.  And thus
thei endured thre dayes, that neuer thei dide of haubrek ne helme
from their hedes till the nyght that thei ete soche vitaile as thei
hadde, but it was full small.  But now turneth the tale a litill
fro hem and returneth to Merlin and to the kynge Arthur, that
be in Toraise, in Tamelyde, in ese, and right moche honoured of
the kynge leodogan.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.16">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XVI. 
<LB/> MERLIN'S JOURNEY TO LOGRES AND VISIT TO GAWEIN. ENCOUNTER BETWEEN THE CHILDREN AND ORIENX.</HEAD>
<P>  Full grete was the ioye that thei ledde in the town of Toraise
for the victorie and the wynnynge that thei hadde vpon
theire enmyes, and thei a-bode theire peple thet assembled euery
day on euery part, and the kynge Arthur ther was full richely
serueved and honoured of the kynge leodegan and of his doughter,
that moche her peyned, be the commaundement of hir fader, and


<PB REF="" N="258" ID="pb.258"/>

vpon a day as the kynge Arthur was moche worshiped and in
grete ese.  Than Merlin com and toke the thre kynges apart and
seide, "Sirs, I moste go in the reame of logres, for ther is
now grete nede of counseyle and of helpe, nought for that the
londe hath eny perile, but that it shall well be deffended from
euell doers, and I do yow to wite that the princes and the barouns
beth moche greved with the saisnes that to many haue in her
londes, and thei haue be-seged two Citees thourgh her pride,
wherof that oon is vandesberes and the tother is Clarence, and
ther be assembled the peple of moo than xl dyuerse regiouns, and
yet thei encrece euery day more and more; and more than he hem
tolde how that the saisnes were departed, and how that <CHOICE><CORR>oon</CORR><SIC>oo</SIC></CHOICE> part
yede vpon the kynge of Cornewaile, and the tother upon the
kynge loot, and the thirde vpon the kynge Clarion and the Duke
Escam, and after that the tolde hem alle the tidinges, and alle the
batailes, and all the trouble that hadde I-be, and all the
discounfitures be-twene the saisnes and cristin kynges, and the
grete parliament that the saisnes heilden for to a-sege the two
townes, and how Ewein the grete and Ewein the a-voutres were
departed fro kynge vrien her fader, and how Dodinell the sauage,
and kay destranx, and keheden lebens com on the tother side
towards logres to a-bide ther with Gawein, and seide how thei
wolde neuer be cleped knyghtis vn-to the tyme that the kynge
Arthur hem girde with her swerdes, and I do yow to wete that
thei may not endure but thei haue other counseile   <MILESTONE N="90b" UNIT="folio"/>than her
owne, ffor the saisnes be so spredde a-boute thourgh the londe that
thei shull be take but thei haue better counseile but hem-self, and
that is the cause that I will go, and loke that ye be mery and
well at ese, and resteth yow that ye go nothir hider ne thider
till that ye se me, and I shall not longe tarye."</P>
<P>  "Ha, feire frende," seide the kynge Ban, "ne a-bide not longe,
for than sholde we alle be deed and distroied, yef ye vs
now for-sake we myght sey that ye hadde vs alle
be-traied."  "How is that, feire lordes?  haue ye doute that I sholde not
come a-gein?  now be-war that neuer ye it thinke, for than haue
ye loste my love."  "Sir," seide the knyge Ban, "I thenke it


<PB REF="" N="259" ID="pb.259"/>

for noon evell that I haue of yow, but for to haue your companye
that I so moche love."  "Now lete it be," quod Merlin, "for ye
shull me haue here a-gein with yow er than ye haue bataile in
this reame, and therfore I yow comaunde to god, for I may here
no lenger tarien;" and with that he departed so sodeynly thens
that thei knewe not where he was be-come.  And that he com
the same nyght to Blase his maister in Northumbirlonde, that
grete ioye hym made whan he hym saugh as he that loved moche
his companye.  And Merlin tolde hym alle these aventures that
were be-fallen in the reme of Tamelide seth that he departed;
and after that he tolde hym alle thinges that were fallen to the
kynges of the reame of grete Bretaigne, that nought he lefte
vn-tolde; and he wrote in hys booke worde for worde like as he
hym tolde; and by hym haue we the knowinge ther-of in to this
tyme.  And whan he hadde alle these thinges writen, thanne he
tolde hym for what nede he hadde lefte the thre kynges in the
reame of Tamelide.  And the same nyght that Merlin spake thus
with Blase was Orienx and his meyne logged vpon the river of
humbir, enteringe in the londe; but now resteth the processe
of Merlin and of Blase a-while, and of the saisnes, and speketh
of Seigramor, that is departed fro Costantynnoble with CCC
felowes for to be made knyghtes of kynge Arthurs honde.</P>
<P>  Now seith the booke of Blase that so hath Seigramor hym
spedde seth that he departed fro the riche Citee of
Costantynnoble, that he com to the port of hucent that thei a-rived
at the port of Dover; and whan thei were alle come to the londe
thei were right gladde, and trussed theire harneys, and lepe on
theire horse, and toke theire wey toward Kamelot, and iourneyed
so as thei that knewe not the weyes, ne fonde not of whom to
asked after the kynge Arthur, and fonde also the contrey brent
and wasted as the saisnes hadde passeth thourgh; and the
childeren ne wiste no worde till sodeinly thei blusshed vpon a grete
parte of saisnes that Orienx hadde desseuered on a companye, and
were xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and went robbinge a-boute Norhant, that noon hem ne
letted of the pray that theire peple hadde gadered.  Whan these
childeren a-proched   <MILESTONE N="91a" UNIT="folio"/>the saisnes with-ynne a myle, thei mette
 
    
<PB REF="" N="260" ID="pb.260"/>

with peple of the contrey that fledde to the wode for drede, for
in the londe was grete sorow and desese in tho dayes.  Whan the
childeren hem mette thei asked what hem eiled, and thei hem
tolde that thei fledde for the saisnes that all the contre
distroied.  And than Seigramor asked, "Where is the kynge
Arthur?"  And thei ansuerde that he was gon to the reame of
Tamelide.  "And who is than in this londe?" quod Seigramor.  Than seide
the men of the contrey that the sone of kinge loot of Orcanye,
that were nevewes of kynge Arthur, were come for to serue for to
take theire armes of kynge Arthur.  "And where ben thei?"
quod Seigramor.  "At Camelot," seide thei, "but for goddes
love, feire gentill knyghtes, ne go not ferther, for than shull
ye alle be slain and distroied."  "Now," quod Seigramor,
"telle vs what wey stondeth Camelot."  "Trewly," seiden
thei, "ye be right well in the wey, yef it ne were for these
false sarazins that here be comynge, and, ther-fore, fleeth, or
ye be alle deed."  "How fer is it hens to Camelot?" quod
Seigramor.  "Sir, it is vj mile vnto a plain that dureth wele
two myle fro thens."  Whan Seigramor vndirstode that he
hadde but viij myle, he cried to his felowes, and seide, "Gentill
squyers, now as armes, for now shall be sein who is noble and
worthi; and loke that thise <CHOICE><CORR>mysbelevinge</CORR><SIC>mybelevinge</SIC></CHOICE> saisnes that thus
distroieth the cristin feith ne bere nought a-wey of youres be
force but it be dere solde, ffor yef we may passe hem thourgh
and gete be-twene hem and Camelot, we shull than come thider
be strengthe of oure horse yef we haue grete mystere."  Than
a-light the squyers and hem armed.  Ther sholde ye haue sein
hem do on fressh newe hauberkes bright shynynge as fin silueir;
and thei hadden hattes of fin steill a-bove theire coiffes of Iren
vpon theire heedes; and than thei lefte theire palfreyes and lepe
vpon stedes covered in maile that thei hadde ther so good and so
feire that no man neded to seche better in no londe.  And than
thei hem renged clos on a sop as starlinges, and rode forth toward
the saisnes, that saugh hem comynge; but now a litill resteth
of hem and speketh of Merlyn, that was in Northumberlonde
with Blase.

<PB REF="" N="261" ID="pb.261"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan Merlin hadde tolde to Blase alle the merveiles of the
londe as thei were fallen seth he departed from
hym.  In the morowe erly he com be-fore the town of Camelot.  And he
com in the semblaunce of an olde man, and hadde on a russet
cote torne and all thredebare; and he was moche and longe and
courbed, and brode sholderes and leene for age, and the heer of
his heede entermedled white and broun, and longe berde, and bar
a grete staff on his nekke, and drof gret foyson of beestes be-fore
hym.  And whan he com be-fore the town he be-gan to make
grete sorow, and cried high and cleer that thei with-ynne vpon
the walles myght wele it here how he yede, seyinge,  <MILESTONE N="91b" UNIT="folio"/> "Ha,
lorde god, how grete pite is it that so feire children shull thus be
slayn and alle to hewen with wronge and grete
synne.  A! ha!  kynge Arthur, goode sir, whiche ffrendes thow shalt lese this
day that moche the sholden helpe yef thei myght lyve thi londe
to mayntene.  Ha, Seigramor, gentill squyer, fre and deboneir,
that thow shalt thus suffre angwissh of deth, now oure lorde god
yow socoure and helpe that ye be not slain, and yef that ye be
ded, he haue the sowle of yow that it be neuer turmentid in the
peynes of helle, as he is very god and man full of mercy and
grace, and also to saue and helpe yowre felowes in the manere that
thus dispitousely shull be martired for defaute of socoure."  These
wordes that the carl seide, vndirstode well Gawein and his bretheren
that were vpon the walles of the town, and were alle redy armed,
and be-heilde the fier and the smoke of the saisnes as thei brente
the contrey a-boute, ffor he was come to Camelot for to kepe the
town as soone as thei wiste the saisnes were entred the contrey,
and were gon vpon the walles to see yef the saisnes come for to
assaile the town.  And Gawein hadde wele herde and vndirstonde
the wordes that the karll hadde seide.  Than Gawein hym cleped
with an high voyse, and siede, "Man! man! com hedir, and
speke with me, and tell vs what thow eylest, and whi thow
makest this sorow, and telle vs who is that that thow goist thus
regratynge and be-monynge."  And the carll leide to the deef
ere and smote his staff on the grounde as he hadde ben oute of his
mynde, for grete sorow that he hadde at his herte; and than he


<PB REF="" N="262" ID="pb.262"/>

lenyd hym vpon his staff and be-gan to make grete sorowe; and
whan he hadde thus hym longe waymented, he drof a-gein his bestes
as though he wolde haue fledde to the forest; and than he seide
a-gein with an high voyce, "A! haa! chiualrie of logres, where
art thow be-come, ffor with-ynne these viij dayes men seide ther
was come in to this contrey all the socoure of the worlde, and I
herde sey that the nevewes of kynge Arthur sholde defende this
contrey; certeys euell it sheweth whan he suffreth to be slain the
merveile of the worlde."  Whan that Gawein vndirstode these
wordes he was right angwisshouse for to knowe whi the carll
hadde this seide, and whi he so waymented and cleped hym a-gein
with a lowde voyce thre or foure tymes, and seide, "Howe,
karll, howe? speke to me and telle me what thow eilest."  And
euer he turned the heed in trauers, and made semblant as he
hadde hym not herde; and Gawein hym cleped efte soones, and
than he lefte vp his heed that was lothly and rivelid, and loked
on high to hym with oon eye open and a-nother clos, and
grennynge with his teth as a man that loked a-gein the sonne, and
ansuerde, "What wilt thow?"  Quod Gawein, "Come a litill
nerre and speke with me."  And he drought ner till he com vndir
the walles of the town vpon the diche, and seide, "Now maist
thow sey what thow wilt,   <MILESTONE N="92a" UNIT="folio"/>but sey hastely, for my bestes gon."
"I will," quod Gawein, "that thow telle whi that thow wepest,
and what he is that thow hast thus regreted, and whi thow hast
so blamed the Chyualrie of this contrey."  "Yef thow wilt
graunte me that thow shalt do thi power to delyuer hym I will
telle the."  "I the graunte," quod Gawein, "as I am trewe
squyer, that I shall ther-to do all my myght that I haue in the
worlde."  And whan the karll herde that Gawein was so
desirouse for to wite whi he was come thider, he seide to Gawein,
"Feire sir, what be ye?"  "My name," quod he, "is Gawein,
the nevew of kynge Arthur.  Treuly I haue grete pitee of a
companye of yonge Gentilmen that beth high mennes sones that
beth fightinge at the ende of this launde a-yen the saisnes that
neuer so fewe men contened so longe a-gein so moche peple, ffor
thei but thre hundred that fighten agein thre thousande; and


<PB REF="" N="263" ID="pb.263"/>

what be thei," quod Gawein, "and what go thei for to seche?"
Quod the karll, "Thei sey that the lorde of hem is cleped
Seigramor, the nevew of the Emperour of Costantinnoble, that is
come in to this contrey for to take his armes of the kynge
Arthur.  Now haue I seide all that I knowe; but I knowe it
well that ye will not hym socoure, and so I haue loste my laboure,
ffor I knewe well that ye haue not the herte ne the hardynesse
for to go thider.  Netherdeles, yef ye go thider and ye may hym
socoure, ye may yow a-vaunte that ye haue wonne a feire emprise
and a riche."</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein vndirstode the wordes of the karll that so
hym cleped cowarde, he was a-shamed, and cried, "Now
to horse, gentill knyghtes and gentill <CHOICE><CORR>felowes</CORR><SIC>felowles</SIC></CHOICE>,   and sue me for I
go."  And as sone as he hadde seide that worde he lepe to horse
and alle his felowes after, and rode oute of the town in all haste;
and whan thei were alle oute thei were iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> what oon what
other.  And Gawein com all be-fore, and come to the karll and
seide, "Lepe vpon this horse, and lede vs ther these childeren
fighten."  Ant the karll dide his comaundement, that for noon
other thinge was come theder, and rode formest ther as thei were
fightynge; and whan thei neyhed nygh thei founde the childeren
fightinge merveilously, and hadde slain of the saisnes moo than
vijC, but ther were so many of hem that thei myght not longe
endure; and ther dide Seigramor the grettest prowesse that eny
man saught euer, ffor he heilde an axe with bothe hondes, and
was be-fore his felowes vpon a stede that was swyfte and right
stronge, ffor whan thei gan hym assaile he smote in a-monge hem
so harde and so depe that he was loste as it hadde be in a see
from the sight of his felowes; and the saisnes hym enclosed on
alle sides, and Seigramor, that heilde the ax that was sharp
I-grounde, thought to perce thourgh to his felowes, he smote so
grete strokes on bothe sides that he slowgh all that he raught a
full stroke, and thei fledde on euery side from hym that knewen
his strokes, and noon was so hardy that durst hym a-byde, but


<PB REF="" N="264" ID="pb.264"/>

launched to hym sharpe grounde speres and gleyves and other
wepnes; but thus myght   <MILESTONE N="92b" UNIT="folio"/>thei not longe endure that thei ne
sholde haue be deed or elles taken, but as Gawein com with his
companye, ffor Orienx payned hym moche hem for to take that
was a noble knyght and a sure; and he sette vpon the
childeren and kepte hem in so short and streite that noon myght
passe, and foughten so felly that the childeren were waxen feble
for lakke of breth, and yef it ne hadde be for Seigramor only
ther hadde noon of hem ascaped.  But his defence was so grete
all a-boute hym that merveile it was how he myght it endure;
but in the ende a-vailed litill the well doynge of hym or eny
other ne hadde Gawein come soone with his companye of yonge
bachelers.  And as Gawein com to the stronge stour the
childeren were in gret mischief; and than he and his felowes spronge
vpon hem so sharply that at the first shofte thei threw of hem to
grounde mo than two thousande.  And of that was Orienx
sorowfull, ffor neuer hadde he sein so fewe peple so well hem
contene; and he heilde a stronge spere and the heed sharp
I-grounde, and rode in the renge formest, and seide he wolde be
a-venged on hem that hadde hym wratthed.  And Gawein hadde
so smyten a-boute hym on euery side that he fonde the childeren
full wery for travaile, and saugh Seigramor, that was a-fore in
the fronte, and hielde an axe in bothe handes wher-with he smote
grete strokes out of mesure.  And he was moche and semly, and
ther-to the beste shapen chielde to have sought thourgh eny
reame, and whom that he a-raught was hitte so harde that it
warant neither Iren ne stiell ne noon armour that he ne smot
thourgh owther arme or sholder or thigh or other member, and
shewde merveiles all a-boute.  And whan Gawein saugh all this
he asked of the olde man that was by hym what he was.  And
he seide it was Seigramor, the nevew of the Emperour of
Costantinnoble; but helpe hym delyuerly, for it is grete
myster.  Than Gawein renged his companye, and lete renne at hem so
fiercely that in her comynge thei threwe to grounde of the
saisnes grete plente, deed and wounded thourgh with sharpe
wepenes.  Grete was the bataile a-gein Orienx of the chylderen,


<PB REF="" N="265" ID="pb.265"/>

but at grete myschief thei were, for on Gaweins side were but
iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and thre hundred that Seigramor hadde brought, and of the
saisnes were xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, with-oute hem that ronne thourgh the contrey
that brente and robbed, of whiche were xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  Whan that Orienx
saugh that so small a peple with-stode hym so felly, he hadde
ther-of grete dispite, and cried to his men, and swor that in euell
tyme sholde eny ascape he caught, and com drivinge agein
Agrauain, that oon of his nevewes hadde slain be-fore his
iyen.</P>
<P>  And whan Orienx saugh that, he spored his steede and smote
Agrauain vpon the shelde, that he perced through the
plites of his haubreke vndir the side, that the spere hede shewed
on the tother side, and he shof ther-on so sore that he bar hym
from his horse to the grounde.  Whan Gawein saugh his brother
falle he hadde grete drede leste that he hadde be deed, and he
heilde a trenchant axe and come to the saisne that hadde him
vn-horsed,   <MILESTONE N="93a" UNIT="folio"/>and wende to smyte hym vpon the helme, but whan
Orienx saugh the stroke come he it douted, and couered hym
with his shielde, and Gawein hym smote that the axe bente and
slit the sheilde in two, the stroke was grete, and Orienx spored
his horse forth, the stroke descended vpon the helme and kut the
cercle and a quarter of the helme, and the mayle of the haubreke
be-hynde, and the horse chyne a-sonder, that he blusht  to the
grounde, and Gaheries smote so Solunant thourgh the heed with
an axe that ded he drof to the erthe, and Gaheret smote Vabibre
thourgh the helme that he slit hym to the teth, and Galashin
smote Pinados that the heed fley in to the feilde.</P>
<P>  Whan the saisnes saugh Orienx lye at the grounde thei hadde
grete drede that he hadde be deed, and shof alle to the
rescewe ther a-boute hym environ, and bar hym oute of the presse
in to the feilde, but he was stonyed of the stroke that he myght
not stonde on his feet ne meve no membre that he hadde, and
ther-to he made so lotly chere and so hidouse semblant, that alle
wende he hadde ben deed, and made a-monge hem grete doell and
wepynge that all the bataile lefte, and the childeren haue
Agravain <CHOICE><CORR>taken</CORR><SIC>tken</SIC></CHOICE>   vp ther he was fallen and set hym on horse, and the


<PB REF="" N="266" ID="pb.266"/>

karll that hadde brought thider Gawein hadde chaunged his forme
to a-nother, and hadde take the semblance of a knyght armed,
and than com to Gawein and to his other bretheren and seide,
"Feire lordes, yef ye do be my counseile, lete vs take the wey
now right towarde Camelot while these saisnes entende to make
this sorowe."  Whan Gawein vndirstode these wordes, he wiste
wele his counseile was wise and with-oute trecherie, and com
a-noon to Seigramore and seide he was right welcome and his
companye, and he a-gein hym salude as deboner and curteys, and
than he seid, "Ha! seigramor, feire frende, it is tyme now that
we go and lede with vs the peple that is vs be lefte, for I-nough
haue we wonne seth that saf and sounde we repeyre."  Than
Seigramor asked what he was that so spake vn-to hym, and he
seide, "My name is Gawein, the nevew of kynge Arthur, and the
sone of kynge loot of Orcanye, and kepe the londes of myn oncle,
I and my bretheren, till he be come from Tamelide, and we be
come hider for not elles but yow for to helpe and to socoure, ffor
in the morowe it was tolde how ye were assailed of the saisnes
right sore."</P>
<P>  Than com forth the knyght that hadde spoke to Gawein, and
cried, "A! Gawein, feire sir, what a-bide ye that ye come
not forthe youre wey; se not ye that all the worle of peple
cometh vpon vs, wherefore we may not ascape yef ye a-bide?"
Whan Gawein herde hym so haste to garison, he be-heilde and
saugh come so grete plente of saisnes, and so grete foison, that
alle the feilde was couered, and thei were alle armed, and com
rydinge   <MILESTONE N="93b" UNIT="folio"/>fiercely, and made soche noyse and soche murmur, that
a myle of lengthe it myght haue ben herde, and whan that Gawein
saugh the saisnes come in soche maner, he seide to Seigramor,
"Sir, and hit ples yow gowe hens."  And he hym ansuerde and
seide, "With goode will."  And thei than rode forth toward
Camelot clos to-geder and streite, that ye myght haue caste a
glove ouer her hedes covered vndir steill; and the saisnes yet
entended to Orienx makynge grete doell and sorowe, but
withynne a while a-roos the saisne fro disturdison, and saugh hem
a-boute hym made grete sorowe and hevynesse.  Than he asked


<PB REF="" N="267" ID="pb.267"/>

a newe helme and sheilde and spere, for he was of grete herte and
a goode knyght and hardy as of his age, and he swore yef he
myght with hym that yaf hym that acooley whereof he hadde so
leyen in swowne at erthe, he sholde it hym wele a-quyte, and than
he lepe to horse that was stronge and swyfte rennynge, and rode
that wey as he wende to haue hem founden, but thei were go
thens a myle.  Whan Orienx saugh hem gon in this maner, he
cried his ensigne and seide, "Now after hem," and than he swore
that noon of hem sholde ascape.  Than pressed forth the saisnes
hastely alle that myght, that oon ne a-bode not a-nother, and the
shoute and the noyse a-roos so grete that wonder it was to here,
and the duste and the powder a-roos so thikke that the clier air
was trouble, and thei com drivinge on so faste that thei nyghed
nygh to atteyne the cristin; and than the knyght that hadde yeve
Gawein this counseile saugh hem come so faste, he hasted sore
Gawein and alle the tother for to go faste, and spake vnto hem
that thei rode a gretter paas; but er thei com to the town of
Camelot thei were sore hasted.  But the noble Gawein and
Agravain and Gaheret and Gaheries and Galaishin and Seigramor were
the laste, and sente in theire felowes and her peple, and her
harneys be-fore, as the heirde driveth his bestes to pasture, and
ther while thei suffred the saisnes to breke theire speres, and
whan thei saugh eny of her felowes ouer charged, thei hem
delyuered at her power as thei that were of high prowesse, and
thei dide so well, that ther nas saisne so hardy that durste that
wey go, wher <CHOICE><CORR>as</CORR><SIC>as as</SIC></CHOICE>   thei were ne of hem a-bide a stroke.  Than com
Orienx with the grete baner, and hadde a grete spere, whereof
the heed is sharp and trenchaunt, and saugh hym that hadde hym
smyte to grounde, and knewe hym full well, and swoor by his
god that he wolde be a-venged; than he spored his horse fiercely,
and the chielde saugh hym come, but he made semblaunt as ther-of
he rought litill, and whan he com even at the metynge Gawein
lefte the wey and lete hym passe forth, that his horse cowde
not restreyne, and Gawein, that was wight and delyuer, returned


<PB REF="" N="268" ID="pb.268"/>

his horse vpon hym, and smote hym vpon the heed with bothe
hondes, but it was with the flat, for the haste that he hadde hym
to smyte, so that he wiste not how he it heilde, and the stroke
was so grete and hevy that the fier sparkled vp in the aire and
a-stoned hym so sore that he fill flat to the erthe, and Seigramor
smote   <MILESTONE N="94a" UNIT="folio"/>Driant the rede thurgh the sholder so harde that it
disseuered fro the body, and Galaishin smote so Placidas that his heed
he hym be-rafte, and Agrauain and Gaheret and Gaheries hadde
eche of hem caught a short spere, the Iren sharp and trenchaunt,
and that oon smote Gynebant, and the tother Taurus, and the
thridde smote ffannell, that eche bar his to the erthe from theyre
horse all blody, and with the same cours thei smote thre other;
and Gawein and Galaishin and Seigramor rested vpon Orienx, for
thei wolde hym haue take yef thei myght, but the saisnes ne
wolde it not suffre, but assembled so thikke a-boute tho thre
felowes that thei hadde many grete strokes taken and yeven, and
thei thre were noble and worthi, and slough of hem so many that
her armes and her brestes were all blody, and also their horse
heer, and so thei hem stered that noon was so hardy to a-byde of
hem eny stroke.</P>
<P>  Whan the thre felowes saugh thei moste nede fosake Orienx,
and saugh a worlde of peple that vpon hem com drivinge,
thei ronne vpon Orienx and hym diffouled with theire horse feet
till he was all to-brosed; and whan he was all to brosed and hym
diffouled at her lust saf thei haue hym not slain, than thei rode
after her felowes that be that tyme myght be nygh Camelot, for
neuer seth thei remeved were thei not enchased, but wente forth
delyuerly; and whan the thre felowes saugh her men were
withynne the town thei were gladde and mery, and than thei rode a
softe paas.  And the saisnes a-bode a-boute her lorde that was
caste down and so diffouled vnder horse feet, whereof he was so
sorowfull whan he a-roos from disturdison that thei be so ascaped,
that nygh he was wode for wratthe and Ire, and swor yef he
myght hem gete in his bailly that he sholde do hem be flain all
quyk and drawen a-sondre with horse.  "Sir," seide his men,
"a full fell pawtener is he that twies this day thus hath yow


<PB REF="" N="269" ID="pb.269"/>

smyten to grounde."  "Ye," qoud Orienx, "but yef I may haue
bailly ouer his body, he shall so be deffouled that ther ne shall
nothinge in the worlde hym warantise."  And thei hadde so
riden that thei com before Camelot, where as thei a-bode stille,
and asked oon of another where the other thre were be-come;
but ther was noon that ought cowde sey.</P>
<P>  Whan Agravain, and Gaheret, and Gaheries vndirstode how
that Gawein her brother and her cosin and the nevew
of the Emperoure were loste, thei turned bakke and seide thei
wolde not reste till thei hadde hem founden, and comaunded her
felowes not to remeve till thei saugh hem com a-gein; and than
alle thre rode a-gein a walop as thei hadde come; but thei hadde
but litill while riden whan thei mette the karll that satte vpon
the steede that Gawein hadde hym yoven, the same that hadde
brought tidinges of Seigramor; and whan he mette these thre
bretheren he asked whider thei wente; and thei seide thei sought
Gawein her brother, and her cosin Galaishin, and the nevew of the
Emperour, for thei wiste not where thei were be-comen.  "Ffull
euell," seide he, "haue ye yow demened, and well sheweth the
  <MILESTONE N="94b" UNIT="folio"/>worthi and noble where thei ben, and loo where thei come, but
whom it displese thei owe to come yow no thonke of her lyves, ffor
ye lefte hem foule as cowardes, and well it sheweth ther as thei
a-bode for to socour these other that now ben saf at garison; and
thei haue doon many feire chiualries and yoven many grete strokes,
that thei ought to be comended and preised of all the worlde that
ther-of heren speke, and to holde yow for soche as ye be; and
wele haue ye it shewed ther as ye lefte youre felowes at soche
nede, and thei ne lefte yow neuer for deth ne for lif, and euery
Gentillman that ther-of hereth speke ought yow to blame be
right and reson, and haue yow euer suspect in euery nede; and,
wite it well, it shall turne yow to repress."  With that the cherll
departed, that lenger with hem ne wolde talke.  And thei passeden
forth all shamefest and mate, and sory of the wordes the karll
hadde spoken; but thei nadde but litill wey riden whan thei
mette the thre felowes, that were so araied that it semed by her
armes that thei were come from felon place; and whan thei mette


<PB REF="" N="270" ID="pb.270"/>

to-geder thei made grete ioye.  Than Gawein asked tidinges of
her other felowes where thei were; and thei seide that thei hem
lefte be-fore the yates of Camelot, where thei a-bide.  Than thei
rode forth to-geder gladde and mery for her newe feliship that
be-come hem to helpe, and of that thei haue hem thus rescewed,
and he and his companye hooll and sounde.  But er thei hade a
wihile riden to-geder, thei mette the cherles horse sore affraied,
that com fleynge, and saugh the arson of the sadell all
blody.  And when these felowes that he hadde reprovid saugh the horse,
that oon be-heilde the tother and be-gonne to laugh.  Of that toke
hede Gawein and Galashin, and asked whi thei lowghen; and
thei stynte for to telle; and thei hem coniured another tyme right
harde for to telle the trouthe.  And Gaheries tolde hym alle the
wordes that the cherll hadde hem seide.  And whan that thei it
herde thei merveiled what it myght be; and than com Gawein to
the horse that fledde, and toke hym by the bridell, and saugh that
all the arson was blody, and well that the karll hadde be slayn.</P>
<P>  Than he asked of Agravain and of the tother yef thei mette
eny of the saisnes seth thei departed fro Camelot, and
thei seide how thei mette neyther man ne woman seth thei
departed from their men, saf the cherll that satte vpon that
horse.  Quod Gawein, "I trowe he be slayn or wounded sore, or
parauenture he is fallen where so it be to grounde, and therfore lete
vs hym seche till we may hym fynde, and yef he be a-lyue lete
vs bere hym to Camelot, ffor it were synne to suffre hym to dye
for defaute here in the feilde."  And than thei sought vp and
down in the feilde and amonge the busshes, but yet thei myght
haue sought hym in to this tyme, for he was come in to her hoste
in the semblaunce of a knave on foote, with a tronchon of a spere
in his honde, and whan Gawein saugh he myght not be founde
thei repeired to kamelot, and fonde her felowes hem a-bydynge
  <MILESTONE N="95a" UNIT="folio"/>at the brigge foot, that thei were of hem ioyfully whan thei saugh
hem hooll and sounde, and than thei entred in to the town and
drough vp the brigge and shette the yates, and than wente vpon
the walles for to loke yef the saisnes com toward þe town it for
to assaile, but thei ther-to hadde no talent, ffor thei desired not


<PB REF="" N="271" ID="pb.271"/>

ther so longe to soiourne till thei hadde it taken, for it was right
stronge, and the childeren hem vn-armed and wente to theire
loggyngis, and hem esed of all thinge that to mannys body
belongeth, and grete ioye and feste thei made of Seigramor whan
thei hym knewen; and whan he hadde hem tolde wherfore he
was come fro Costantinnoble to kynge Arthur to take of hym his
armes, and than was he moche worshiped and moche preised of
oon and other, and seiden that he was of grete herte and hardy,
for thei hadde hym sein in bataile, and he was of merveilouse
bounte, and moche reuerence <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> worship dide hym the noble
gentilmen ther-Inne, and disported and pleide, and be-heilde
Seigramor, that was moche and semly, and well furnysshed of membres,
and thus thei lyven in disporte and ioye thre dayes, that nothinge
thei ne herde on noo part, but that the saisnes wente in to the
Northumberlonde, and in to the londe of the Duke Escam, of
Cambenyk, that ther foughten sore bataile at the strayte of the
roche magot, a-gein the peple of Orienx, vpon the river of
Sauarne.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.17">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XVII. 
<LB/> DOINGS OF THE SAXONS IN THE LANDS OF KING CLARION AND DUKE ESCAM.</HEAD>
<P>Now, seith the booke, that sore were thei greved the peple of the
kynge Clarion, and also of the Duke Escam, whan Orienx
com to the medle, for gretly he hym peyned hem to do damage
at his power, and he was yet right wroth for the diffoulinge that
Gawein hadde hym don, and therfore wolde he gladly haue take
vengaunce yef he myght, vpon hem that he hadde ther founden,
and comaunded his men to do well, and swor his oth that ther
sholde noon of hem ascape, and than be-gan the assaute so
grete and merveilouse, that of arowes and quarelles ther were
many wounded and hurte.  Ne never myght the saisnes, for no
power that thei hadde, make hem remeve from that grounde; and
whan that the saisnes saugh that thei myght not make hem be

<PB REF="" N="272" ID="pb.272"/>

force for to leve the place, thei drough them vp and logged hem
by the river of Sauarne, and seide thei wolde kepe that passage,
and ther while thei robbed the contrey all a-boute hem, "for yef
we myght gete hem in honde," seid Orienx, "thei myght not
a-gein vs so endure."</P>
<P>  As soone as the saisnes were logged thei spredde a-brode in
the contrey to forry, and euer brente and distroied as thei
wente, and token prayes of bestes and of vitaile of all that thei
myght gete, and I-now thei hadde, for the contrey was riche and
in ese, and the peple of the contrey hadde tho at the firste
begonne to drive theire bestes out of the weye and her other auer,
and many were supprised er thei myght ought hide from theire
handes, and the saisnes com vpon hem sodeinly that of hem hadde
no pytee, but slowgh alle that thei myght atteyne, and toke the
bestes and theire other goodes and sette fier all a-boute, and the
fier and   <MILESTONE N="95b" UNIT="folio"/>the flame a-roos so huge that the air be come reade all
a iourney, that the kynge Clarion and the Duke Escam saugh the
fier clerly in the streite ther as thei were.  And whan the Duke
Escam saugh the distruxion that thei made thourgh the contrey,
he com to Clarion and seide, "Sir, as me semeth we haue heer
no wynnynge heer for to a-bide, for the saisnes distroyeth all the
londe a-boute vs, and ther-fore I rede we go to hem ther as thei
be and fight with hem, and do hem the harm that we may, for
me semeth that is the beste."  "Ye," quod Claryon, "but and
we lese this contry a-noon thei will distroie all the londe all
hool."  "I shall telle yow," quod the Duke, "what we shull
do: we shull leve a part of oure peple at this passage if for to
kepe, and ye and I shull go a-gein hem toward the foreste of
Brekehen, and enbussh vs there till that we se that the pray is
past, and than shall we go be-twene hem and the pray and fight
with hem, and the lorde of palerne, that well knoweth the streytes
of the foreste, shall lede the pray fo saftee, and than com a-gein
to helpe vs at the bataile, and we shull do hem all the harme
that we may."  "A god mercy," seide Clarion, "it is merveile
that ye sey, that sey we shull go to hem for to fight, and thei be
many moo than be we, ffor whan we be-gonne we hadde not the


<PB REF="" N="273" ID="pb.273"/>

peple that thei haue now."  "See not ye," quod the Duke, "how
thei be spredde a-brode in the contrey all theire grettest power,
and heere be-fore vs is two thousande at these paviliouns vpon
the river, and thei be nothinge elles lefte but for to kepe this
paas where-as thei knowe we be, and thei that ben a-boute in the
contreye, holde thei be right sure, ffor their holde that thei ben
right sure, for thei haue no doute where thei gon." "I sey not,"
quod Clarion, "for that to me ateyneth, but for these noble men
that ben heere with me that I wolde not folyly myslede, ne in to
no place that I sholde therfore bere blame, whan we parted be
fole enprise."  Whan the gode men vndirstode the wordes of
kynge Clarion they preised hym moche, ffor thei knewe well that
he seide it but for pite of the peple, that he wolde gladly saue
yef he myght, and than thei seide, "Haa! gentill kynge Clarion,
neuer ne dowte yow of nothinge, but lete vs go and a-venge oure
shame, oure harme, that we see a-fore oure iyen, and as well
ought we to be shamed and to be angwisshouse and wroth yef it
be falle as well as ye, ffor ye ne haue no more than we, saf only
the Crowne."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Clarion vndirstode how his men seide, he
wepte tenderly with hys iyen vndir his helme, that the
teeres wette his Iowes and the chyn, and was so full of angwissh
that vn-ethe myght he speke a worde with his mouth, and his
men that a-parceived, and seide, "Gentill kynge, ne wepe nought,
but go we in the name of god and fight with hem, ffor better it is
to dye with honoure than dye olde and pore and disherited;" "but
firste ordeyne   <MILESTONE N="96a" UNIT="folio"/>whom ye will leve heere," and thei seide he seide
well, and ther thei chese the lorde of Norhant, and the lorde of
dolerouse garde and bruyn saunz pitee, and hadde in her
companye a thousande men well horsed, and kepte the paas right
streyte; and thei departed at mydnyght, and rode thoo towarde
the foreste of Brekehan, and hem gyded the lorde of Salerne, that
well knewe the passages of the londe and the forestes; and whan
thei come to the foreste of Breighan, than thei enbusshed hem
a-gein ja carfowgh of vj weyes, by a feire launde that was grene
and full of flowres, and it was a feire morownynge and softe wedir


<PB REF="" N="274" ID="pb.274"/>

and still, and these briddes songen thourgh the holtes full grene
leves, for the fressh seison of the moneth of may, that was newe
entrid, and the nyghtingale and these other briddes songen so
lowde that the wode and the river resovned.  This launde that I
of speke was so feire and plesaunt to be-holde for the swote
sauours, that thei hadde no will to meve thens and for the swete
songe of the fowles, and yef thei ne hadde not had to do other weyes
thei wolde not haue remeved, and ther thei hem enbusshed, the
kynge Clarion and the Duke Escam of Cambenyk, be-fore the
day, ffor well knewe that the saisnes sholde come that wey, and
so thei a-bide till it was passed tierce, and than thei saugh come
oute of the foreste of Breighan, oxen and keen, and swyn and
sheep, and horse and palfreyes trussed with salt flessh, and with
corn and brede redy bake, and plente of cheese and of all viteill
soche foyson that more than a myle lasted the route.</P>
<P>  Whan that the kynge Clarion and the Duke Escam saugh that
alle these bestes were passed and the cariage, thei sente
oute hem that sholde hem sewen after that were v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men wele
horsed, and whan the lorde of Salerne saugh that the beestes
were enclosed, he issed oute with five hundred knyghtes to hem
that these beestes dide condite, and slough hem alle, that neuer
foot ascaped, and than gadered alle the beestes and the cariage,
and hem condited to Cambenyk, that was thens two myle, and
whan he hadde alle sette in saftee he returned a-gein.  And whan
the saisnes saugh that the cariages was from hem enclosed, thei
were sory and wroth, and com drivinge vpon hem so fiercely and
mete vpon the sheldes, that the speres fly in peces, and thei
begonne a stronge stoure and an harde, ffor there in shorte tyme was
grete occisioun, and longe it endured, from tierce in to noone, and
than sparbled the saisnes and turned bakke towarde her
chyuachie.  Ther the cristin slough many, ffor of the saisnes that were xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
ne lefte but x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and of the cristen were well xxij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and thei
pursude so the chase that many of hem were loste, ffor er thei
were war thei were vpon the grete hoste of the kynge Orienx that
lefte at the paas of the roche magot, that hadde ben oute erly
and com with wonder gret richesse that thei hadde robbed thourgh

<PB REF="" N="275" ID="pb.275"/>

the contrey, and were moo than xlv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> to-geder, for thei desired to
haue repeired to the grete hoste be-fore the Citee of Clarence that
tho was newe be-seged.<MILESTONE N="96b" UNIT="folio"/></P>
<P>    Whan the kynge and the Duke saugh the saisnes come soche
foyson, thei were sore a-frayed, and with-drough her
reynes and returned bakke a softe paas streite and cloos towarde
the foreste that thei com fro; and whan the saisnes hadde fledde
so that thei were come to the grete hoste so afraied.  Whan the
kynge Orienx saugh hem come fleynge, he asked whi that thei
fledde so faste; and thei hym tolde of the grete harme that the
cristin hadde hem don; and whan he herde that thei were so
nygh, he comaunded that thei sholde be harde enchased; and
a-noon thei dide his comaundement, and ther was many an horse
abredeed er thei myght come to the foreste, for er thei come fullich
ther thei were hasted right nygh, for in a while thei hadde hem
ouer-taken; and whan thei hadde hem a-tyened thei smote to
hem with speres, and brake many vpon theire bodyes, and euer
the cristin drough to the foreste so streite and cloos that the
saisnes myht hem not breke ne perce; and whan thei were euen
nygh the foreste thei returned her bridelis a-gein her enmyes, and
thei com vpon hem fiercely and with a grete nombre; and the
cristin hem receyved at spere poynte and with sharpe grounde
glevis, and of hem many thei made to stomble that neuer roos
after, ffor ther was mortall and felon bataile and greet occision on
bothe parties, and yet hadde the cristin loste more ne hadde be
the foreste of Breighan, and that was be-hynde at her bakke; and
ther the saisnes loste so many of her companye that thei myght
not a-vaunten hem that hadde mette with no cowardes, ffor
of xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> thei loste x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  And thei were at greet myschief, for the
saisnes were so many that thei moste flat in to the foreste wolde
thei or noon, ffor as soone as the kynge Orienx was come, he kepte
hem so shorte that many were deed and taken; and than nyght
and the forest hem departed.  And whan Orienx saugh hem
ascaped that all this grete harme hadde hem don, he was full
wroth and angry, but for all that he drough hym a-wey from the
foreste; and the cristen rode all nyght that neuer wolde hem


<PB REF="" N="276" ID="pb.276"/>

vn-arme till it was day.  And the kynge Clarion wente that nyght
<SUPPLIED>to</SUPPLIED> Cambenyk with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and v C men that were hym be-lefte
of the bataile; and whan thei sholde departe, the Duke Escam
graunted to sende hym his part of the pray that thei hadde wonne
as soone as the saisnes were passed.  And thus thei departed
a-sounder, and kepte right well bothe two Citees, that no more
harme ne hadde at that tyme.  And erly on the morowe the
saisnes were renged and a-raide, and than thei blewe hornes and
trumpes, and serched the contrey to wite where the cristin were
be-come and whiche wey, and than returned a-gein to Orienx, and
seide thei were gon; and than was he sory and wroth, and made
sownde his tymbres and tabours, and toke the wey toward
Cambenyk, and sente be-fore Napin, an admyrall, with xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and
hadde sente be-fore them thre thousande harlotis, for to sette fier
on the contrey a-boute, and for to waste the londe; and after the
forewarde com the cariage and the prayes that   <MILESTONE N="97a" UNIT="folio"/>was grete, and
hem condited Adax with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and after in the rerewarde com
Orienx with xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and rode till thei com to Cambenyk, and than
gonne thei to waste and distroie the contrey ther that were vilages;
and these harlottis, that were forreyours, brente all a-boute.  And
whan the Duke Escam saw the distruxion he was full of sorowe,
and comaunded his men a-noon to arme hem; and thei dide his
comaundement, and lept to horse lightly, two thousande, and com
amonge the harlotis that were forreyours, that so brente and
distroied, and ouertoke hem in valey; and whan thei saugh hem
come thei turned to flight, but thei were so supprisid, for theire
horse hadde rested and were fresch; and thei slough and maymed
alle that thei myght ouer-gate, so that er the vangarde com of thre
thousande there ascaped not xl; and whan these xl com to the
vaungarde, thei cried, "Fitz dei putein, what a-byde, ye
treitours!  se ye not how we be alle slain and deed, and ye myght alle oure
enmyes haue slain and distroied, and saued youre frendes, yef ye
hadde a little hasted; and shamed be the kynge Orienx but he
hange yow heigher than other treitours vn-trewe, ffor ye hym
shame and suffre his men to be diffoiled."  "Pees, harlottis,"
quod Napin, "shoche sholde ben youre payment; where be thei


<PB REF="" N="277" ID="pb.277"/>

that thus haue yow don?"  And than seide the ribaudes that
thei were gon alle the glotouns to Cambenyk with-oute doynge
more.  And the saisnes than passed forth and no more harme
ther dide, and rode forth till thei com to the riche Citee of Clarence,
that hardogabran hadde be-seged hym-self the twentithe kynge;
and whan Orienx com in to the hoste, hardogabran made of hym
grete ioye for the grete refreshynge that he brought of vitaile,
for he brought I-nough, and therfore was he moche preised.  And
on that othir side, as soone as the Duke Escam saugh the saisnes
were passed, he sente the half of the prise that thei hadde wonne
to the kynge Clarion, of that thei had wonned vpon the launde
vpon the saisnes that were so cruwell at the entre of the foreste
of Bregnehan, for so was the name of the foreste, and the name
of the rivere was Savarne.  But now retureneth the tale a-gein
for to speke of Ewein, the sone of kynge Vrien, and Ewein
a-voutres, that be departed fro Sorhan.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.18">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XVIII.  
<LB/>ADVENTURES OF GAWEIN AND HIS FELLOWS AT ARONDELL IN CORNWALL.</HEAD>
<P>Now whan the two brethren were departed fro Sorhan, thei
rode thourgh wodes and thourgh playnes till that thei come
to Arondell in Cornewaile toward Bredigan; and whan thei come
ther thei herde telle how Soriondes was logged in the medowes
of Bredigan and rested ther his peple, ffor he com wery for traueile;
and whan the childeren vndirstode that thei moste passe thourgh
the hoste saisnes, and that was noon esy thinge to do, thei drough
hem a-gein a litill bakke.  And the saisnes ronne thourgh the
contrei and a-boute Bredigan ner to Cardoell, and ther-of herde
Gawein and his bretheren and companye that the saisnes were
thus logged a-boute Bredigan and distroied the contrey
aboute.  Than sente   <MILESTONE N="97b" UNIT="folio"/>Gawein aboute to euery garnyson thourgh the reame
of logres, and assembled xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> what oon what other, ffor moche
was he and his companye be-loved for theire grete prowesse and
her gret largesse; and than thei rode and iourneyed so longe till


<PB REF="" N="278" ID="pb.278"/>

thei com to Cardoell, and ther they restede two dayes, and the
thirde day thei departed and rode forth by theire iourneyes till
thei com to Bredigan where-as thei were well come; and the
saisnes were spredde a-brode thourgh the londe of kynge Ydiers,
and hadde it all brente and robbed, and com all the river
betwene the wode and the medowe vnder the Castell of Arundell,
and thei were moo than lx<HI REND="sup">MI</HI> of horsemen and x<HI REND="sup">MI </HI>ribaudes, that
sette fier all a-boute the contrei.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ydiers saugh this grete damage that thei
dide, he was so full of sorowe that neer he wente oute
of his witte, and lepte to horse with alle the peple that he hadde,
and were nygh xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> wele armed, and be-gan to pursue the hoste,
so that thei atteyned hem at a passage at a cauchie, and ther thei
fought to-geder right harde, ffor the kynge Ydiers was a full noble
knyght and a sure, and he dide ther merveilous of armes, and he
hadde many goode knyghtes in his companye, that hym right
wele dide helpe, and thei foughten all the day at the rerewarde
of the hoste, and were xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the tother that were be-fore
rode all the day till thei were half a myle from the castell of
randoll, and thei were wele xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and in the vaungarde were x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that
ledde the pray, for thei hadde herde the tidinges of the castell of
Bredigan that ther-to were come gret peple sodeinly, and
therfore thei were in drede to be supprised.</P>
<P>  Whan thei of the castell herde why the saisnes were passed
in to the londe of kynge Ydiers, of Cornewaile, thei ne
trowed noon other but that thei wolde repeire be that wey, ne
thei trowed not that eny hadde be lefte be-twene the castell of
randoll and Bredigan.  And whan the two sones of kynge Vrien
herde sey that the saisnes were passed, thei wende to haue no
dowte, and armed hem wele and lepte on horse, and rode oute of
the castell of randoll, and were foure hundred wele armed at
devise, and rode till thei come to a brigge thre myle from the
castell of Bredigan, and whan thei were passed ouer, a-noon com
ageins hem Bilas, with xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, that hadde the
vaungarde of kynge Soriondes, that made kepe the passage that
noon sholde come oute of Bredigan, that hem myght don damage

<PB REF="" N="279" ID="pb.279"/>

to the bakke of the hoste while thei forreyed.  And whan the
childeren saugh this thei were sore affraied, and thei gat the
brigge, and ther thei hem deffended strongly.  And on the tother
side the kynge Ydiers faught at the ende of the cauchie so
merveilously, that neuer of so fewe peple was don do stronge bataile,
and ther thei shewed soche prowesse, that the xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> torned to
disconfiture, and ther ne hadde noon ascaped ne hadde Soriondes
turned bakke with his grete hoste, and ne hadde be that a-venture
  <MILESTONE N="98a" UNIT="folio"/>that he so turned vpon kynge Ydiers, the childeren of kynge
Vrien that were gon be-fore ne hadde neuer ascaped.  But resteth
to speke of hem at this tyme, and telleth of that cherll that hadde
chaunged his semblaunce in to the gyse of a squyer at Camelot,
whan that Seigramoor was rescued.</P>
<P>  Whan this squyer wiste that Gawein and his companye were
gon to Bredigan, he was ther-of gladde and wele plesed,
and also he knewe wele of the two Bretheren that were at the
castell of Randoll, and saugh wele how thei were in grete
auenture of deth or to be taken, thanne he toke vpon hym the
semblaunce of a curroure trottinge on foote, and bar a letter seled in a
coffin, that was peynted with the armes of kynge Vrien, that he
made to be writen of Blase his maister, so as ye shull heren after;
and whan it was I-wreten he departed from Blaase and com to
Bredigan, and he was tukked and on his heede a felt, and bar a
longe staff on his bakke, and he was sklender and lene and hadde
on lowe voyded shoon and blak hosyn, and his clothinge was
blakke fustyan with bendes on the sleues, and girde with a
girdell harnesshed, and he was longe and broun and a blakke
berde, and his heed bare with-oute coyfe, his hatte at his
sholderes hanginge be-hynde by the laces; and he com to the maister
paleys and yede vpon the greces, and whan he was a-bove he asked
after Gawein the sone of kynge loot, and a-noon oon hym shewde
where he stode, and he com be-fore hym and set hym on hys
knee; and Gawein hym dressed vp as he that was wele lerned
and right wise; and he hym salude, "From Ewein the more and
from Ewein the a-voutres, the twey sones of the kynge Vryen
his cosyns, and to yow hath sente these letters."


<PB REF="" N="280" ID="pb.280"/>
</P>
<P>  As soone as Gawein herde speke of tho childeren, he lepe on
his feet, and toke the letter and brake the seall and hit
radde all to the ende as he that well hadde lerned his yowthe,
and fonde writen how the letter seide,"I Ewein, the sone of
kynge Vrien, greteth well my cosin Gawein and myn other
cosyns and frendes, and I lete yow wete that I am departed fro
Sorhan with-oute leve of my fader, bothe I and Ewein a-voutres
my brother; and we be-come oute of the castell of Randoll to
the brigge of Sorionde, where we haue founde x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes that
vs holde medle vpon the brigge, and we ne be but foure hundred;
and on that other side the kynge Ydiers, that ne hath but xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men in his companye a-gein xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes on the chauchie vnder
Randoll, and as soone as the kynge Ydiers is departed thei will
come vpon vs and take alle but god vs helpe and ye vs socoure;
and yef we be take or slain, the harme is owres and the shame
youres, and alle dayes of youre lif it shall be to yow reprof, and
yef ye for cowardise leve vs to be socoured while ye haue power,
and ther-fore remembre vs   <MILESTONE N="98b" UNIT="folio"/>of pitee and of youre grete fraunchise."</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein hadde redde the letter he cried,"Now as
armes this tyme more hastely than eny other, and
neuer be he preised that now is not hardy."  And whan the
squyers herde Gawein thei ronne to armes gladde and mery, ffull
moche thei desired to come in place where thei myght hem
conquere loos and pris to encrese theire honours; and as soon as
thei were armed thei lepte to horse and rode oute of Bredigan,
and the yoman that hadde brought the letter was theire gyde;
and thei were xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men noble and hardy; and so thei rode a
grete spede, but firste thei departed her peple and devised her
wardes in to vj.  The firste warde Gawein yaf vn-to Agravain
his brother with thre thousande men of armes wel a-raied, and
thei rode a goode paas be-fore.  The seconde warde ledde Gaheret
with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes that were vaillant and hardy.  The
thridde warde hadde Gaheries, that were it cowde lede, and were
also iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and rode forth after the tother.  The fourthe bataile
Gawein yaf to Seigramor, the nevew of the Emperour of
Constantinenoble, that right wele cowde hem helpe at nede, and were


<PB REF="" N="281" ID="pb.281"/>

also iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; and thei rode forth after the tother cloos streite,
and eche hadde a baner wher-to thei sholde relye whan thei were
medled with the saisnes.  The fifte bataile hadde Galashin hys
cosin for to lede, and moche Gawein hym preide well for to do
and wisely to rule for his men, and hadde with him also iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; and
whan he hadde hem departed and disseuered thei rode theire wey
a softe paas after Seigramor.  The vj<HI REND="sup">te</HI> bataile, where-in was
moste peple, ledde Gawein hym-self, and bar a baner of sendall
of ynde beende ther in a lyon of siluer, and thei kepte hem cloos
a-boute hym and were v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and moo; and whan he saught that alle
the tother were sette on her wey that oon after that other, than
he sette on a softe paas hool to-geder.  Ther sholde ye haue sein
the baners and fresh armes glyteringe in the wynde and fresh
hauberkes bright shynynge above so many startelynge stedis that
made the fier fle from the Caliouns that alle that it be-heilde made
her hertes to reioyse.  But now cesseth to speke of hem how
that thei ride to the brigge of dove, and returneth for the speke of
the kynge ydiers that fighteth with the saisnes.</P>
<P>  So sore faught the kynge ydiers a-gein xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes that he
put hem alle to flight.  Ther was grete discounfiture and
grete trouble of men and horse that fellen deed to-hewen; and
whan Soriondes saugh hem fle he asked why that thei fledde, and
thei hym tolde how that the kynge Ydiers hadde don hem grete
damage to the taile of the hoste that alle the xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> hadde
dicounfited; and than returned Soriondes sory and wroth, and were
with hym moo than xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and rode till thei fonde the kynge Ydiers
at the heed of the cauchie that yet was  fightinge a-gein the meyne
of Maglaant, an amyrall saisne cruewell and felon, that grete
harme dide to the cristin and was so douted that noon durste
  <MILESTONE N="99a" UNIT="folio"/>hym approche ne come vpon the cauchie, but launched to hym
speres and gysarmes grounden; and than com Soriondes with all
his peple that was so grete, and sette ouer the caunchie so rudely
as horse myght renne.  Ther was thoo stif stour and mortall
bataile, ffor at to grete a myschief were the men of the kynge
Ydiers, and moche thei loste at that encountre, but right dere
thei it solden; but what a-vailed her well doinge, discounfited


<PB REF="" N="282" ID="pb.282"/>

thei were and driven oute of the place, and it nedeth not to aske
yef that the kynge Ydiers were sory and wroth, ffor ther he
cursed the houre and the day that he was on I-crowned and that
he was at debate with kynge Arthur,"ffor by the synne." quod he,
"that he haue don a-gein hym falleth to vs all these myschaunces,
but it is so ferforth that it is to late vs to repente."</P>
<P>  Thus repeired the kynge ydiers, but moche was his losse;
and Soriondes repeired with all his pray that was so
grete to the caunchie, and passed ouer delyuerly, and rode be-nethe
the castell Randoll streight to the brigge of Doue, and put in
the vaungarde xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and rode forth till that the fowarde
saugh the bataile at the brigge foot of the childeren that faught
a-gein x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that kepte the passage; and whan thei saugh this thei
spedde hem faste to ride, for hem thought longe er thei were
taken, and whan the childeren saugh hem so come thei were sore
dismayed; and than Ewein loked towarde Bredigan and saugh
where that Agravian  com gripinge his baner, and he saugh wele
that thei were grete peple, and than he badde his felowes to be
of goode chier, for he saugh come cristin knyghtes; and than
seide his felowes,"sir, how may ye hem se, and how shull we
do? for lo! here bith saisnes that cometh be-fore and be-hynde,
and ne forwarde ne bakwarde may we not fle, but that we
moste perish, and on this side yef we take the feilde we myght
haue grete damage."  "I shall telle yow," quod Ewein
avoutres, "what we shull do; holde we vs to-geder cloos and make
semblaunte as we wolde with Ioyne, and than will we go down
this ryver at the spore, ffor yef that we a-bide hem that beth
here comynge thei shull vs haue taken alle er thei ben heder
I-come."</P>
<P>  To this that Ewein a-voutres hath seide thei acorded well,
and than thei closed hem rounde to-geder and hem
distrayned, but erst were the saisnes come hem right nygh
withynne the shote of an arblaste, and whan thei saugh the cristin
come thei sporered theire horse ouer the brigge at a brunt, and
thei smyte thourgh the x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and ouer-threwe mo than CC at the
firste springe, and whan the saisnes wende hem to close they

<PB REF="" N="283" ID="pb.283"/>

glenched down the river with spede of the spore that wey as
thei saugh the cristin comynge.  Whan the fowarde of the
kynge Soryoundes saugh hem that fledden, thei priked after hem
more than xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and pressed so thikke vpon the brigge and so
streite that many of hem fell in the water, and the x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that the
passage kepten enchased the childeren till thei hem atteyned in
a medowe be-twene two rivers, and ther sholde haue ben   <MILESTONE N="99b" UNIT="folio"/>hastely
so grete losse-that neuer it myght haue ben restoreth, wher-of
hadde be grete damage and grete doell to all the reame of logres;
and than com Agrauain that well sein the chase be-gynne vpon
the childeren as soone as thei com down the brigge, and a-noon
as Agravian com nygh the saisnes he lete his horse renne and
his felowes also and smote on hem so harde that all the foreste
and the ryver resounded, and whan the speres were broken, thei
drough theire swerdes and be-gonne the medle crewell and felon,
ne neuer herde ye so fewe men that more delyuerly hem
contened, ffor so moche thei dide to theym that made the foure
hundre for-sake place.  Agrauain and his companye drof hem
bakke all a bowe draught, and that was grete socoure for the
childeren, for Ewein le graunde and Ewein A-voutres were bothe
smyte down of theire horses and fought on foote full sore, and
also a hundre of theire felowes vn-horsed and wounded and hurt
right sore, and therefore the cristin hadde grete hevynesse, and
hem drof bakke that thei myght not stynte on the grounde, and
it was no merveile, for thei were but thre thousande and the
saisnes were x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and also xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that com hem to helpe that
passed the brigge in grete haste, and as soone as thei were ouer
thei sprad a-brode down the river and abode that oon the tother,
and the x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> foughten full vigerously that were full gladde of
theire peple that thei saugh repeire from Cornewayle, and the day
be-gan to chauffe, and the sonne was risen right high as a-boute
the houre of pryme, and the duste be-gan to rise right thikke
that a myle thens myght oon knowe where was the trouble.</P>
<P>  Whan Agrauain saugh that his peple myght not kepe her
grounde, he swor that he wolde not thens departe
though he sholde be deed tho in the place.  Than he smote


<PB REF="" N="284" ID="pb.284"/>

the horse with the spores and daysshed in a-monge hem and
caught his swerde in bothe hondes and cried a Clarence with
lowde voys, and be-gan to do soche maistries that his
companye hadde merveile of his grete prowesse, ffor thei trowed not
in hym so grete vertu as thei ther saugh, and the saisnes gretly
hym douted for the merveiles that thei saugh hym don, but for
all that hadde he litill profite; but as Gaheret com hym for to
socoure with thre thousande men of armes, and in his comynge
he made all the renges to fremyssh, for eche oon that com with
hym bar oon to the grounde at theire metynge, and disparbled
the saisnes towarde the brige; and whan Ewein the more and
Ewein a-voutres saugh the saisnes drawe bak, thei seide thei hadde
founde strength of peple, and onn asked of a-nother.  "Lorde god,
who may be these cristen, for fayn wolde we knowe?"  Ther
was a yonge squyer that hyight Aces de Bemonde; he com to
hem and seide, "Sirs, be ye come in to this contrey to be-holde
here these turmentys and the feire strokes of knyghtis, for yef
ye wolde knowe what thei be, ye most a-vaunce yow forth and
do so that thei enquere who ye ben, for by theire prowesse is
knowen the worthy where-so-euer thei ben, and ye ne do but
muse as fooles and lese youre   <MILESTONE N="100a" UNIT="folio"/>tyme, and therfore lete vs helpe
hem to discounfite these false saisnes, ffor what folke that these
ben cristin or other thei be worthi men, but moche me merveileth
whens come alle these saisnes, and soone it shall be shewed who
shall do beste, ffor I yow a-vye to turney with oure enmyes that
haue don vs so grete damage, and to oure frendes and to oure
auncestres, and yef we dye, at this nede more honourably ne may
we suffre the deth that for the love of Jeshu criste, and for his
lawe to strengthe and encresen."  Whan the childeren herde Acon
de bemonde thus speke, thei hadde grete shame and seiden that
neuer wolde thei be holde for cowarde, and acon spronge forth
and seide, "Now be it seyn who doth beste."  Than thei hem
renged alle to-geder, and than thei sprongen in <CHOICE><CORR>a-monge</CORR><SIC>a-monge a-monge</SIC></CHOICE>   the
saisnes and be-gonne to smyte and throwe down on euery side,


<PB REF="" N="285" ID="pb.285"/>

and diden so well that the worde and the renon com to Agrauain
and to Gaheret that the childeren foughten be-nethe fer from
hem.  Whan thei harde tho tidinges, thei wiste well it were the
sones of kynge Vrien, and drowgh down that wey and made
soche martire of the saisnes that thei made tho x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> to rebounde
vpon the fowarde of kynge Sorioundes, that were mo than xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and Agrauain and Gaheret haue so spedde that thei be come to
the childeren that sharply foughten, ffor Ewein le graunt and
Ewein a-voutres and Acon traueiled so merveillously that onn for
that other that gladde was Gaheret hem to be-holden, and so was
his companye, that a-gein diden so well that noon was founden
cowarde ne ydell; and than com Agrauain to Acon and asked
what were these childeren, and he ansuerde that thei were the
sones of kynge vrien, "that be come to take theire armes and to
serve <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>the the</SIC></CHOICE>   kynge Arthur, her vncle, with alle thise meyne that
ye here sen."  "Whiche be thei?" seide Agrauain.  "Sir," seide
Acon; "lo! hem ther in the armes half parted white and reade,
but what be ye that this enquere?"  "Certes," seide Agrauain,
"we be nevewes to the kynge Arthur and sones to kynge loot of
Orkanye and of leoneys, and my name is cleped Agrauain and
this other Gaheret my brother, and oure lorde be worshipped and
preised that we be now mette hool and sounde in his londe."
Than thei com to the childeren and made to hem grete ioye, and
thei asked what thei were; but litill while hadde thei be there
whan thei saugh come the vowarde of Saisnes with xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men,
and thei that fledded with hem in companye that yet were v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and drof the cristin a-bakke full fiercely.  Whan Agrauain and
Gueheret saugh hem come and the myschef so grete, thei seide
to the childeren and to her companye, "Cosin, holde yow a-boute
vs in oure feliship;" and thei ansuerde that thei wolde not hem
lete for deth ne for lif; and than thei thronge to-geder and
be-gonne the bataile newe full stifly, but so longe myght thei not
endure, for to many were the saisnes, that thei yaf bakke the
space of a bowe draught wheder thei wolde or noon, ne neuer


<PB REF="" N="286" ID="pb.286"/>

thei   <MILESTONE N="100b" UNIT="folio"/>sholde haue stynte till thei hadde come to Bredigan ne
hadde be Gaheries that com with thre thousande men, but thei
ne wente not foule, for Agrauain and Gueheret and Ewein li
grans and Ewein a-voutres and Acon and Alechin, these yaf grete
strokes euer a-monge often that oon for the tother, and were
hyndermeste in the route, and socoured her men wher thei saugh
hem encombred.  Than com Gaheries with this warde of iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
goode men, and sette on hem full of Ire and malencolyus, and
threwe down and slowgh and kepte at stall a longe while, but in
the fyn he mote yeve grounde a litill, ffor than the saisnes
be-gonne to recover londe vpon hem.  But now a litill turneth the
tale fro hem, and speketh of the kynge Sorioundes.</P>
<P>  While thei fought thus at the brigge ende, all the cariage
and the pray that kynge Sorioundes brought com to the
brigge, and thei that hadde ther-of the kepynge seide thei sholde
no ferther passe till thei saugh to what fyn the bateile sholde
drawe, ffor on this side that we be on nowe haue we no drede,
and yef ther come vpon us gret forse of peple we may vs here
deffende better and more suerly, and more may we greve hem
than thei vs, ffor we shull be at the brigge heed and kepe hem
so of, that nought shull thei haue of oures.  Than toke thei
grounde and hem logged; and the maistres that condited the
pray was Maglans and Pyngnores, and with hem xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> or mo;
and than thei pight tentes and pavylouns, and Sorioundes rode
till he come to the brigge, and than he asked whi thei were so
soone herberowed, and thei seide thei were more sure on that
side than on that othir side of the ryver, ffor we knowe not what
peple that ther ben there.  "Now," quod Sorioundes, "loke
that ye be well a-raied to helpe oure peple yef it be nede;" and
thei seide that so thei wolde, but returneth now we agein to
Gaheries and to his companye that fighted be-twene the river of
Dione and Bredigan.
  </P>
<P>Now seith the boke that the ix<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and foure hundred cristin
so foughten a-gein the saisnes that were well xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> or
moo, that moche loste that oon parte and that other, and the
saisnes more than the cristin, but longe ne myght endure the


<PB REF="" N="287" ID="pb.287"/>

cristin for yet the childeren were tendre and grene, so that thei
moste nede remeve a-bronde in to the feilde, and in short tyme
thei sholde haue hadde grete losse; but as Segramor com
prikinge with thre thousand men armed, and hym thought right
longe er that he were assembled, and he smote vpon hem so
fiercely that all the chase he made to cesse by fin force.  Than
was the stoure be-gonne harde and full crewell, ffull grete crakke
and noyse ther was of brekynge of speres and stif strokes of
swerdes vpon helmes and vpon hauberkes, and many horse and
man leide on the grounde, and full well dide ther Seigramor and
his companye that many an hethen made his ende; but all that
well dede of Seigramor myght thei neuer stynte the saisness, ffor
his men were putt bakke that his well doynge myght not but
litill be sene; and than   <MILESTONE N="101a" UNIT="folio"/>com Galaishin, with thre thousande men,
and mette with hem so harde, that be-fore theire speres ne lefte
noon vp-right stondinge.  Than thei cried a Clarance with a
lowde voyse, that is the worde and the signe of kynge Arthur,
and the saisnes were sore greved and com a-gein hem and mette
hem tho dispiteously that thei made hem alle to disparble a-gein
a-bakke.  Than a-roos the shoute and the noise vpon hem so
grete that the saisnes were driven bakke hastely with-oute eny
a-reste euen to the brigge of Dione.  Than ther was grete occision of
the saisnes, that of the xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> ther was slayn vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> er thei come to the
brigge, and yef theire socoure hadde not be so nygh ther hadde
neuer ascaped noon of hem a-wey, but Maglans and Pyngnores
com for to socour theym with xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes as faste as thei myght
passe the brigge, and many thei throwe to grounde in her
comynge.  Ther be-gan angwissous myschef and grete losse, for
the saisnes were xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and mo, and the cristin ne were but
xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> what oon what other, and therfore thei were putte bakke
the space of a mark shote.  Ther suffred moche Galashin and
Seigramor and Gaheries and Geheret and Agrauain and Ewein
li grans and Ewein a-voutres and Aces of campercorentin and
brian of Arondell.  These diden merveillouse prowesse a-bove
alle other that were in the hoste.  These ix suffred so moche,
and so moche thei dide in armes, that alle hadde ben discounfited


<PB REF="" N="288" ID="pb.288"/>

 ne hadde be theire worthi dedes, but in the fin thei moste
nede turne.</P>
<P>  Full grete was the stour and harde medle be-twene Dione
and Bredigan ther as these xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> cristin be a-gein xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
saisnes, and the myschef was grete for thei hadde ther grete
losse; and than com Gawein hem for to socour with v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of
armes, and than be-gan ther a grete stour and harde, ffor as soone
as Gawein was come he be-gan to do so well that the saisnes
rused and lefte place, ffor he slough man and horse whom that
he raught with his axe that he heilde with bothe hondes, and
whom he ther-with atteyned, hym myght warante neither Iren
nor steill ne other armoure, ffor he alone sustened all the bateile,
that alle the saisnes fledde from his axe on euery side, and he hem
pursude so fiercely a-noon as noone was come that his strengthe
be-gan to double, tho was it no wisdome to a-bide hym eny stroke,
for he was so crewell for wrath and Ire, and he kepte hem so short
that on fin force he made hem to resorte to the entre of the brigge
of dione, where thei were so thikke and so entacched ech amonge
other, that mo than a thousand fill in to the river.</P>
<P>  Whan Sorioundes saugh the damage that these hym dide
and the grete martire, he was so full of sorowe that ny
he yede wode for wrath, and fain wolde he haue come ouer the
brigge, yef he hadde myght for to haue foughten with hem to
socour his men, but thei were so thikke vpon the brigge and
down the river that noon myght come ouer; and thaugh the
brigge hadde ben all clene empty it hadde not be no light
thinge for to haue passed, ffor Gawein and Galashin and
Seigramor and Agrauain and Gaheries and Gueheret   <MILESTONE N="101b" UNIT="folio"/>and Ewein li
grans and Ewein a-voutres were a-geins hem at the entre of the
brigge that fiercely hem deffended the entre that noon was so
hardy that durste presse ouer, ffor thei slough so many and made
soche martire that ther was hilles of dede men and horse hem
beforn, that the toon myght not come to that other but launchant;
and this assaut dured all the day till nyght that thei
withdrough; and on that other side Gawein and his companye
withdrough hem and wente a-gein to Bredigan, gladde and mery for


<PB REF="" N="289" ID="pb.289"/>

the childeren that thei hadde so socoured at nede; and that nyght
was ther grete ioye and grete feste, and thei ete and dranke with
grete myrthe and solas, and after gon to bedde to reste, for thei
were full wery of trauayle, and thei rested till it was day, that
thei wolde go a-gein to fight with the saisnes, a-gein whom thei
wolde deffende the londe and the contrey for euer more.  But as
thei were departed at euen from the brigge ther thei foughten,
Sorioundes sente to seche the grettest lordes of his hoste for to
take counseile what he sholde do, and as soone as he saugh his
barouns assembled he hem asked how he sholde don, for he hadde
founde the cristin full felon and crewell, and he was sore astoned
for the grete damage that thei hadde hym don of his peple; and
than a-roos vp Maglans vpon his feet, a grete Geaunt fell and
crewell, but he was right wise, and he spake right high that he
myght well ben herde.</P>
<P>  "Kynge Sorioundes, yef thow will do my connseile, set forth
thy Cariage now right and lete hem go be-fore oure
chyuachie and neuer stinte till thei come to oure hoste, and
Pynogras shall hem condite with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men be-fore in the firste
fronte, and we shall come in the taile after with as moche peple
as we can gete and assemble, and yef the cristen vs pursue thei
may be well receyved, and that the cariage be not letted to
iourney forth euer on her way, for that is the beste as me
semeth."  And than cried alle that saisnes that the kynge
Sorioundes sholde a-corde ther-to, as maglans hadde seide; and he
comaunded to trusse and charge the harnoys and sette forth the
vaungarde be-fore firste ouer the brigge with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes or moo,
and whan all the harneys was paste, than passed he ouer
hymself with xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes and rode after a softe paas all the nyght
and all the nexte day with-oute eny more distrubinge till thei
come to Valdesbery ther as the sege was leide, and ther thei
were soone welcomed, ffor moche were thei desired for the vitaile
that thei brought, and thei brought I-nough wher-with the
hoste was refresshed well in ese; but of hem ne speketh no
more at this tyme, but turneth to the childeren that ben in the
Castell at Bredigan.

<PB REF="" N="290" ID="pb.290"/>
</P>
<P>  Full gladde and ioyfull were these bretheren for the comynge
of these childeren, the sones of kinge Vrien, and made
hem great ioye and feste that nyght till thei were brought to
bedde for to reste; and on the morowe erly Gawein sente a spie
for to se   <MILESTONE N="102a" UNIT="folio"/>what the saisnes diden that thei hadde lefte at the
brigge of dione, and whan he com there he fonde that thei were
departed and gon in the nyght, and than he returned and tolde
to Agrauain how thei were alle gon, and he ther-fore was sory
that thei were so ascaped, but seth it myght be noon other thei
a-bode stille in the town, and soiourned to a-bide here tidinges of
the kynge Arthur or of other a-ventures.</P>
<P>  Hit fill on a day be-fore dyner that the childeren dide walke
be the ryver, and Gawein com to Ewein and seide,
"Feire cosin, how knewe ye that we were here assembled, and
be whos conseile sente ye me the lettere that ye sente me this
other evenynge?"  "What lettere was that?."  quod Ewein, "ffor
trewly I sente yow neuer noon in my lyve, ne I knewe of yow
no tidinges, till god of his grace sente yow to vs whan we were
in soche poynt, ffor elles hadde we be alle slain or taken and
distroied."  "How," quod Gawein, "feire cosin Ewein, sey ye
in trowthe that ye sente me neuer letter that I sholde come yow
to socoure." "Sir," qoud Ewein, "I sey yow soth ther-of
withoute faile."</P>
<P>  Whan that the <CHOICE><CORR>bretheren</CORR><SIC>betheren</SIC></CHOICE> herde that Ewein sente hem neuer
letter ne message, thei merveiled moche fro whens he
myght come that hem hadde brought.  Than thei lete crie and
enquere yef the man that hadde brought the lettere were yet in
the town; but thei cowde not here of hym no tydinge, and thei
desired sore to wite where he was be-come; thus thei a-bode in
the town viij dayes full, till that tidinges come to hem from
Arondell that tolde hem how the peple and the Gentilmen of the
garnyson were sore greved with the saisnes that euery day hem
assailden, and how thei dide but loke after the howr that thei
sholde alle be take.  Whan Gawein herde of the grete nede that
thei hadde in the castell, he for-thought it sore.  Than he called
his felowes and seide it were goode to go thider to the Castell of


<PB REF="" N="291" ID="pb.291"/>

Arondell for to rescewe theym, for thei haue grete mystere, and
sholde we heire tidinges soneste of my fader the kynge loot, and
thei seide thei wolde do hys volunte.  Than thei a-raide hem
redy and toke her wey towarde Arondell, and were x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> with-oute
moo of the beste horsed, ffor thei wolde not disgarnyssh the londe
of peple, and so thei ride on euenynges and on morownynges,
and by the moste vncowth weyes that thei knewe, till thei com
half a myle from Arondell, and than thei herde grete bruyt and
grete noyse, ffor Arans the sone of Brangue was entred in to the
londe of leonoys, and hadde wasted moche of the londe all a-boute
as he hadde gon and assayled the Castell of Arondell often tymes
and hadde brente the borowgh; and it be-fill that ther com that
wey a route of yonge squyres, and com oute of the londe of
Strangore, and thei were a-bowte xxvj, and thei noon hede ne
were not war of the kynge Arans that hadde all day assailed the
Castell of Arondell, but it was so well defended that no-  <MILESTONE N="102b" UNIT="folio"/>thinge
thei wonne, saf only thei hadde brent the bourgh with-oute,
and than the saisnes hem with-droughen to resten, and as thei
turned, thei mette the xxvj squyres that kay destranx and
kehedyn dide lede.</P>
<P>  As soone as the saisnes saugh these squyres come, thei sette
on hem a showte and ronne vpon hem, ffor well thei
knewe thei were cristen, and thei hem defended in the beste
maner that so small a peple myght.  Whan thei of the castell
saugh the bataile so be-gonne in the mydowes by the ryver, thei
wiste well it were cristin and hem be-heilde a grete while, but
thei weren so fewe that thei were not seen a-monge hem, and thei
foughten right harde and sore, but no while mygh thei endure,
for the saisnes were so many.  Than thei of the castell issed out
iiij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> that were wight and hardy and put hem-self in a-uenture
for to socoure hem that were cristen, and thei smote in a-monge
hem with so grete raundon that thei ben persed thourgh to the
place ther these squyres were that litill while elles sholde haue
endured but that thei moste haue ben deed or taken; and whan
thei were mette to-geder and a litill knowen than be-gan the
medle newe to enforce and harde bataile, ffor ther was many


<PB REF="" N="292" ID="pb.292"/>

stroke yoven and receyved that wratthed sore the saisnes and
well it shewed for thei sowned theire hornes and tymbres and
trumpes, and that was token that thei wolde haue socoure; and
than the saisnes assembled on alle partees, that thei spredde all
the river of arson, and the meyne of the Castell de la roche were
come oute, and wente towarde the Citee of Clarance with grete
cariage that was hem sente oute of Saxoyne, and thei dide it
condyte that it hadde brought thens, and thei were many and
alle well armed, ffor as the booke seith thei were come ther-with
oute of Saxoyne mo than lx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> with-oute the peple that was
with kynge Arans that were spradde a-brode thourgh the
contrey for to forrey, and thei hadde wasted and distroied that more
than two iourneyes ye sholde not haue founde <CHOICE><CORR>nother</CORR><SIC>nther</SIC></CHOICE> house ne
town that a man myght herberowe in, hym ne his horse, ne fynde
so moche vitaile for oon mannes repast.  But now let vs repeire to
the squyres vnder Arondell.</P>
<P>  At full grete distresse were thise xxvi squyres that hem
deffended a-gein xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes; but thei of the castell of
Arondell moche hem conforted and sustened, for in that company
were many worthy men that were grete lordes sones, ffor ther
was Ewein with the white honde, and Ewein de lionell, and
Ewein Estranis, and Grosenain de strangot, these were lefte for
to a-bide the kynge Arthur for thei wolde no knyghtes be made
but of his honde, and alle were thei heigh menes sones, as kynges
and Dukes, and also thei were nygh cosins to kynge loot of
Orcanye and to kynge Brangore, and were alle come oute of her
contrey in pryve wise, ffor ther was noon of hem that com with
moo in his companye than xx, and thei a-bode ther as sowdiours
for wynnynge, for litill hadde thei brought oute of theire contrey,
and thei haue so don that I-nough thei hadde   <MILESTONE N="103a" UNIT="folio"/>geten of the saisnes.</P>
<P>  Whan these squyres com to the bataile the cry and the noyse
encresed gretly; and whan these four hundred of the
castell come to these sex score, Ewein white honde, that was
more enquesitif, asked of whens thei were.  And kay destranx
seide thei were squyers and sowdiours that wente to seche theire
armes of the kynge Arthur, and how thei were nygh cosins to


<PB REF="" N="293" ID="pb.293"/>

the two kynges of Strangore; and whan thei of the castell herde
that thei were squyers, thei asked yef thei wolde a-bide with hem,
and thei wolde hem neuer faile, and that thei wolde a-bide alle
to-geder till that the <CHOICE><CORR>kynge</CORR><SIC>kynke</SIC></CHOICE>   Arthur were come, and than sholde
thei gon in fere to take theire armes, for in the same wise were thei
come and for the same cause; and thei ansuerde that so hem
liked wele.</P>
<P>  And while thei spake thus to-geder approched the cariage of
the roche, and weren in the firste fronte xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of hem
that sholde it conditen, and xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> in the taile after; and as thei
com nygh Arondell thei saugh the x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes that foughten with
thise squyres vnder Arondell; and whan thei wiste it was the
vowarde of kynge Arans thei slakede her brideles and environed
the squyres all a-boute; and thei hem peyned sore to repeire in
a-gein to the castell, but the saisnes were so many and so thikke
that thei myght not hem breke ne pershe; and so longe myght it not
be, but thei moste needes haue ben taken and the castell also, but
than com Gawein and his companye with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes; and
as soone as saugh the bataile medled, thei lete theire horse
renne and com so harde that be-fore hem no-thinge myght
withstonde for her sharp trenchaunt speres.  Ther was stronge stour
be-gonne and many haubreke to-torne of double maile, and of
deed and wounded peple was all the feilde couered.  Ther loste
the saisnes many, wherfore thei were sory and angry, of the
comynge of Gawein hadde thei of the castell grete myster, ffor
thei were at gret myschief, and in the comynge of Gawein and
his felowes thei were so vigerouse vpon the saisnes that thei
resorted vpon the cariage that sewed after; and whan Gawein
saugh the squyres of Arondell he asked what thei were; and Ewein
white hande seide thei were with kynge Arthur and were
come oute of the Castell for to rescue these squyres, and shewde
hym theym that the saisnes hadde assailed; "and what be ye that
thus me demaunde and that thus come to this grete nede;" and
than he hym named and seide he was come hem to helpe and


<PB REF="" N="294" ID="pb.294"/>

alle his companye; and whan he hadde herde this he was so
gladde that noon myght be more, and thanked god of the socoure
that was comen, and than thei cried "Clarence!" the worde of
kynge Arthur, and smote in a-monge the saisnes and made soche
martire that all the feilde was strowed full of deed men and
horse.  Ther dide Gawein wonderes with his hondes, and
Gaheries and Agrauain and Galaishin and Seigramor and Gueheret
and Ewein li grans and Ewein a-voutres   <MILESTONE N="103b" UNIT="folio"/>the two sones of kynge
Vrien, and Ales and Aces.  These shewde there merveillouse
prowesse; and on that other side also dide well and wonder
merveillous; Dodynell the Sauage, and Ewein white honde, and
Ewein lyonell, and Ewein Estrains, and Gosenayne de strangot,
and Kay destranx and Kehedin the litill, these xvij were in the
fore-fronte and made soche martire and soche slaughtere that noon
durste nygh hem ne abide a stroke, and alle theire other felowes
dide also right well that alle the saisnes were fain to for-sake the
feilde, and be fin force to rebounde vpon the xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that com after
the cariage.  And than com an olde man all vn-armed on a grete
horse to Gawein, that wolde haue pursued the saisnes, and he
seide, "Gawein, Gawein, and thou do after my rede returne
agein and bringe with the alle thi felowes in to Arondell, ffor, lo,
here come saisnes a grete nombre, and we may not hem endure."</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein vndirstode the wordes of this wise man he
hym be-heilde and saugh that he was right olde and so
croked that he merveiled that he myght holde hym on
horse-bakke, and saugh he hadde a grete beerde and a longe that
couered all his breste and was all white, and a chapelet of coton
vpon his hede, and clothed in a robe of blakke, and for age heilde
hym by the sadill bowe, and loked vpon Gawein and seide,
"Gawein, do as a wise man and leve me well, for alle thi felowes
be not of thi strengthe ne force, and as well owest thow to love
her savetee and her lyves as thin owne, and thow sholdest synne
dedly yef thei were loste thourgh thi foly, for heer-after may thei
come to grete goode, and of theym shall Arthur haue grete
myster thin oncle as soone as he is repeired oute of the reame of
Tamelide."


<PB REF="" N="295" ID="pb.295"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan this olde man hadde seide these wordes, he turned the
streight wey towarde leoneys in Orcanye as moche as
his horse myght renne; and Gawein stynted and cleped his felowes
a-bowte hym, for the wise mannes counseile wolde he
beleve.  Than thei returned alle a softe paas towarde Arondell, and lefte
the chase, and entred in to the Castell and yede vpon the walles,
and be-heilde the saisnes that hem renged and assembled, and
rode towarde Arondell after the kynge Arans, that all the londe
of kynge loot hadde wasted; and thei were so moche peple that
nothinge myght hem with-stonde, and the kynge loot faught with
theym many tymes and loste moche of his peple, and sore was
he greved in the ende; so that he be-hoved to bringe his wif to the
Castell of Glocedon for strengthe.  Whan the kynge saugh how
the saisnes wasted his londe and distroied, and hadde slain so
moche of his peple that he myght not but kepe hym in stronge
place, and than he was full of sorowe and of hevynesse, and
cursed the hour and the day that he was at werre with kynge
Arthur, "for by hym haue I loste alle my childeren," and on that
other side his Citee was alle wasted, and he ne loked but after
the hour to be take with-ynne, ffor the   <MILESTONE N="104a" UNIT="folio"/>walles were broke down
in many places, and saugh also how the kynge Arans was loged
all a-boute hym, and he hadde no peple in his companye that
myght eny while hym with-stonde yef the kynge Arans wolde
eny while soiourne, but he desired it not gretly but a-boode after
his men that the contrey wasted and distroied all environ.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge loot saugh hym-self in soche auenture, he
toke counseile what was beste to do, and his counseile
in the ende was this, that at the firste cokke crowinge he sholde
lepe to his horse, he and his wif, and his litill sone that was but
two yere of age, and lede hem to Glocedon, and sholde haue with
hym v hundre men well armed, and that other part sholde a-bide
stille that yet were vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of noble man and hardy, and thei hym
promyseden that thei sholde kepe well the Citee while there life
myght endure.  At mydnyght the kynge and his companye toke
theire horse and his litill sone mordered that the kynge Arthur
hadde be-geten in soche manere as ye haue herde devised, and a


<PB REF="" N="296" ID="pb.296"/>

squyer hym bar in a litill cradell, hym before, vpon his horse
nekke, and rode oute by a fause posterne of the Citee toward
the gardins and entred in to a lane, and rode all nyght and all
daye till noone that neuere hadde distrubinge; but <CHOICE><CORR>than</CORR><SIC>tha</SIC></CHOICE> was the
kynge loot sore aflayed, ffor they mette Teucus with thre
thousand saisnes that repaired from Arondell that condited the pray
to the kynge Arans, and as soon as thei knewe the kynge loot,
thei ronne vpon hym with grete hete, and ther a while was
stronge stour and full nobly dide the kynge loot and the vC that
were in his companye; but of well doynge was litill myster, for
soone were thei discounfited and chased oute of the feilde, and
his wif also I-take.  Than the squyer fledde towarde Arondell as
faste as the horse myght hym bere.  But now cesseth a litill of
kynge loot and returne to Gawein.</P>
<P>  Full gladde and mery were Gawein and his felowes at Arondell
that nyght that whan thei were knowen to-geder of the
squyers that thei hadde rescuwed; and as thei were in this ioye
and in this feeste, com a knyght right well armed vpon a grete
steede all for swette, and his shilde all to-daisht and hewen with
strokes that he hadde receyued of swerdes a-bove and be-nethe,
and his couerynge cote alle to-rente, and his hauberke torn and
broken in many places, and he com be-fore Arondell a grete
walop gripynge his launce, and whan he com be-fore the castell
yate he stynte, and saugh the squyres a-bove on the walles that
grete ioye made oon to a-nother, and a-noon he gan to crie, yef
ther-ynne were eny squyer that were so hardy that durste hym
snewen thider as he wolde go, be soche a condicion that he sholde
haue no drede of no man but of his owne corse.  Whan Gawein
it vnderstode, he asked what wey he wolde go.  Quod the knygth,
"What art thow that spekest to me?"  "My name," quod he,
"is Gawein the sone of   <MILESTONE N="104b" UNIT="folio"/>kynge loot."  "Than shall I telle yow,"
quod he, "fort the a-venture a-perteneth to yow more than to eny
other, and certes seide the knyght in to the entre of this foreste
is the prowesse that I of speke.  But ye haue not the prowesse
ne the hardynesse that ye dar me sue, and yet is it oon of the
moste honourable a-uenture in this worlde, and that ye sholde


<PB REF="" N="297" ID="pb.297"/>

moste be preised yef ye myght it a-cheve, but ye haue nother the
herte ne the hardyness that ye durste thider come, and wite it
well but ye will come, I will go sooll be my-self."</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein vnderstode hym that so cleped hym cowarde
he was shamefaste, and seide that though he sholde
dye he wolde holde hym companye, and he be-gan for to go that
full well knewe his corage, and Gawein cleped hym a-gein and
cried, "Sir knyght, lo! me here all redy to go with yow.  But
that ye shull me ensure that for noon euell ye make me it for to
do, and that ye shull me helpe at youre power a-gein alle tho
that will me mys-do."  Whan he herde these wordes he a-bode
and be-gan to smyle as it were in scorne, and seide as for that
sholde he not lette, but that he wolde make hym the assuraunce,
and Gawein asked his armes and armed hym wightly a-noon, and
he a-boode that gretly hym hasted.  And the felowes of Gawein
com to hym and seide, "Sir, what thinke ye to do?  Ne goth not
with-outen vs, for we wote neuer whether it be for goode or for
euell."  And Gawein seide that he wolde well that thei wente
with hym yef the knyght wolde assente.  "And we shull hym
aske," seide Galashin.  Than ran Seigramor to the knyght and
asked, "Sir knyght, and it plese yow ther ben somme here-ynne
that fayn wolde go with yow in companye, and theire feliship
shall yow nought empeire, and therfore thei yow preyen by me
that ye will hem graunte to holde with yow companye."  And
the knyght hem ansuerde and seide he wolde it well, and well it
hym plesed that alle wente that go wolde, ffor the auenture is
soche that noon shall faile to fynde his auenture that ther
cometh; and than Seigramor was gladde, and a-noon thei armed
hem ther-ynne with grete spede till thei were vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that mo thei
wolde not lede, but tho were of the beste, and of theym that were
beste horsed, and whan thei com oute of the castell, Gawein toke
the assuraunce of the knyght that for noon euell he com not hym
for to seche.</P>
<P>  Than thei wente ridinge all the day and all the nyght till it
com to the dawenynge, and than thei herde at the ende
of a launde a grete crye and a grete noyse of peple, and as hem

<PB REF="" N="298" ID="pb.298"/>

semed ther were many, and than thei mette a squyer that fledde
vpon a grete horse that a bar chielde be-fore hym in a cradell,
and when Gawein hym mette, he asked hym with whom he was
and whi he fledde so faste; and he hem be-heilde and saugh that
thei were cristin, and seide, "I am with the kynge loot that the
saisnes hau discounfited at the end of this launde towarde that
wode, ffor he was goynge toward Glocedon and ledde with hym
his wif, and now thei haue hir taken and chased hym oute of
the feilde, and I am thus fleynge as ye seen with this childe that
is hers, ffor neuer shall I it lete till I haue sette it in soche
  <MILESTONE N="105a" UNIT="folio"/>place that it shall not haue drede of the saisnes that in to this
contrey ben entred, and for the love of god ne go ye no ferther
feire lordes, for ye shull fynde ther so grete plente of saisnes that
ye ne shull may hem endure."  "Certeis," seide Gawein, "but
I shall telle the what thow shalt do; thow shalt go reste the
here in this wode till thow se what shall falle of this bataile, and
after, yef I may ascape, I will the bringe ther as thow ne childe
shull haue no drede of noon euell that no man shall yow do,"
and praide hym so that he hym graunted.
  </P>
<P>With that thei departed that oon from that other, and the
knyght wente forth that moche dide Gawein for to
haste, and badde hym sue faste with-oute lettinge, and ther-with
he rode faste be-fore; and whan Gawein saugh he wente he
spored his horse after and so dide his felowes also, and rode faste
till thei were paste the foreste, and saugh the chase that euen tho
was be-gonne after the kynge loot, that fledde to Glocedon with
the peple that was hym be-lefte of the bataile; and on that
other side Gawein be-heilde in the myddill of the medowe, and
saugh a lady of grete bowte ne hadde be the doell and the sorowe
that she made and the myschief that she was ynne, and she was
all discheuelle in her heer, and Taurus hir heilde be the tresses
and drough hir after his horse, and hir robe that she was in clad
was so grete that for combraunce she myght not a-rise, and she braied
and cride with an high voyse, "Seint Marie, blissed lady and moder
of god! helpe me and socour."  And whan she cried and cleped
oure lady seint marie, Taurus smote hir with his honde armed


<PB REF="" N="299" ID="pb.299"/>

right sore that she fill down to the erthe euen as she hadde be
deed, and whan he hadde sette hire vpon his horse she fill a-gein
down to the erthe as a woman that was hurte, and cried and
braide right lowde, and seide that she wolde fayne be deed;
and he a-gein sette hir vpon horse, and she fill down a-gein
to grounde, and seide as longe as she myght lyve sholde he neuer
lede thens for no power that he hadde; and whan he saugh that
he myght not hir maistrie, he hente hir be the tresses and drough
hir towarde the horse trailinge, and somte hir so that she was all
couered in blode what from mouthe and nose; and so he hath hir
trayned and drawen, that the lady myght no lenger crye ne brayen,
she was so hoorse and so brethles that on hire feet myght she not
stonde ne sustene.</P>
<P>  And whan the knyght saugh the lady so euell be sein he
seide to Gawein, "Now, Gawein, knowest thow not that
lady yonder, and yef euer ye hir loved dayes of youre lyf thinke
hir to rescowen and to a-vengen."  And as soone as Gawein
saugh he knewe hire well; than he was so full of angwissh that
ner he yede oute of his witte, ne he wende neuer to haue sein the
hour to haue come ther-to.  Than he smote the horse with
sopores all that he myght, and hielde a grete shorte spere, the
heed right sharp and trenchaunt; and mydday was somdell
passed and the sonne right high, and Gawein cried to Taurus,
"Leff the lady, traitour fitz aputain! in euell tyme hast thow
her so delerous mette, for neuer in thi liff   <MILESTONE N="105b" UNIT="folio"/>didest thow foly that
thow shalt bye so dere."  And whan Taurus saugh hym come
that so gretly to hym cried and manaced, he lete the lady falle
and righted his armes and toke a grete spere and a rude and lete
renne his horse a-gein hym; and Gawein and he smote to-geder
as harde as theire armes myght dure, and Taurus brake his spere,
and Gawein smote hym so rudely thourgh shelde and hauberke
that the spere heede shewde thourgh his chyne an arme lengthe,
and he blussht so harde to grounde that his nekke brake a-sonder;
and Gaheret and Gahereis and Agrauain a-light down, and oon
smote of his heed and a-nother thriste hym thourgh with his
swerde, and the thirde smote of bothe his armes, for it was not


<PB REF="" N="300" ID="pb.300"/>

I-nough to hem that Gawein hadde don, but made of hym smale
peces; and these other smote in a-monge the saisnes and made of
hem soche martirdom and soche occision that thei slough mo than
x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> er thei leften; and Gawein slough so many that he was all
wete in blode and brayn that his armes dropped down as he hadde
be wete in a flode.  And whan that the saisnes saugh the grete
occision that vpon turned, thei fledden alle that myght thourgh
wode and thourgh playn; and Gawein repeired thider as he
saugh hys moder ly, and a-light on foote, and toke hir in his
armes and fonde hir euen as deed; and he wepte sore that the
teeris ronne down from his iyen as thikke as water hadde be
throwen in his visage, and cried and wrange his handes and
made soche doell and sorowe that alle his felowes were ther-with
a-noyed and hadden ther-of grete pite that ther nas noon but
wepte water with his iyen; and whan the bretheren of Gawein
com thider ther be-gan the doell and sorowe so grete that noon
erthly man myght devise noon gretter.</P>
<P>  Whan the lady vndirstode the brayes and the cries that the
bretheren made a-boute hir, she opened hir iyen and
saugh hir sone Gawein, that hir heilde in his armes, and knewe
hym wele a-noon, and lifte vp hir handes ioynynge towarde
heuene, and thanked oure lorde of that socoure that he hadde hir
sente.  Than she spake as she myght and seide, "Feire sone
Gawein, be stille and wepe no more, for I haue not the harme
that I sholde dye fore, but hurte I am right sore;" and than she
asked hym where his bretheren were, and a-noon thei com before
hir makynge grete doell, and whan she hem saugh she thanked
oure lorde, and in a while aftere a-noon she seide, "Haa las! my
sone mordred haue I loste, and my lorde youre fader that this day
hath suffred grete peyne me for to rescewen and socour, ffor whan
he hadde alle loste his men I saugh hym fight longe a-gein v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> men
and a-bode while oon myght haue gon half a myle of grounde
vpon his feet, and therfore I haue grete drede that he be wounded
to the deth, ffor I saugh hem launche at hym knyves and
gavelokkes and dartes soche foison as it hadde reyned from heuene;
ne neuer wolde he voide the place ne me forsake till I hym

<PB REF="" N="301" ID="pb.301"/>

coniured for that he loved beste in the worlde that he wolde
gon his wey, and than <MILESTONE N="106a" UNIT="folio"/>he dide so sorowfull that no man myght
more."  "Dame," quod Gawein, "of Mordred my brother I can
telle yow tidinges, ffor the squyer that it bar hath hym kept
wisely and vs a-bydeth in this foreste, but of the kynge my
fader I can not sey."</P>
<P>  Whan the lady it vndirstode that it hevied her herte and
swowned in Gaweins armes, and he her kiste and wepte
right sore, and whan she com a-gein from swownynge she yaf a
sore sigh, and with that the coloure com a-gein in to her visage,
and than she asked Gawein watir to waisshe hir face, that was
all soilede with blode, and oon it brought in an hatte of stiele,
and than she wossh hir visage as softely as she myght; and than
thei ordeyned hir a litier vpon two palfrayes, and leide ther-ynne
fresch gras and erbes plente and clothes, and than leide her
therynne softely, and than gadered the prayers that thei hadde wonne of
the saisnes and wente forth to Arondell a goode spede, and thei hadde
but litill while riden whan the squyer com be-fore hem with the
childe; and than was Gawein gladde, and rode forth with the
childe till thei com to Arondell, where-as thei soiourned viij
dayes full till the lady was hool, and than thei departed from
thens and wente to logres, the chief Citee of the kynge Arthur,
alle the company to-geder; but two hundre squyers thei lefte at
Arondell to kepe the Castell, and ledde with hem the lady and hir
litill sone.  And the foure bretheren swore that neuer sholde the
kynge loot her fader haue a-gein theire moder till that he hadde
acorded with kynge Arthur theire vncle.  Of this thinge that
thei dide was the lady gladde; and so thei spedde theire iourneyes
till thei com to lorges, where thei were receyved with grete
honoure and reverence.  And Doo of Cardoell made to hem grete
ioye and feeste, and so dide alle the Citee; but whan thei
parceyved the lady thei made moche more ioye, and hir dide as grete
worship as myght be don to eny lady of the worlde; and euery
man was gladde of the a-venture that god hadde hem sente.  And
than made Gawein to enquere and serche yef eny man knewe the
knyght that hadde hem ledde to socour his moder, but noon


<PB REF="" N="302" ID="pb.302"/>

cowde telle of hym no tidinge.  And so the tidinges ronne vp
and down that doo of Cardoell it wiste, that was a noble knyght
and a sure and a wise, and thought well in his herte who this
knyght myght be; and than he com to Gawein and seide, "Sir,
knewe ye neuer that man that brought yow firste tydinges of
Seigramor and also of Ewein youre cosin?"  "I neuer hym
knewe ne saugh be-fore," quod Gawein.  "Nor hym," quod Doo,
"that taught yow where was youre moder, ne knewe ye no
hym?"  "No, truly," quod Gawein.  Than thought doo a-noon what he
was and gan to smylen; and Gawein merveiled moche why he
dide aske, and than he hym coniured be the feith that he ought
to the kynge Arthur his lorde, and praied hym dierly also to telle
hym whi he asked hym that demaunde and wherfore he
lowgh.  And than he seide, "Gawein, Gawein, so moche ye haue me
coniured that I shall telle yow   <MILESTONE N="106b" UNIT="folio"/>whi; but be well ware that ye
lete no man knowe of no-thinge that I sey vn-to yow."  And
Gawein seide, "Nay, for hym were lever to haue his tonge
drawen oute."  "Knowe it verily," quod Doo, "that he that alle
these tidinges hath brought it is Merlin, that is the beste devynour
that is in all the worlde or euer was."  "How sir," quod Gawein,
"speke ye of that Merlin that was so well be-loved of
Vterpendragon, that was be-geten of the devell vpon a woman?"  "Of
that same," seide Doo, "speke I with-oute faile."  "A god
mercy," seide Gawein, "how myght this be or bifalle that I haue
seyn hym in so many maner formes, for I haue seyn hym in thre
semblaunces."  "Wite it well," quod Doo, "how that euer ye haue
hym seyn it is he verily, ffor he is so full of stronge art that he
hym chaungeth in to as many semblaunces as he will."  Than
Gawein hym blissed for the merveile that he ther-of hadde, and
seide that he wolde with hym be a-queynteth yef it hym plesed,
ffor I wote well now that he vs loveth, whan that he entermeteth
hym of oure deedes.  "Knowe it well," quod Doo, "yef it plese
hym ye shall it wite, ffor we may nothinge do ne sey but he it
wite."  Thus a-bode the squyres at logres gladde and myrry of
that oure lorde hadde hem assembled to-geder, and thei kepte the
contrey aboute that the saisnes euer more loste than wonne.  But


<PB REF="" N="303" ID="pb.303"/>

now leveth the tale of hem and speketh of the knyght that ledde
Gawein for to socour his moder.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.19">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XIX.  
<LB/>MERLIN'S MEETING WITH LEONCE. HIS ADVENTURES WITH NIMIAME.</HEAD>
<P>Now seith the storye, that whan Gawein and his felowes were
medled with the meyne of Taurus, and this knyght saugh
that Gawein hadde his moder rescowed he departed a-wey so
sodeynly that no man wiste where that he be com, and wente
in to Northumbirlonde to Blaase his maister and tolde hym alle
these aventures that hadde be don in the reame of logres; and
Blase of hym was ioyfull and gladde, and wrote these thinges
that he hym tolde, and by hys booke haue we yet the knowynge
of the seide a-uentures.  And whan he hadde be ther as longe as
hym liked, he seide he wolde go in to the reame of Benoyk, ffor
soone elles myght the kynge Ban and the kynge Boors haue grete
damage while thei ben with Arthur in Tamelide, and that were
dedly synne, for thei ben full noble men and trewe, ffor the
kynge Claudas de la desert hath don homage to the kynge of
Gaule, and he hath promysed hym to helpe and to maynteyne,
and on that other side this Claudas hath so purchased that he
hath be at Rome, and he and the kynge of Gaule haue take theire
londes to the Emperoure be soche covenaunt that the Emperour
Iulius shall sende hym socour and wolde sese the two remes of
Benoyk and Gannes; and thei assemble and somowne on alle
partees, and now be meved the romaynes with an huge peple,
and theire lorde and gouernoure is Pounce, Antony, tweyne of the
counseillours of Rome, that be two grete lordes and mighty, and
also on that other part cometh for love of hem, ffrolle a Duke of
Almayne that is right a grete lorde of londe and of richesse and
of ffrendes, and is cosin germain to Antony and to Pounce, and
ech of these bringeth xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> at his baner, and thise of the reame
of Benoyk ne knowen it nought and so sholde thei alle be
distroide er thei token hede or were ther-of war.

<PB REF="" N="304" ID="pb.304"/>
</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="107a" UNIT="folio"/>Whan Blase this vndirstode he be-gan to wepe, and seide to
Merlin, "Ffor the love of god haue pitee of cristin
peple that thei be not distroied;" and he seide while that he
myght lyve he wolde hem helpe with all his counseile.  "And
yet," quod Merlin, "it is the londe that I ought moste for to
hate, ffor in that londe is the wolf that the lupart shall bynde
with cercles that shall nother be of Iren ne steile ne tree ne
golde ne siluer ne lede ne nothinge of the erthe ne of the water
ne herbe, and shall be so streite bounde that he shall not
meve."  "A god mercy," quod Blase, "Merlin, what is that ye
sey?  is not the leopart more of strength than is the wolf, and more he
is to doute?"  "Yesse, truly," quod Merlin.  "How may the
wolf than haue power ouer the leopart?"  quod Blase.  "Ye
shull no more knowe," quod Merlin; "but þus moche I will
telle yow, that this prophesie shall falle vpon me, and I wote
well I may me not kepe ther-fro."  And Blase hym sayned for
the merveile, and than he be-gan to aske, and seide, "Merlin,
now telle me this, yef ye go now in to Benoyk, what shall
falle of this londe that the saisnes thus go distroyinge?"  "Of
this ne care yow nought," quod Merlin, "ffor Arthur shall
neuer Iustise his barouns till that thei be well scowred, and
knowe it well thei shall be driven oute in short tyme, and on
that othir side ne were for the merveillouse leopart that shall
come oute of the reame of Benoyk that shall be so grete and
so fiers that alle other beestes shall surmounte bothe of this
contrey and of the bloy bretaigne, and of hym shall come the
grete lyon to whom alle beestes shull enclyne and for whos
look the heuene shall open.  I wolde not go ne come ther as
longe as I myght me holde thens, but I shull synne dedly
yef I sholde do a-gein the ordenaunce of god wherefore he
hath me yove soche witte and discrescion as I haue, ffor to
helpe a-complissh the a-uentures of the seynt Graall, that shall
be a-complisshed and made an ende in the tyme of kynge
Arthur, but enquere now no ferther for thow shalt it in tyme
comynge what this may be, and youre-self shull it se at youre
yie er ye be deed."


<PB REF="" N="305" ID="pb.305"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan Blase herde Merlin thus couertly <CHOICE><CORR>speke</CORR><SIC>sepke</SIC></CHOICE>   he thought
longe on these wordes; but euer he putte hem in
writinge as he hadde hem seide; and than departed Merlin and
wente in to the reame of Benoyk, and come to leonces the lorde
of Paerne and drowgh hym a-parte and a-queynted hym with
hym, so that he hym knewe, for other tymes he hadde hym seyn
in the companye of the thre kynges; and leonces made of hym
grete ioye, and he was a full worthi man and cosin to the kynge
Ban and to the kynge Boors his brother, and Merlin spake to
hym in the same semblaunce that he hadde seyn hym be-fore in
the companye of the thre kynges, but that was do so previly that
noon wiste ther-of no worde, and leonces yaf credence to all that
he seide; and after that thei well a-queynted, leonces hym
a-resonde as a wise man and well vndirstondinge, and seide,
"Merlin, I merveile moche of oon thinge that I wolde of yow
asken, but I wolde not ther-with yow displese."  "I wote well,"
quod Merlin, "what ye thenke, and it nothinge doth me displese,
but sey on hardely what yow liketh."  "Sey youre selfe," seide
leonces, "seth that ye it knowen."  "With good cheer," seide
Merlin, "for the love of yow; ye wolde aske me," quod Merlin,
"whi I haue left   <MILESTONE N="107b" UNIT="folio"/>the thre kynges and I am come
hider."  "Trewly," quod leonces, "ye sey trouthe, and that wolde I
gladly wite, yef it were youre plesier."  "A," seide Merlin, "ye
shall knowe all in tyme, for I may not here longe a-byde."</P>
<P>  "LEonces," quod Merlin, "it is the trouthe, and the
prophesie it seith that the serpent shall chace the leopart
out of the forest, sauage and auncyent, that be-fore that hath be
so grete and so fierce and so merveillouse, that beestes a-boute hym
to hym enclyned and bowed theire heedes to the erthe; and it is
trouthe that ye haue a felon neyghbour that is cleped Claudas de
la desert, and this Claudas hath don homage to the kynge of Gaule,
to holde of hym his londe by this condicion: that he helpe hym
to mayntene his werre, and ben bothe to-geder and holde bothe
theire londes of the Emperoure of Rome; and Claudas his owne


<PB REF="" N="306" ID="pb.306"/>

body hath ben there, and so moche hath he sought and don, that
Pounces and Antonyes, tweyne counseillers of Rome, come with
grete power to distroie this contrey; and hider also cometh
ffrolles, a Duke of Almayne, that is a riche lorde and right
puyssant, and a goode knyght at armes, and is cosin germain bothe
to Pounce and to Antonye, and he will peyne hym sore this
contrey to waste and distroye and it to take; but it shall not be as
thei wene, and ther-fore I am come in to this contre, for I will that
ye sende to youre kyn and frendes fer and nygh, and assemble
alle that ye may of peple, and garnyssh youre Citees and
Castelles, and geder alle vitaile and corne and beestes and put it in
soche place ther thei haue no power for to come, and ordeyne
that ye be so araide that whan thei renne thourgh the londe thei
fynde nought to take, ffor they shull renne vpon yow right sore, and
assaile Castelles and townes, and ther-fore deffende yow myghtyly,
but be-war, as dere as ye haue youre owne corse and youre honoure
and also the honour of two kynges, that ye go not oute to bataile
agein hem, ffor ye sholde haue to grete losse; and trust it trewly,
ye shull haue socour, and that shall be stronge and goode and
feire, on the wednysday be-fore the feeste of seint John, that the
bataile shall be by-fore Trebes be-twene leire and arsune by-fore
day, where-as the Romayns and thei of Gaule and of Almayne
shull be loged; and ye shull drawe oute youre parties as strongly
as ye may, and than hide yow in the nexte foreste alle armed,
and that this be so secretly don that noon of youre companye it
a-parceyve, be he neuer so well youre frende and with yow prevy,
saf only to Pharien and to Grassien, to thise tweyne sey it in
counseile, ffor thei be full worthi men and right trewe, and do
the weyes and the passages to be kepte so well that when ye ride
yef eny asspie come that he be taken, that he ne repeyre not to
hem to discure nought of youre coveyne, ffor soone so myght ye
haue damage."  And he seide that he wolde do this so well that
Merlin sholde hym preyse at departinge.  "I wote not," quod
Merlin, "what   <MILESTONE N="108a" UNIT="folio"/>I sholde sey to yow more, for I go my wey, for
moche I haue to do in other places."  "And to what contrei
shall ye go?"  quod leonces.  "Whan I departe from hens," quod


<PB REF="" N="307" ID="pb.307"/>

Merlyn, "I go to Toraise in Tamelide where as ben the thre
kynges, and hem shall I teche how the Geauntes and the sarazins
shull be enchased oute of the londe; and the bateile shall be the
thursday after pentecoste so grete and so merveillouse that neuer
was noon so grete in the reame of Tamelide."  "Sir," quod
leoces, "greete well myn oncles and my cosin the kynge
Arthur."  "So shall I do," quod Merlin.  "Now haue in mynde to do
well, and to god I yow comaunde."  Than eche departed from
other, and as soone as Merlin was departed fro leonces he wente
to se a maiden of grete bewte, and was right yonge, and was in a
maner that was right feire and delitable and right riche, in a valee
vnder a mounteyne rounde side be side to the forest of Briok,
that was full delitable and feire, for to hunte at hertes and at
hyndes, and bukke and doo and wilde swyn.  This mayden of
whom I speke was the doughter of a vauasor of right high lynage,
and his name was cleped Dionas, and many tymes diane com to
speke with hym, that was the goddesse, and was with hym many
dayes, for he was hir godsone; and whan she departed she yaf
hym a yefte that plesed hym wele.  "Dionas," quod diane, "I
graunte the, and so doth the god of the see and of the sterres
shull ordeyne, that the firste childe that thow shalt haue female
shall be so moche coveyted of the wisest man that euer was
erthly or shall be after my deth, whiche in the tyme of kynge
Vortiger of the bloy mountayne shall be-gynne for to regne, that
he shall hir teche the moste parte of his witte and connynge by
force of nygremauncye in soche manere, that he shall be so desirouse
after the tyme that he hath hir seyn that he shall haue no power
to do no-thinge a-gein hir volunte, and alle thinges that she
enquereth he shall hir teche."  Thus yaf diane to Dionas hir yefte,
and whan Dionas was grete he was right a feire knyght and a
goode, of high prowesse of body, and he was moche and longe,
and longe tyme serued a Duke of Burgoyne, that to hym yaf his
nyece to ben his wif, that was right a feire maiden and a wise.</P>
<P>  This Dionas loved moche the deduyt of the wode and the
river while that he was yonge, and the Duke of Burgoyne
hadde a parte in the foreste of brioke, so that was his the haluendell

<PB REF="" N="308" ID="pb.308"/>

all quyte, and that other half was the kynge Ban.  Whan
the Duke hadde maried his nyece he yaf to Dionas his part of
this foreste and londe that he hadde a-boute grete plente, and
whan Dionas wente it for to se it plesed hym wele, and he lete
make a maner to repeire to, that was right feire and riche by the
vyuier, and <CHOICE><CORR>whan it</CORR><SIC>whan it whan it</SIC></CHOICE>   was made he com thider to be ther for the
deduyt of the wode and the river that was nygh, and ther a-boode
Dionas longe tyme, and repeired ofte to the court of kynge Ban,
hym serued with ix knyghtes, and in his seruise he yede at many
a grete nede a-gein the kynge Claudas, to whom he dide many a
grete damage, till that the kynge Ban and the kynge Boors
 <MILESTONE N="108b" UNIT="folio"/> hadden hym in grete love, ffor thei knewe hym so noble a knyght
and so trewe, and the kynge Ban to hym graunted his parte of
this foreste in heritage to hym and to his heyres, and londe and
rentys grete foyson; and the kynge Boors yaf hym also a town
and men and londe, for the grete trouthe that he saugh in hym,
and he was so graciouse, that alle tho that a-boute hym repeyred
loved hym a-bove all thinge.  Thus dwelled Dionas in that londe
longe tyme, till that he gat vpon his wif a doughter of excellent
bewte, and hir name was cleped Nimiane, and it is a name of
ebrewe, that seith in frensch, ment neu ferai, that is to sey in
english, I shall not lye, and this turned vpon Merlin, as ye shall
here her-after.  This mayden wax till she was xij yere of age
whan Merlin com to speke with leonces of Paerne, and Merlin
spedde hym so that he com to the foreste of Brioke, and than he
toke a semblaunce of a feire yonge squyre, and drowgh hym down
to a welle, where-of the springes were feire and the water clere,
and the grauell so feire that it semed of fyn siluer.  To this
fountayn ofte tyme com nimiane for to disporte, and the same
day that Merlin com thider was she come; and whan Merlin hir
saugh he be-hilde hir moche, and a-vised hir well er he spake
eny worde, and thought that a moche fole were he, yef he slepte
so in his synne to lese his witte and his connynge for to haue the
deduyt of a mayden, and hym-self shamed, and god to lese and


<PB REF="" N="309" ID="pb.309"/>

displese.  And whan he hadde longe thought, he hir salued, and
she ansuerde wisely and seide, "That lorde that alle thoughtes
knoweth sende hym soche volunte and soche corage that hym be
to profite, and hym not greve ne noon other, and the same welthe
and the same honour hym sende as he wolde to other."  And
when Merlin herde the maide thus speke, he sett hym down vpon
the brinke of the welle and asked hir what she was; and she
seide she was of this contrey, the daughter of a vauasour, a
grete Gentilman, that was at a manoir ther-ynne, "and what be
ye, feire swete frende?" quod she.  "Dameselle," quod Merlin,
"I am a squyer traueillinge that go for to seche my maister, that
was wonte me for to teche, and moche he is for to preise."  "And
what maister is that?" seide the maiden.  "Certes," quod he,
"he taught me so moche, that I cowde here reyse a Castell, and
I cowde make with-oute peple grete plente that it sholde assaile,
and with-ynne also peple that it sholde defende, and yet I sholde
do mo maistries, ffor I cowde go vpon this water and not wete
my feet, and also I cowde make a river where as neuer hadde
be water."</P>
<P>  "Certes," seide the maiden, "these be queynte craftes, and
fayn wolde I that I cowde do soche disportes."  "Certes,"
seide the squyer, "yet can I mo delitable pleyes, for to reioise
euery high astate more than these ben, ffor noon can devise
nothinge but that I shall it do, and make it to endure as longe as I
will."  "Certes," seide the maiden, "yef it were to yow no gref,
I wolde se somme pleyes by couenaunt that I sholde euer be youre
love."  "Certes," seide Merlin, "ye seme to me so plesaunt and
deboneir, that for youre love I shall shewe yow a party of my
pleyes, by couenaunt that youre love shall be myn, for other
thinge will I not aske."  And she hym graunted that noon euell
ne thought, and Merlin turned hym a-part and made a cerne with
a yerde in myddell of the   <MILESTONE N="109a" UNIT="folio"/>launde, and than returned to the
maiden, and satte a-gein down by the fountayn, and a-noon the
mayden be-heilde and saugh come oute of the foreste of briogne
ladyes and knyghtes and maydons and squyres, eche holdinge
other by the hondes, and com singinge and made the grettest ioye


<PB REF="" N="310" ID="pb.310"/>

that euer was seyn in eny londe, and be-fore the maiden com
Iogelours and tymbres and tabours, and com be-fore the cerne that
Merlin hadde made, and whan thei were with-ynne, thei be-gonne
the caroles and the daunces so grete and so merveilouse, that oon
myght not sey the fourthe parte of the ioye that ther was made,
and for that the launde was so grete, Merlin lete rere a vergier,
where-ynne was all maner of fruyt and alle maner of flowres, that
yaf so grete swetnesse of flavour, that merveile it were for to
telle; and the maiden that all this hadde seyn was a-baisshed of
the merveile that she saugh, and was so at ese that sche ne
a-tended to no-thinge but to be-holde and entende what songe thei
seiden, saf that thei seiden in refreite of hir songe, "Vraiement
comencent amours en ioye, et fynissent en dolours."  In this
maner dured the ioye and feste from mydday to euenesonge, that
oon myght here the noyse from fer, ffor it was right high and
clere, and plesaunt to heren, and it semed to be of moche peple,
and oute of the Castell com Dionas and man and wif grete plente,
and be-heilde and saugh the feire orcharde and the daunces and
the caroles so feire and so grete, that neuer hadde thei seyn soche
in theire lives; and thei merveilled gretly of the orcharde that
thei saugh ther so feire ther noon was be-fore, and on that other
side thei merveiled whens alle these ladyes and the knyghtes
were come so wele a-pareiled of robes and Iuewelles.  And whan
the caroles hadde longe dured, the ladyes and the maydenys satte
down vpon the grene herbes and fressh floures, and the squyres
set vp a quyntayne in myddes of the medowes, and wente to
bourde a partye of the yonge knyghtes, and on that other parte
bourded the yonge squyres with sheldes oon a-gein a-nother that
neuer ne lefte till euesonge tyme.  And than com Merlin to the
mayden and toke hir be the hande and seide, "Damesell, how
seme ye?"  "Ffeire swete frende," seide the mayden, "ye haue
don so moche that I am all yours."  "Damesell," quod he, "now
holde my <CHOICE><CORR>couenaunt</CORR><SIC>comenaunt</SIC></CHOICE>."    "Certes," seide the mayden, "so shall I
with goode chere."  "Also," quod Merlin, "be ye eny clerk, and


<PB REF="" N="311" ID="pb.311"/>

I shall teche yow so many merveilles that neuer woman cowde
so many."</P>
<P>  Quod the maiden, "How knowe ye that I am a clerke?"
"Damesell," qoud Merlin, "I knowe it well, ffor my
maister hath me so well taught that I knowe alle thinges that
oon doth."  "Certes," seide the mayden, "that is the moste
connynge that euer I herde, and moste myster were ther-of in
many places, and that I wolde faynest lerne; and of thinges that
be to come knowe ye ought?"  "Certes," quod he, "swete love,
yee, a grete part."  "God mercy!" quod the mayden, "what go
ye than sechynge."  "Truly," qoud Merlin, "of that ye moste
yet a-bide yef it be youre plesier."  And while the Mayden and
Merlin helde this Parlement, assembled a-gein the maidenes and
the ladyes, and wente daunsinge <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>  bourdinge toward the foreste
fro whens thei were come firste; and whan thei were nygh thei
entred in so sodaynly, that oon ne wiste where thei were be-come;
but the orcharde a-bode   <MILESTONE N="109b" UNIT="folio"/>stille ther longe tyme, ffor the maiden
that swetly ther-of hym praide, and was cleped ther by name the
repeire of ioye and of feeste.  And whan Merlin and the maiden
hadde be longe to-geder, Merlin seyde at the laste, "Ffeire maiden,
I go, for I haue moche to do in other place than here."</P>
<P>  "How," qoud the maiden, "feire frende, shull ye not teche
me firste some of youre pleyes?"  "Damesell," quod
Merlin, "ne haste yow not sore, ffor ye shull know I-nowe all in
tyme, ffor I moste haue ther-to grete leyser and grete soiour, and
on that other side I haue yet no suerte of youre love."  "Sir,"
qoud she, "what suerte wolde ye aske? devise ye, and I shall it
make."  "I will," quod Merlin, "that ye me ensure that youre love
shall be myn, and ye also for to do my plesier of what I will."  And
the maiden her be-thought a litill, and than she seide, "Sir," quod
she, "with goode will by soche forwarde, that after that ye haue
me taught all the thinges that I shall yow aske, and that I can
hem werke."  And Merlin seide that so it plesed hym
well.  Than he a-sured the maiden to holde couenaunt like as she


<PB REF="" N="312" ID="pb.312"/>

hadde devised, and he toke hire surete.  Than he taught hir
ther a pley that she wrought after many tymes, ffor he taught
hir to do come a grete river ouer all ther as her liked, and to
a-bide as longe as she wolde; and of other games I-nowe,
where-of she wrote the wordes in perchemyn soche as he hir
devised, and she it cowde full well bringe it to ende.  And whan
he hadde a-biden ther till euesonge tyme, he comaunded hir to god
and she hym, but er he departed the maiden hym asked whan he
sholde come a-gein; and he seide on seint Iohnes even; and thus
departed that oon fro that other.  And Merlin went to Tamelide,
where the kynges made hym grete ioye whan that thei hym
saugh.  But now a-while we moste cesse here, and speke of the
message that the kynge de Cent chiualiers sent to speke with the
Princes by the counseile of the kynge cleped Tradilyuaunt, of
North wales.</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.20">
<HEAD>CHAPTER XX 
<LB/> MEETING OF THE PRINCES AT LEICESTER; RETURN OF MERLIN TO THE COURT OF LEODOGAN; BETROTHAL OF ARTHUR AND GONNORE; AND GREAT BATTLE WITH KING RION AND THE GIANTS</HEAD>
<P>So well spedde the messagers of the kynge de Cent chiualiers
and haue tolde theire message that thei were with charged
to the princes, and this was theire ansuere, "That thei seide thei
wolde speke to-geder at whitsontyde at leycestre."  And thei
drough to-geder as secretly as thei myght, and ther thei
counseilled what thei sholde do, and lete wite that to that other.  And
when thei were mette at leycestre thei made ech of other grete
ioye at her metinge, and after mete thei tolde of the trouble and
the damages that the saisnes hem hadde don, and thei fonde that
the kynge Aguysans hadde moste I-loste than alle the other; and
ther hym playned moche the kynge loot of his childeren and of
his wif that he hadde loste, and seide that he hadde leuer be deed
than lyve in that langour.

<PB REF="" N="313" ID="pb.313"/>
</P>
<P>  Than spake the kynge de Cent Chiualiers, by whos counseile
thei were ther assembled, and seide, "Feire lordes, were
it not better that we wente alle to dye with goode herte in the
servise of oure lorde, and a-venge our deth and the deth of oure
frendes and of   <MILESTONE N="110a" UNIT="folio"/>oure kyn, than to dye as cowardes shrewdely oon
with-oute a-nother, and to be in soche dolour as we ben euery day,
ffor yef the saisnes holde vs thus short thei shull distroie oure
vitaile and the Iustice that vs gynneth.  Ne in to this londe
ariveth noon, for all the saisnes haue wasted and distroied, and
we may neuer nought recouer, but vpon hem as thei bringeth oute
of theire contreyes, but er we may eny thinge of hem conquere
we by it right dere, ffor many we lese of oure kyn and oure frendes,
and thus we lese euery day of oure strength and of oure peple,
and oure enmyes encrece euery day, and thus thei shull vs distroye
and chace oute of the londe, but we ne forfete hem but litill; but
lete vs alle at ones go fight with hem and to hem do the werste
that we may, and selle oure lyves so dere that it be spoken of
euer after oure dethes."  Whan the lordes herden Aguysant thus
speke, thei comended hym gretly, and preised hym of that he
hadde seide, ffor thei saugh wele that he seide it not but of right
high prowesse that in hym was.  And whan thei hadden spoken
be-twene hem thei acorded to that hadde seide; and than thei
toke day to assemble with all the peple that thei myght viij dayes
be-fore the Magdaleyn, in the medowes by suret, a Castell of the
Dukes of Cambenyk, that was right plentevouse and riche.  Than
departed thei oon from a-nother, and wente in to theire londes, and
assembled as moche peple as thei myght of frendes and cosins,
somme for preyer and some be force, and labored till thei come in
to the medowes of lauerep, and ther thei pight tentes and
pavilouns be-twene tweyne armes of a river that was right grete, that
com oute of the see and ran also in to the see, and the booke it
clepeth the river Sevarne, by a forest that is called Bregnehan,
that is right plentevouse and riche, and ther thei a-bide that oon
the tother, and a-raied theire peple, and scowred hauberkes and
furbisshed swerdes and helmes, and to sette sharp stiell vpon
theire launces.  But of hem now resteth a-while the tale, and


<PB REF="" N="314" ID="pb.314"/>

speketh of Merlyn, that is departed fro Nimiame, from the foreste
of Briogne.</P>
<P>  Whan Merlin was departed from this maiden, that he hadde
yoven to his love, that the same nyght he com to
Toraise in Tamelide, where as the kynges were of hym right
gladde and ioyfull, and sore hem longed hym for to seen, ffor the
kynge leodogan hadde so spedde that his men were come, and
a-bide the hour that the hoste sholde assemble for to go a-reise
the kynge Rion be-fore the Citee of nablaise, where he lay at
sege.  Than the thre kynges toke Merlin in counseile, and seide,
"Merlin, what shall we do, the hoste shall meve hastely?"  "I
shall telle yow," seide Merlin, "what ye shull do.  Go and sey
to the kynge leodogan that he do ordeyne his peple to bataile,
and devise his wardes, and sette yow on wey the morowe after
Pentecoste, that oon after that other, and doth wisely that all day
x knyghtes wele horsed go be-fore the hoste, that shull serche the
contrey and the londe as thei gon, and take alle the asspies
where-of ther ben many entred in to the londe to enquere of the
rule of vs;   <MILESTONE N="110b" UNIT="folio"/>and a-noon lete hem be slayn or sette in prison that
thei may no-thinge discure, and ride euer be nyght and by the
moste vn-cowth weyes that ye may, and I my-self shall yow
condite in the firste fronte, ffor ye and youre companye and the
knyghtes of the rounde table shull be in oon warde to-geder
withoute eny other peple, and that shall be the firste bataile."</P>
<P>  Whan thei hadde longe thus spoken, the kynge Arthur asked
tidinges of his londe how thei hadde seth don.  And
he tolde hem alle the auuentures that hadde ben in the reme of
logres seth he departed from hym, and how alle the childeren
were assembled; and after he tolde how that the sones of kynge
loot hadde rescowed theire moder from the saisnes, and tolde how
the bretheren hadde seide how the kynge loot theire fader sholde
neuer haue a-gein his wif in companye, ne their frende he shall
not be, till he haue made a-corde with yow.  And the kynge
Arthur was ther-of right gladde, and be-gan to laughe for ioye,
and thanke hym of that seruyse.  Aftre that he turned to the
kynge Ban and towarde the kynge Boors.  "And ye, feire lordes,"


<PB REF="" N="315" ID="pb.315"/>

quod Merlin, "how shull ye do? ffor ye haue a werke towarde, and
that right grete, where-as ye shall haue grete peyne and traueyle, an
I shall telle yow what."  And that he tolde how Claudas de la desert
hadde wrought, and how ffrolles and Pounces and Antoneyes com
with a grete hoste for to take her londe and it to distroie; "and I
haue seth," quod he, "ben there and spoke with leonce of Paerne,
youre cosin, that sendeth yow gretinge by me, and I haue tolde
hym the ordenaunce of hem that come to distroye the londes.</P>
<P>  Whan thei herde Merlin thus speke thei were so hevy and
so pensef that thei wiste not what to sey ne do.  Whan
the kynge Arthur saugh hem so enterprised, he be-gan for to wepe
with this yien, and seide to Merlin, "Ha, feire swete frende, haue
pyte of hem and of her londes and sette soche counseile as ye
knowe is myster, ffor I wote wele yef ye hem faile thei haue all
loste; ne I shall neuer than haue ioye in my lif tyme."  "Certes,"
quod Merlin, "thei shull not drede to be distroied while I am in
her companye, and I do yow to wete that to yow and to hem
encreseth moche werke and besynesse euery day, ffor the grete
dragon, as seith the prophesie shall com to chase the lyon crowned
oute of the bloy breteigne, with the helpe that he shall haue of
xxix serpentes that shull be merveillouse grete and stronge, that
shall be so grete and fierce, and moche he shall hym peyne, and a
partie he shall haue of the grete serpentes crowne, to whom alle the
beestes of the bloy bretaigne and of Tamelide shull enclyne a partie
for his fiercenesse and his grete prowesse, but yet is not born the
leopart by whiche the lyon shall be sustened that the grete dragon
shall no power haue hym to enchase from his conuersacion."</P>
<P>  Whan the thre kynges herde Merlin thus speke, thei were
sore a-baisshed, for neuer herde thei hym so derkely
speke, and asked and enquered of hym what it mente; and he
seide that thei sholde no more wite at that tyme; "but thus
moche I sey to the kynge Arthur, that the grete of this mater
longeth vn-to hym."  And ther-with thei cessed of this matere;
and than the kynge Ban hym   <MILESTONE N="111a" UNIT="folio"/>asked what was his counseile, and
how he sholde his londe socoure.  And Merlin seide that yet
shulde thei wite no worde, "but as soone," quod Merlin, "as ye


<PB REF="" N="316" ID="pb.316"/>

haue holpen to chase these sarazins out of this contrey, hit
behoveth vs to move with as moche peple as we may haue in this
reame, and we shull go by logres, the stronge Cite of kynge
Arthurs, and by the Castell of Bredigan, and take the tresour
that is grete in the foreste denoyable, where ther be xij of the
beste swerdes that eny man knoweth in eny londe; and with hem
shall the kynge Arthur dubbe his nevewes, that for hym haue
lefte fader and moder and kyn and frendes, and hem  <SURPLUS>we</SURPLUS>   shall we
lede with vs in to the reame of Benoyk, ffor thei that com
thiderwarde ben grete nombre; and whan the bataile is fynysshed, in
the soiour that we shull make in the londe, shall the gret leopart
be engendred, that shall be so prowde and fierce, by whom the
dragon of the fer oute ylles shall drawe hym a-bakke from the
lyon crowned of the bloy bretaigne, that noon harm he ne shall
hym don, and yet he shall well ther-to haue power, but in the fyn
he shall hym Iustice so that he shall make hym come on his knee
as in maner to crie mercy be-fore the crowned lyon."  "Sir,"
quod the kynge Ban, "as for that we be come hider, knowe ye
of that what shall be-falle?"  "Of that haue ye no doute,"
quod Merlin, "that er we departe all this contrey shall be in the
handes of the kynge Arthur."  "Sir," quod the kynge Ban, "of
these derke wordes that ye haue remembered that we vndirstonde
nought, shull ye ought to vs tellen."  "Nay," quod Merlin,
"but thus moche I sey to the kynge Arthur, that all this shall
falle in his tyme."  With that ther entred in a massager, and
asked where were the sowdiours, and oo hym taught in to a
chamber wher thei were yet in counseile, and he wente thider,
and he was right wise and eloquent, and a moche knyhgt and a
feire, and cosin germain to the kynge leodogan, and his name was
Guyomar, and was of xxv yere of age; and this Guyomar caused
afterwarde the reame of logres to be in grete trouble, by whom
the knyghtes of the rounde table hadde after soche peyne and
labour for the damage that the quene Gonnore hym dide, for the
love of Morgain, the suster of kynge Arthur, that so moche hym


<PB REF="" N="317" ID="pb.317"/>

loved that the quene a-reisede so grete blame, as the tale shall
reherse here-after whan the tyme cometh to speke of that matier.</P>
<P>  Whan Guyomar com in to the chamber the kynges departed
from counseile, and com be-fore theym, and hem salued
from the kynge leodogan, "and sent yow to seyn that ye sholde
come speke with hym;" and thei ansuerde thei wolde with goode
will.  Than thei asked their horse and wente to Court; but
thei were not so sone a-light at the halle, but the kynge leodogan
com hem a-geins, and toke hem be the handes, and ledde hem in
to a chamber for to counseile to-geder.  Than spake the kynge
leodogan as he that was right a wise man and well lerned, and
ther were no moo but the fyve only, and than he seide, "Feire
lordes, I holde yow full noble and worthi men and trewe, and
knoweth it well that I love yow right hertely more than ye wene,
and that I ought of right for to do, for ye haue saued my lif and
my   <MILESTONE N="111b" UNIT="folio"/>londe and myn honoure, and I ne wote not what ye be, and
that me sore for-thinketh, ffor ther is no-thinge that I wolde so
gladly knowe; but I shall wite whan yow lyketh, for other-wise
I will not of yow desire, and I wolde yow asken what we shull
do, for ye knowe well how that the kynge Rion is entred in to
my londe, and hath be-seged oon of my beste Citees with the
power of xx crowned kynges, and eche of hem hath at his baner
xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; and on that other side my peple is here assembled,
but thei ben so fewe that thei may not compare with hem, and
therfore I aske yow counseile how we may beste be gouerned,
ffor I putte me all hooll in youre ordenaunce."</P>
<P>  Than spake Merlin to the kynge, and seide, "Sir, dismay
yow nothinge, ffor be the feith that I owe vn-to yow er
that the kynge Rion from yow ascape he wolde haue ben in hys
contre all naked by the Condicion that it hadde coste hym the
beste Citee that he hath.  Ne ye be not at soch myschef but that
ye haue lx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men at armes and moo; but I shall telle yow what
ye shull do: sendeth x of youre beste men for to serche the
contrey that ther be neither asspie ne ribaude, but a-noon he be
taken and brought be-fore yow and put in prison, so that youre
enmyes may nothinge knowe of youre ordenaunce, and than devise
 

<PB REF="" N="318" ID="pb.318"/>

youre wardes and youre bateilles, and loke that ye make x
withoute mo, and in eche of hem ye shall putte x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and than
meveth on monday two houres be-fore day, and goth all esely oon
after a-nother with-oute sore traveile, and that we be ther on
wednysday at even; and I do yow to wite that on thursday, a
litill be-fore day, we shall hem fynde all slepinge, ffor in to the
hoste is come grete plente of flessh and of wyne and of corne and
other vitaile grete foyson, and the drinke and ete ech day and
trouble so theire braynes that thei sette litill wacche in theire
hoste, but towarde the playnes thei haue hem-self closed with
cartes and chariettes, that litill or nought oon may hem mysdo
on that side; and therfore we moste werke wisely, ffor I knowe
a place where-as thei take litill hede, and that wey ye shull hem
alle fynde a-slepe, and ther-fore, yef god will, we shull som-what
haue hem at oure wille, and we shull so chastice hem at this enuay
that thei shull haue litill corage eny more in this londe to werrye."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge leodogan herde Merlin thus speke, he
merveiled what he myght be; and he be-heilde hym
ententely that he loked on noon other, and after that he be-heilde
his felowes, that were stille and koy, that seiden not o worde but
be-heilde hym that spake; and whan he hadden hem be-holden a
longe while he yaf a grete sighe and that was right sore, and
thought well in his corage that thei were right high men and
gretter of astate than he cowde thinke, and a-boute his herte com
so grete errour that it wete all his visage with teeres of his yien,
that com from the herte that vn-ethe myght he sowne oute o worde,
and he fill down at her feet as half deed, and cride hem mercy
so as he myght, that for the love of God thei sholde of hym haue
pitee and of his londe, "ffor I wote well,"   <MILESTONE N="112a" UNIT="folio"/>quod he, "and also
myn herte telleth me, that I shall all lese yef god and ye be not
my warant."  Whan that the kynge Arthur saugh hym at erthe
be-fore hym knelinge, he hadde ther-of grete pite, and so hadde
the other kynges, and caught hym in her armes and reised hym
vp and assured hym of all that thei myght; and than they wente
to sitte down alle v to-geder as goode felowes and trewe; and
than be-gan Merlin his reson, and seide to the kynge leodogan,


<PB REF="" N="319" ID="pb.319"/>

"Sir sire, ye wolde fayn wite what we ben and of what peple
and of what lynage."  And he seide ther was nothinge that he
desired so moche to knowe.  "I shall telle yow," quod Merlin,
"firste for what we be come to seche.  Lo, here a yonge lorde that
is a goode knyght as ye knowe well I-nough, and, wite ye well
in trouthe, what-so-euer he be, he is a man of higher lynage and
of londe and frendes than ye be, and yet ye be a kynge crowned;
and he hath no wif, and therfore we come through londes to seche
auentures till that we may fynde some high prince that his
doughter wolde yeve hym in mariage."  "A lorde mercy!" quod
the kynge leodogan, "what go ye ferther than sechinge?  I haue
a doughter that is holden oon of the feirest of the worlde and
the wiseste and oon of the beste lerned, and for defaute of goode
lynage ne of goode londe ought she not to be refused; and yef it
be youre plesier I yeve hir yow to be youre wif; and I haue no
mo heires to whom my londe moste falle after my discesse."  And
Merlin ansuerde that he hir not sholde refuse neuer, yef god will;
and thanked him the foure felowes righ hertely."</P>
<P>  Than the kynge hym-self wente to fecche his doughter, and
made hir to be appareiled in the richest wise, and ledde
hir be the honde in to the chambre where-as the foure ffelowes
dide a-bide, and after hem com grete route of knyghtes, where-of
ther-ynne were grete plente, and ther also were alle the companye
of the rounde table, and the xl that the storye hath rehersed, and
many other of high astate, that were come in to the hoste for to
socoure the kynge leodogan; and whan the kynge and his
doughter entred thourgh the chambre that was feire and grete,
the foure felowes com hem a-geyns; and spake the kynge
leodogan that he myght wele ben herde, and seide, "Gentill sir,
cometh forth, for I can not yet yow namen, and resceive here my
doughter to be youre wif, that is so feire and courteise, and
ther-to right wise, with all the honour that to hir appendeth after
my deth, ffor to a worthier than yow may I not hir yeve, and
that knowe well alle these worthi men here-ynne."  And Arthur
stode forth and seide, "Sir, gramercy."  And the kynge leodogan
delyuered hir to hym by the right honde.  And that oon graunted

<PB REF="" N="320" ID="pb.320"/>

to that other full debonerly, and the kynge hem blissed with his
right honde, and the bisshop of Toraise was sent fore, and than
was the ioye grete ther-ynne that neuer be-fore was ther seyn
gretter.  And than com Merlin and spake to the kynge, heringe
alle that were ther-ynne, "Sir, ye wolde gladly knowe what we
be   <MILESTONE N="112b" UNIT="folio"/>and to whom ye haue yoven youre doughter."  And the
kynge that it so moche desired, that yet wende it not to haue
knowen, seide, "certeynly that gladly wolde he wite yef it were
hir plesier."  "Now knoweth wele," quod Merlin, "and alle tho
that it will heren, that ye haue yoven youre doughter to Arthur,
the kynge of Bretaigne, the sone of kynge Vterpendragon, and
thei owe hym homage bothe ye and alle the barouns of this
reame.  Now let hem don it alle tho that will hym honour, and after
shall we go the gladlyer and the more wightly to turneyen a-gein
these sarazins that this londe do werryen, and wolde take and
distroien, but it shall be other-wise than thei wene; and also I do
yow to vndirstonde that these two noble men ben bretheren and
also kynges crowned, and that oon is cleped the kynge Ban of
Benoyk, and that other the kynge Boors of Gannes, and be comen of
the heighest lynage that eny man knoweth; and alle these other
felowes beth the sones of Erles and barouns and Castelleynes."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge leodogan and the other felowes vndirstode
that this was <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>the the</SIC></CHOICE>   kynge Arthur, thei weren so gladde
that neuer hadde thei so grete ioye be-forn.  And the two kynges
com first be-fore hym and dide hym homage, and after the kynge
leodogan and alle the other barouns, and thei made the feste of the
mariage so riall that neuer in that londe was seyn soche; but ouer
alle other was the quene Gonnore gladde of hir newe lorde.  And
that nyght Merlin lete hym-self be knowen of the knyghtes of
the rounde table with-oute eny moo.  And whan the kynge
leodogan hym knewe he seide that god in this worlde hadde sente hym
goode eure, that to so noble and worthi man hadde hym yove the
love and a-queyntanse, "and from hens-forth, gode lorde god, do
with me thy wille, seth my londe and my doughter is be sette in


<PB REF="" N="321" ID="pb.321"/>

so noble wise to the worthiest of the worlde."  Thus seide the
kynge leodogan, and than after thei yede to bedde for to reste;
and on the morowe the kynge sente the knyghtes in to tho parties
as Merlin hym taught, where as the peple of kynge Rion sholde
assemble, and than devised his wardes of his bataile where-of
were x.</P>
<P>  In the firste warde, where as the dragon was, was the kynge
Arthur and the kynge Ban and the kynge Boors and her
xl felowes, and so were the knyghtes of the rounde table, and so
many of other that thei were vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men right well armed; and the
seconde warde ledde Guyomar, the kynges cosin, with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men
of armes; the thridde warde ledde Elunadas, a yonge lorde that
was nevew to the wise lady of the foreste saunz retour; the
fourthe bataile ledde Blios, the lorde of Cloadas, a merveillouse
castell, and were with hym vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes and horse of prise;
the v warde ledde Aridolus, a knyght of grete renoun, and weren
also vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; the sixte bataile ledde Belcys li loys, that was
I-nough riche and puyssaunt, and hadde with hym also vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men of armes well horsed; the vij bataile ledde ydiers, of
the londe of Norwey, to whom the feire a-venture fell in the
courte of kynge Arthur, of   <MILESTONE N="113a" UNIT="folio"/>the v ringes that he drough oute of
the deed knyghtes honde that asked vengaunce, that neuer knyght
that was in that court myght haue, as the tale shall yow declare
here-after; and he hadde in hys companye vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and he was a
noble knyght and an hardy.  The viij<HI REND="sup">th</HI> bateile ledde landons, the
nevew of the stiward of Tamelide, that was a full noble knyght
of his honde, and he ledde vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> in his companye soche as he hadde
brought; the ix<HI REND="sup">th</HI> bateile ledde Groinge poire mole, that was a
noble knyght of his body, but he hadde no gretter nose than a cat;
this chese oute vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> in whom he trusted; and the x<HI REND="sup">th</HI> bataile
ledde the kynge leodogan and his stiwarde Cleodalis, that right
wele cowde hym helpe, and were in her companye x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> what oon
and other, that wolde not fle for lif ne lym.  Whan these batailes
were disseuered that oon from that other and renged by hem-self,
thei devised whan thei shulde meve; and thus thei acorded, that
on the morowe after Pentecoste thei shulde move at the firste


<PB REF="" N="322" ID="pb.322"/>

cok crowynge; and than thei rested all day and on the morn, ffor
on the witsonday the kynge leodogan helde court roiall for love
of the barouns that ther were assembled; and the thre kynges
and Merlin satte to-geder at the hede of the deyse, and be-fore
hem satte the two Gonnores, that were wonder like, saf a litill
that oon was heigher and fressher coloured, and that was Arthurs
wif, and the better tonge she hadde, ffor she was of all the worlde
the feirest speker and the beste, and also she hadde more heer
than the tother Gonnore, but of alle other thinges thei resembled
so like that vn-ethe myght oon knowe that oon from that
other.  And after satte the felowes that Arthur hadde brought with the
knyghtes of the rounde table for chierte and gret love, ffor so
wolde Merlin and Gynebans the clerke.  And whan thei hadde
eten thei wente to bedde, but litill while thei lay, for thei roos at
mydnyght.</P>
<P>  Whan the armes of kynge Arthur were brought, Gonnore
hym helped for to arme right wele and feire, as she
that right wele cowde her ther-of entermete, and hir-self girde
hym with his swerde; and whan the kynge was all armed saf his
helme she toke the spores and sette hem on bothe knelinge; and
Merlin, that all this be-hilde, be-gan to laughe, and shewde to
the two kynges how Gonnore hir entermeted and peyned hym to
serue; and hir preised moche the twey kynges.  But in the fin
she hadde a riche guerdon whan she loste the kynge hir lorde by
mysauenture and by Bertelanx, the traitour, as the book shall
re-herse here-after; and while Merlin be-heilde the maiden that
serued hir lorde, he lough and seide to the kynge, as he that cowde
all goode and full well cowde Iape in myrthe and game, "Sir sire,
never were ye so verily a newe knyght as ye be now, and ther ne
faileth but o thinge that ye were alle a newe knyght; and well may
ye sey whan ye departe hens that a maiden that is kynges doughter
and quenes hath made yow a newe knyght."  "Sir," seide the
kynge, "sey what thinge that is and my lady shall   <MILESTONE N="113b" UNIT="folio"/>it do, but
yef it be to grete a thinge or that she sholde ther-by haue
shame.'  "Certes, sire," seide the maiden full wisely, as she that full well
lerned, "in nothinge that I do to yow may I haue no shame ne


<PB REF="" N="323" ID="pb.323"/>

vilonye, ffor I knowe yow so noble and worthy and also curteyse
that ye wolde me not requere nothinge that to vilonye shulde
turne for the beste castell that ye haue."  "Lady," seide Merlin,
"ye sey wisely; neuer for nothinge that I haue seide shall ye
haue no reprof ne that sholde turne yow to no shame."  "What
is it than?" seide the kynge, "I pray yow telle me."  "Sir,"
seide Merlin, "hit is the baisyers, yef to the lady it
plese."  "Certes," seide the kynge, "and for that shall I not leve to be a
newe made knyght."  "No," quod the maiden, "as for that
shall I yow not lese, but that ye shull be myn and I yowrs; and
why sholde ye ther-of me preyen, for also well it pleseth me as
it doth to yow."  Whan the kynge herde hir thus sey he be-gan to
laugh; than the kynge toke hir in armes, and kissed hir swetly
as yonge peple that full well to-geder loved.  And than were the
horse apareiled and brought forth; and Gonnore yaf hir lorde an
helme of merveillouse bountee, and he sette it on his heed; and
than ech comaunded other to god, and rode forth eche warde
after other, the ganfanouns folden and the speres lowe, and rode
a softe pas as Merlin hym guyded as he that wele knewe alle the
passages; and the x knyghtes that were gon be-fore hadde taken
mo than x pantoneres, that alle weren espies of the kynge Rion,
and bounde hem and sette hem in prison, and kepte so well the
passages that thei herde no tidinges.</P>
<P>  And so well spedde hym Merlin that the firste warde dide
condite that thei come the wednysday at nyght after the
mydnyght in to the hoste of kynge Rion; and the nyght was
right clere and stille, but the moone shone a litill trouble.  And
thei slepte strongeliche in the hoste ffor the tyme that relented,
ffor on the day was right grete hete in the hoste, and ther-to thei
hadden dronken I-nough.  And Merlin sette in be-twene the
wode and the river, and comaunded that no man presse in to the
hoste till that thei herde an horne blowe; and as the wardes
passeden ouer oon after a-nother, Merlin a-bode hem alle, and
made hem close to-geder; and than wente Merlin to the baner,
and toke an horne and blewe it so lowde that all the foreste and
the river resownnded that a man myght heere the horne well half

<PB REF="" N="324" ID="pb.324"/>

a myle.  Than Merlin cried, "Lady seint Marie, praye to oure
lorde god, thi blissed sone, that he now be oure helpe."  "Now
sette on manly," quod he, "gentill knyghtes, ffor now shall it be
sein who is noble and worthi, ffor I do yow to wete that ye
be alle at the deth or at the lif, and noon ne hath no heede
but he hit now deffende."  And whan thei herde the horne
a-noon thei slaked theire reynes and spored theire horse and
smote in to the hoste with grete ravyne; and ther ye sholde
haue sein tentes and pavilouns reverse to the grounde, ffor Merlin
by crafte made soche a trobellion a-rise that ther lefte   <MILESTONE N="114a" UNIT="folio"/>nother
tente ne pavilon stondinge, but fellen vpon theire heedes that lay
with-ynne; and thei smyten in to the hoste on alle parties, and
slowgh and maymed what thei myght a-reche, ffor ther was made
of hem grete slaughter er thei were a-parceyved in the hoste what
peple thei were, till that thei herde the brayes and the dolerouse
cries as thei weren slain and mangeled of hem that of hir deth
hadde no pitee.  Than comaunded the heigh lordes to theire
squyres to make theire horse redy thourgh the hoste, and thei so
dide, and than thei ronne to armes hastely, and peyned hem harde
to be smartly armed and soone; and as soone as thei myght be
armed thei assembled at the tente of kynge Rion, and blowen
hornes and trumpes right harde.  And the cristin hadde so hurled
a-monge hem vp and down that mo than thre thousande thei
hadde so araied that neuer repeired thens, and chase the remenaunt
to kynge Rions tente; ther thei made hir gaderinge, and ther
thei stalled, for thei were moche peple and stronge; and than
armed hem thei that were not armed, and tho apered the feire
day and cleire, and than the wardes drowen vp and appereilled
hem in ordre, and eche gadered his peple a-boute hym, and ther
thei reised theire baners a-lofte that flekered in the wynde, and
the bright soone smote vpon the bright armurs that it glistered so
bright that merveile was to be-holden.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Rion saugh the damage that thei hadde
hym don he was nygh wode for ire, and satte vpon a
grete horse that was wonder stronge and swight, and hadde an ax
hanginge at his sadill be-fore, that was grete and hevy of harde


<PB REF="" N="325" ID="pb.325"/>

stiell, and rode so vp and down, devisinge who sholde go be-fore
and who sholde go be-hynde; and than he cleped Solynas, a knyght
of grete prowese and right hardy, that was his nevew, and seide,
"Solinas, thow shalt lede the firste bataile with an hundred
thousande men of armes of soche peple as ye will, and thow shalt go
and a-venge my shame and youre harmes."  And he seide he
wolde well so that he wolde deserue of hym no blame.  Than
departed he that was wight and hardy and merveillouse stronge;
and as soone as Merlin saugh hym come he rode hym a-geins with
the dragon, and he hym disfigured in soche manere that no man
saugh who it bar saf the thre kynges.  Whan Merlin saugh that
he com nygh, he seide to the kynge Arthur, "Arthur," quod he,
"now shall it be sene how well ye shull do, and loke that the
kisse that youre love yow yaf be to somme solde so dere that euer
after ther-of be spoken."  And he ansuerde a-gein and seide that
in hym sholde be no feyntise, and no more he ne seide.  And
than approched that oon bataile to that other right nygh, and
than thei leide theire speres in fewtre, and mette to-geder with
trenchaunt heedes vpon the sheldes that ech hurte other and
wounded and bar to the grounde; ther dide the kynge Arthur a
pointe that moche was be-holden.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur saugh bothe partyes so nygh approche, he
smote the horse with the spores a-gein Ionap, a grete
Geaunt and merveillous stronge; and he saugh hym so come he
douted   <MILESTONE N="114b" UNIT="folio"/>hym but litill, for he semed a-gein hym but a
chielde.  Thei com faste and rudely, and Arthur was smyte with Ionappes
spere in the shelde so rudely that the shafte passed thourgh his
lifte flanke an arme lengthe; and Arthur smote hym a-gein so
sore that thourgh shelde and sholdre he shof the trenchaunt
spere, but the sarazin was so proude and of so grete strength
that he made no semblaunt of no greuaunce, but hurteled to-geder
so rudely with theire bodyes and with the myght of theire horse
that eche bar other to erthe and the horse vpon theire bodyes, and
ther thei lay a longe while sore astonyed, that the ton cowde telle
no tidinges of the tother.  Than ronne to the rescowse on bothe
two sides; ther was many a grete spere crased and stronge stour of


<PB REF="" N="326" ID="pb.326"/>

swerdes upon helmes and sheldes.  Ther loste the Geauntes more
than the cristin, but, neuertheles, thei traueyled so on bothe parties
that bothe were thei releved and sette on horse, and than be-gan
the stoure stronge and merveillouse; ther dide the knyghtes of the
rounde table wondres, and the xl felowes, ffor a-gein hem myght
endure noon harneys, ne no kynge, ne warde, ne sheltron, were
it neuer so clos, and drof hem to the standerd, and were so
affraide the meyne of Solinas that thei ne entended but for to
fleen; and the cristin hem enchased and driven in a-monge hem so
harde that alle the renges dide fremysh, and ther be-gan the
chaplee so mortall that neuer was sein more mortalite; grete
prowesse ther dide the knyghtes of the rounde table, but of alle
other ther dide well a yonge knyght, that ought well to be
rehersed in the storye, for he ought not to be for-yeten but to be
remembred what he was and what was his name, ffor he was the
beste that euer was in the tyme of Vterpendragon and in the
tyme of kynge Arthur, as longe as hym liked for to use and to
haunte chiualrie.</P>
<P>  The storye seith that he was cosin germain vn-to Percevall de
galoys vpon his moder side, of whom this booke shall
speke here-after whan the matier cometh ther-to; and also the
booke seith that this knyght was nygh to Ioseph
Abaramathie, for he was the sone of Enhyngnes, the soster of Ioseph,
that was the wif wedded to Ebron, that hadde xij sones, where-of
the londe of Bretaigne was after enlumyned, and next cosin to
Selydoyne, the sone of Duke Nascien de breting, that the grete
merveile of the graal saugh firste, and also a-pertened to kynge
Pelles of lytenoys and his brethren.  This knyght hadde after
Galaad, the sone of launcelot, many a day in his kepinge, wher-of
the boke shall reherse here-after of alle thinges oon after a-nother
as thei fill day be day.  This knyght of whom I haue so spoken
was cleped Nascien ffor love of the duke Nascien, that was so
noble a knyght, and he was after of so gode lyvinge whan he
hadde lefte chivalrie that he be-com an hermyte; and oure lorde
hym visited and loved so that he was a preste and seide messe,
and was also a mayden and chaste as longe as he leved; and this

<PB REF="" N="327" ID="pb.327"/>

same knyght was after ravisshed be the holy goste in to the
thridde heuene, where he saugh a-pertely the fader, sone, and holy
goste.  This knyght hadde after the storie in his kepinge,   <MILESTONE N="115a" UNIT="folio"/>and
wrote with his owne hande by comaundement of the grete
maister; and that he dide write he anexed to the booke that
Blase wrote, the holy hermyte, by the techinge of Merlin.  This
knyght yaf afterwarde, whan he was hermyte, the noble
counseile to kynge Arthur whan he was in pereile to lese his londe, in
the tyme of Galehant, the lorde of the fer oute yles, that werred
vpon Arthur with the power of xxx kynges that he hadde alle
conquered.  But now resteth the tale to speke of thise thinges,
and returneth to telle how thei dide in the bataile.</P>
<P>  Full grete and harde was the bataile, the thursday after
pentecoste, of the peple of kynge Rion of Denmarke and of
Islonde, a-gein the peple of the reame of Tamelide, and ther the
knyghtes of the rounde table shewde merveilouse prowesse in
armes, but a-boven alle other well dide this Nascien and
Adragayn li bruns: these tweyne dide merveillouse prowesses: these
tweyne brake the sheltrouns with strokes of swerdes, and with
hem also the kynge Arthur.  These thre hilde companye to-geder
that thei haue loste all theire felowes, and what wey that euer
thei yede euer hem gyded the baner of the dragon, and sore
peyned alle the tother felowes for to folowe the baner, but the
sarazins were so many and so thikke that thei myght hem not
persh ne breke, but nede moste thei ruse, and leve place wheder
thei wolde or noon; and these thre be lefte a-monge hem that
sore laboured er thei myght come to the standerd where the baner
waved of the kynge Rion in the wynde that was grete and born
vp with iiij Olyfauntes; and on that other side the kynge Ban
and the kynge Boors saugh how thei haue loste the kynge Arthur,
and that the Geauntes have hym for-closed, thei lete renne theire
horse and lefte theire felowes, and gerden in to the presse, with
swerdes drawen, and slowen and casten down all that thei myght
atteigne, ne neuer cessed hem to percen and thriste thourgh till
thei com to Merlin, that hilde the baner be-fore the kynge
Arthur.  And whan the v felowes weren to-geder and hir banerer that hem


<PB REF="" N="328" ID="pb.328"/>

gided, than be-gan the medle so cruwell, that oon for that other,
that merveile it was to be-holde.  Than fill it that the kynge
Rion com that wey, his ax in his honde, and he was the moste
man and the grettest of corsure of the worlde, and happed that
he mette firste in his wey the kynge Boors, that chased the kynge
Saron with swerde drawen, that a merveillous stroke he hadde
hym yoven with a spere thurgh the shelde, that ner he hadde
hym felled to grounde, but as he kepte hym by the arson of his
sadell, and with-oute faile hadde not the spere broken he hadde
falle to grounde; and as soone as the spere was spente the kynge
Boors redressed hym in his sadell and ficched hym so in his
steropes so harde that the Iren bente, and he hilde his swerde
naked, and clipte his shelde to his breste, and ran to the Geaunte,
and whan the Geaunte saugh hym come he fledde, for he durste
hym not a-bide; and the kynge Boors hym pursude that loth was
hym to leve, and of that dide he grete folye, ffor he hadde paste
his felowes the space of a bowe draught, and thei ne myght not
hym ouer-take; and than happed hym mette the   <MILESTONE N="115b" UNIT="folio"/>kynge Rion,
that com ridinge wonder faste, with all the force of xvij kynges
crowned, and alle were thei hardy knyghtes and sure in armes,
and the kynge Rion rode be-fore the caste of a ston, and helde in
his hande a grete malle of brasse, and he was grete and stronge,
and sat vpon a stronge horse and a grete, and mette the kynge
Boors, that chased the kynge Saron, and hilde hym so straite
that he smote hym vpon the helme that he made hym stoupe on
the arson of the sadell, and as he sholde haue recouerd a-nother
stroke to smyte of the hede, the horse that he satte on caught the
bridell with the teth, and bar hym ferther than he wolde, the kynge,
that smote with so grete myght, <SUPPLIED>myght</SUPPLIED> not with-drawe his
stroke, but hitte ther as he wolde not haue smyten, ffor he smote
of the horse hede of the kynge Saron faste by the eeres, that
bothe the horse and the hover fill to the erthe, and than Boors
rode ouer hym, and fayn wolde haue light yef he hadde
leyser.  But the kynge Rion that com fer be-fore cried, and seide, "Sir
knyght, so fer haste thow gon that late it is to repente, for he is
longinge to me, and ther-fore I com hym for to chalenge, and


<PB REF="" N="329" ID="pb.329"/>

thow shalt wite yef be-twene hym and me were eny love."  Than
he spored his horse harde that the blode sterte oute on bothe two
sides, and he ran so swyfte that the felde that was full of smale
caliouns that the fire sparkeled thikke, and the kynge Boors
behilde and saugh come the grete Geaunte so nygh that he myght
not glenche a-side on no parte, and saugh come so grete foyson of
peple after hym that all the felde was couered, and saugh well
yef he a-bode he were in grete a-uenture of deth, and than he
seide a-gein, "A mercy lorde god, for yef I go thus shall I neuer
haue honour, ffor euer it shall be to me reprof and holde
cowardise, and yet hadde I leuer to dye with worship than lyve with
shame; now god do with me his plesier," quod he, "for I will
a-bide."  Than he made vpon hym the signe of the very crosse,
and hilde his swerde in his honde that was of grete bounte, and
bode hym that com prikinge thourgh the playn.  Whan the kynge
Rion com to the kynge Boors he threw down his launce, and yaf
hym soche a stroke with the brasen betell so vn-mesurable, that
ner he hadde hym encombred, but he kepte the stroke vpon his
shelde, and Rion smote so rudely that it fill in peces, and Boors
enterpassaunt hit hym on the helme with his swerde so fiercely
that he bente on his horse croupe.  Whan the sarazin saugh that
he hadde of hym failed, he returned a-gein with his betill of
brasse, and the kynge Boors that saugh come so grete foison of
peple and the kynge Rion that hilde hym so shorte, he thought
it foly to a-bide lenger.  Than he priked bakke in to the presse,
and saugh how the kynge Aroans helde hervy the rivell by the
nasell of the helme vpon fote, and hadde hym so beten, he and
his men, that the blode ran oute of mouthe and nose, and thei
hadde his hede smeten of ne hadde be Adragain li bruns, that full
sore hym deffended a-gein mo than an hundred, but in short tyme
he moste haue be   <MILESTONE N="116a" UNIT="folio"/>slayn, whereof hadde be grete damage, ne
hadde be the kynge Boors, that com and saugh hervy at that
myschef, and was ther-fore full sory; and than he priked his horse
toward Aroans and smote hym vpon the helme that he fill flatte
to grounde all a-stonyed.  And whan hervy saugh hym so
delyuered, he hente the horse and lepte vp lightly, and ran in to


<PB REF="" N="330" ID="pb.330"/>

the presse that dide sore encrese and enforse, ffor all the x wardes
of the kynge leodogan were flusshed to the standerd that the
kynge Rion dide condite, that hadde chaced the kynge Boors till
he com in to the bataile ther he hadde felled the kynge Aroant,
and as soone as he hym saugh he ran vpon hym with his betill in
his honde and wende to smyte hym vpon the helme, and whan he
saugh the stroke come and that he hade no shelde, he spored
forth his horse, and Ryon smote so rudely that the stroke fill
betwene the horse croupe and the sadell that brake the horse chyne,
and bar bothe to the erthe, that oon vpon that other bothe vpon an
hepe.  Than the kynge boors lepte on foote, for he was a knyght
hardy and sure, and the presse was so thikke a-boute hym, that
vn-ethe myght he hym turne, ffor so grete plente of peple sued
the kynge Rion, that no man myght hem nombre, that smote
vpon hem so sore that the cristin rused more than a bowe
shote.  Ther was Boors full sore greved, for the kynge Rion peyned hym
sore to smyte of his hede; and whan hervy de rivell saugh the
goode man at so grete myschef, for he hadde sein hym thries
vpon his knees fallen and a-rise vpon his palmes, he rode that
wey hym for to socoure, and caught a grete stronge spere oute of
a sarazins handes, and smote the kynge Rion thourgh the shelde
and hauberke and the lifte sholdre, but it perced not the
flessh.  Ne for no stroke that he yaf the kynge not meved more ne lesse,
but lifte vp the betill where-with he hadde many a cristin slain,
and wende smyte hervy vpon the helme, but he hym covered with
his shelde, and the stroke com so harde that a quarter fill to the erthe,
and whan he wolde it recover as he that was of right grete forse,
and hervy was full of grete vigour, and hilde his swerde drawen,
and wende to smyte hym vpon the helme, and the kynge caste
his shelde ther a-geins, and hervy hym smote so sore that he slitte
it to the bokle, and the kynge lefte vp agein the betill and wolde
haue smyte hym vpon the helme, and hervy plukked his reyne
a-bakke, for sore he douted the stroke of the grete Geaunte, and
he failed of hym, and smote the horse be the paytrell and braste
the nekke a-sonder, that to grounde fill the horse and his maister,
and whan Adragain saugh his felow fallen, it was no nede to aske

<PB REF="" N="331" ID="pb.331"/>

yef he were dolent.  Than he drough that wey with his swerde
in his fiste, and smote so the kynge Rion, that he made hym
bende on his horse nekke, and but as he enbrased his horse nekke
he hadde fallen to the erthe all vp-right, and yef Adragain hadde
I-hadde leyser, taken hadde be the vengeaunce with-oute more
taryinge.  Whan the sarazins and the Geauntes saugh the   <MILESTONE N="116b" UNIT="folio"/>kynge
Rion in soche pereill, thei were right wrorth.  Ther was a proude
kynge that was cosin to the kynge Rion, that hight Solinas, that
heilde a spere with an heede of steill: whan he saugh the kynge
Rion so euell I-ledde, it a-noyed hym sore, and than he spored his
stede and smot Adragayn so rudely be-twene the two sholderes
that he bar hym to the erthe vp-right, but a-noon he lept on
foote.  And when the thre knyghtes saugh hem-self so at myschef,
thei drough hem to-geder and foughten so harde that noon to
profer hys honde hem to take; and thei launched at hem dartes
and gauellokes, and hurt and wounded hem in many places, but
thei were of so high herte that nought thei sette of all that was
ther don, but slough and caste down all that thei myght
atteyne.  But the kynge Rion hem kepe so short that taken hadde thei ben,
but as Nascien com with a shorte spere in his honde all blody.</P>
<P>  Whan Nascien saugh the kynge Boors at soche myssese, and
his two felowes that he so loved, and saugh the kynge
Rion that sore hym peyned hem to damage, he smote his horse
with spores so harde that wey that down goth all that he mette
in hys comynge with the breste of his horse, and braundisshed
his gleyve, and smote the kynge Rion so harde at discouert vpon
the lifte side that he bar hym to the erthe so a-stonyed that he
wiste not whether it were day of nyght; and Nascien passed ouer
his body on horse-bak tweys or thryse, and than his men ronne
to the rescowse, and ther was so grete prese of speres and swerdes
that Nasciens horse was slain vnder hym be-twene his legges;
and ther were these iiij knyghtes at grete myssese and soone
myght haue be so grete damage that neuer myght haue be
restored; but Merlin, that alle these auentures knewe, com to
kynge Arthur, and seide, "Clepe the kynge Ban and the knyghtes
of the rounde table and suweth me, ffor it is now grete nede, ffor


<PB REF="" N="332" ID="pb.332"/>

the kynge Boors and thre knyghtes of the rounde table fightes,
and alle iiij ben at grete myschief, ffor the kynge Rion hem
kepeth so shorte that I loke but after the houre that thei sholde
be slain."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ban vndirstode Merlin, all his body
trembled, and a-noon asked and seide, "Ha! sir, telle me
whiche wey it is, ffor yef he dye shall I neuer haue ioye in my
lyve."  "Sue me than," quod Merlin, "for it is no tyme for to
a-byde."  Than caste Merlin a-noon his enchauntement full
merveillous, for he made a-rise a tempest and a wynde so stronge that
all the duste drof a-monge the saisnes so thikke that vn-nethe oon
myght knowe a-nother; and than a-roos the shoute so grete and
the noyse that noon myght here other.  Than turned Merlin the
dragon in his honde so grete and so merveillouse that neuer was
seyn noon soche be-fore, and caste fier and flame in to the aire so
grete and so merveillouse and so grete foison that all the aire
waxed all reade of the flawme, and ther fill a thousande of soche
sparkeles of fire vpon theire helmes of the Sarazins and Geauntes,
that was a thinge that moche hem affraied.</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="117a" UNIT="folio"/>While that Merlin entended to breke the presse, com the
men of kynge Rion so grete plente that noon cowde
hem nombre ne seye, and on that other side come the wardes of
kynge leodogan and that oon smote a-gein that other alle
to-geder.  Ther was a stour merveillouse and felon, ffor the cristin were at
grete myschef, ne it myght not longe haue endured ne hadde ben
the grete knowinge and witte of Merlin, in whom was all the
recouer, ffor for oon of the men kynge leodogan hadde kynge
Rion foure, but the cristin ben more noble and better I-armed and
feirer in ordenaunce ech at his baner.  Ffull grete was the bataile
and the stour mortall be-fore the Citee of da Nablaise, for sore that
oo parte peyned to damage that other.  Ther the knyghtes of the
rounde table so laboured and peyned hem to sue the baner where
as Merlin it bar, for ther were so gret foyson of peple that vn-ethe
were thei seyn a-monge theire enmyes.  Ther dide merveilles the
kynge Ban, for he hadde grete drede of his brother, and whiche
wey that Merlin wente euer was Arthur with hym and his xl


<PB REF="" N="333" ID="pb.333"/>

felowes and CC l knyghtes of the rounde table; a-gein these
myght no force of peple with-stonde, and so haue thei medled
and styghtled till they haue founde the kynge Boors vpon foote,
and his felowes so araied that theire helmes were slitte and
quartered that it henge a-boute theire yeen so that it hem blynded,
and theire hauberkes were so rente and torne in many places, but
thei hadde yet no wounde that letted hem to bere armes, and thei
helde theire swerdes in bothe handes and merveillously hem
deffenden, ffor so many hadde thei slayn of men and of horse that
the mounteins of bodyes were a-boute hem so grete that noon
myght come to hem but launchinge; and the kynge Ryon hym
peyned hem for to take and holde, ffor well he thought that thei
were high men and riche for the grete diffence that he saugh in
hem and for the high hertes that thei hadden, and than he yaf
hem a-gein a newe a-saute where thei alle hadde be loste hadde
not the socour haue come.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ban saugh his brother in soche turment,
ffro whens he sholde neuer haue come oute hooll ne
sounde yef thei ne hadde not comen ne the knyghtes that with
hym weren, than he lete renne his horse that wey, and smote
the kynge Minap so thourgh the heede that he slitte hym to the
briste bon, and the kynge Arthur smote so a sarazin that he made
the heede falle be-fore the kynge Rion, and the other felowes
smote in so sore a-monge hem that ech bar his felowe deed to the
erthe or elles wounded.  And whan the kynge Boors saugh the
socour come, he ioyned his feet and lept vpon the deed bodyes of
men and horse that he hadde slain, and ech of hem caught an
horse and lept vp lightly, and chaunged theire helmes a-noon in
grete haste, and after gate hem sheldes, and than rode in to the
medle with swerdes drawen.  Ther be-gan the stour newe full
hidouse and fell, ffor thei braste and threst thourgh the batailes
  <MILESTONE N="117b" UNIT="folio"/>on alle parties and smyten down and slough all a-bowte, and
thus the bataile endured all the day vnto lowe euesonge.  Than
rused the cristin towarde the Cite of Danablaise, and the cry
a-ros so grete and the noyse and the shoute that all the cite ronne
to the walles and saugh that the cristin hadde moche the werse.


<PB REF="" N="334" ID="pb.334"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan Sadoynes the Castelein saugh the kynge leodogan, his
oncle, at soche myschef, and that thei were discounfited
and driven from the place, ne hadde ben the kynge Arthur and
his companye, that were well CCC; these sustened so the bataile
that euer thei recouered in to what place thei in wente; and whan
Sadoyne saugh the myschef of his oncle and of his companye, he
cried, "Gentill knyghtes, now as armes, for now is the nede, ffor
this day we most recouer worship or all lese, and diffende oure
lyves and oure heritages a-gein the enmyes of Ieshu criste, and
who that dieth in diffence of the cristin feith he shall be saued
from the peyne of helle; ne neuer hadde we so moche nede to
recouer our honour as we haue now right; and se ther the kynge
Arthur, that is oure lorde terrien, be the baner of the dragon,
that is the beste knyght of the worlde, that us for to socoure put
hym-self in a-uenture of deth, and whan he his body thus
a-bandoneth for us well ought we oures for to abandone for hym, and
therfore ought we haue grete pite of hym and of many other worthi
men that ben in his companye, for moche thei suffre and endure,
and therfore ought we to haue grete drede whan thei ben thus
rused and we that ben here-ynne so many shull helpe hem of nought,
ffor yet be we here-ynne of x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and moo, and se theym that passe
not foure hundre contene hem so vigerously that thei holde place
but haue all day suffred and endured the medle and the
martileys.  Now, gentill knyghtes, vpon hem, and lete vs yeve hem a shofte,
and wete ye well, yef thei be well mette at this encountre we put
hem alle to the flight, ffor better it were for vs to dye with
honoure, seth that vs be-hoveth for to dye, than for to be shamed
and disherited for cowardise of herte; and on that other side we
ought moche to diffende oure right heritage and the cristin
feith that is but newe stablisshed and be-gonne."  And whan the
kynge leodogan saugh hem isse oute of the Citee, he cried to his
men, "Now vpon hem, gentill knyghtes, lo, here the socoure that
Sadoyne bringeth; ffor love of god, gentill knyghtes, thenke to
kepe youre honours, and remembre what ye ben."  "Sir," quod
Guyomar, "wher-to somowne ye vs so faste? we ben eche man
redy his heede to diffende, ffor we ben so fer forth that alle we

<PB REF="" N="335" ID="pb.335"/>

shull dye or we shull haue the victorie, ffor ech of vs ought to be
worth a kynge to diffende his owne heede; but lete vs sette on
hem alle at ones so harde that thei be ther-of a-baisshed."  Than
thei assembled alle to-geder clos and streite, and rode forth as softe
paas toward the standerd, ther-as the kynge Ban, and the   <MILESTONE N="118a" UNIT="folio"/>kynge
Boors, and the kynge Arthur, and the knyghtes of the rounde
table dide merveilles.  Whan the kynge leodogan approched the
standerd he and his men smot in so fiercely that thei made hem
tremble, and than be-gan a newe stour, stronge and mortall, and
ther loste the sarazins many of here peple; and so moche vertu
was in leodogan and his men that thei made hem remove and
forsake place; and with that com Sadoynes, hurlinge in so harde
a-monge hem that he drof hem euen ther the hoste hadde ben
logged, and ther thei stode stifly and merveillously hem deffended;
and Merlin drough hym vp from the bataile, and made the
knyghtes of the rounde table come a-boute hym, and made hem
refressh and girde hir horse and a-brethe hem, and to renewe
theire helmes and sheldes that hadde myster, and assembled
to-geder alle hem that hadde ben in her warde, and thei were well
refresshed and a-vented and were well vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and eche man hadde
take a stronge spere; and whan thei hadde thus rested a-while
thei saugh her meyne come full harde dryuinge, ffor the sarazins
recouered a-noon as the knyghtes of the rounde table lefte the
standard; and than Merlin criede, "Gentill knyghtes, now vpon
hem, and shewe youre knyghthode, ffor yef ye do well at this
encountre a-noon thei shull go theire wey."  And than he seide
to the kynge Arthur that euell he thought vpon that his wif
hadde hym yoven, and that porely he hadde don in the firste
stoure.  And whan Arthur that herde he wax rody for shame
and seide no worde, and ficched sore in his stiropes.  And the
kynge Ban be-gan to laugh vndir his helme, and shewde hym
to the kynge Boors his brother, and alle the knyghtes of the
rounde table; and thei preised hym moche, ffor thei saugh
hym of fierce contenaunce, and seide yef he lyve longe ther
was neuer seyn soche a kynge; and thei preide god hym diffende
from pereile.


<PB REF="" N="336" ID="pb.336"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan Merlin approched the bataile he cried, "Now vpon
hem," and he drof in to the bataile with the dragon, that
he bar to the erthe alle that thei encountred, that thei lefte nought
standinge, so fierce was theire comynge; and Arthur, that helde
a stronge short spere, smote so the kynge Clarell that he perced
shelde and hauberke, that he fill to grounde and hadde ne myster
of no leche.  Than he ches to the kynge Rion by his coueringe
cote that was full of berdes crowned, and whan Arthur hadde
perceyved the kynge Rion, he <CHOICE><CORR>plukked</CORR><SIC>pukked</SIC></CHOICE> to hym his short spere,
and preced thurgh the presse with his goode horse so that noon
hym with-stode, but he caste to grounde xiiij, bothe horse and
man, er he myght come to the kynge Rion, and than he smote
hym so fiercely with this short spere thourgh shelde and
hauberke, and hadde not ben the doublet that he hadde of a serpentes
skyn, deed hadde he ben with-oute recouer; but the skyn was so
harde that he myght not perce ne breke, neuertheles he shof so
harde that he fill to grounde with his legges lifte vp-right.</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="118b" UNIT="folio"/>Whan the Geauntes and the sarazins saugh theire lorde
fallen, thei fremysshed, for grete drede thei hadde leste
he were slayn, and alle thei ronne vpon Arthur and smote hym
with speres on all parties that thei bar hym to the erthe, his
horse and hym on a hepe to-geder.  And whan Merlin saugh
the kynge falle, he made hem renne to the rescu alle the vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and than was ther soore medle and sharp shour, ffor that oon
part peyned for to rescu, and that other part for to take or to
confounde for venguance of the kynge Rion.  But ther dide Ban
gret merveilles, ffor he remounted Arthur a-monge his enmyes
with fin force, and made so grete lardre of the Geauntes, that
noon durste of hymn a-bide a stroke; and also diden well the vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
by the force of the knyghtes of the rounde table, that fewe ther
were but that he bar his felowe to the grounde, that thei made
hem remove from the place magre hem alle.  Ther was the kynge
Rion foule diffouled er he myght a-gein be remounted.  But whan
he saugh that it turned to disconfuture, and that thei moste gon
wolde thei or noon, he seide he hadde lever dye but his shame
were a-venged, and than he lepte on foote and caught his betill in


<PB REF="" N="337" ID="pb.337"/>

bothe hondes and smote in to the presse, and be-gan to smyte
soche strokes on bothe sides, so rude and oute of mesure, that he
confounded all that he a-raught, that thei fledde from hym on
alle partes for the merveilles that thei saugh hym do.  And on
that other side the kynge Ban and the kynge Arthur, and the
kynge Boors, and Nascien, and Agragayns, and Vlfin, and hervy,
and Antor, and kay the stiwarde, and lucas, and Gifflet, and the
othere felowes, foughten so till thei come to the standerd of the
kynge Rion that the Olyfauntes bar.  Ther was dolerouse fight,
and the mortalito so grete, that ther ran stremes of blode as a
rennynge river thourgh the felde.  Ther was throwe down the
Olyfauntes and the standerd of the kynge Rion, and than a-roos
the shoute and the noyse vpon the Geuantes, that thei turned to
flight toward the foreste.  And whan the Geuantes saugh that thei
turned to disconfiture, and that the damage was theirs, thei ledde
to kynge Rion his horse, and ledde hym a-wey wolde he or noon,
for grete drede thei hadde of hym, and he was so sorowfull, that
nere he wente wode for Ire.  And er he departed, he dide grete
damage to kynge leodogan, ffor of his men he slough mo than xx
er he departed oute of the felde; but whan he saugh thei fledde
bothe oon and other that he myght no lenger a-bide, he wente his
wey so wroth through the wode with-oute companye.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge leodogan saugh the kynge Rion and the
Geauntes fledden, he hem chaced, and Sadoynes, and
Cleodales, and Guyomar, that many thei lefte ligginge at erthe;
and on that othir side the knyghtes of the rounde table made
soche lardure thourgh the felde as it hadde ben shepe strangeled
with wolves, ffor the plaisshes greved hem sore that thei myght
not passe delyuerly, ffor thei were so entassed with swerdes so
thikke,   <MILESTONE N="119a" UNIT="folio"/>that oon a-monge that other, and so affraide, that in hem
was litill diffence, and thei slough so many, that all the feldes
were covered with deed and wounded bodyes, and the chace dured
vn-to derke nyght.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Rion departed fro the bateile so sory and
wroth, as ye haue herde, and he was not a-perceyved of
no man that hym knewe, saf only of kynge Arthur; and whan


<PB REF="" N="338" ID="pb.338"/>

Arthur saugh hym departe so, he seide to hym-self, that rather
wolde he be deed, than he sholde so ascape, and than he smote the
horse with the spores and lefte his felowes, so that noon wiste
whiche wey he wente.  And on that othir side the kynge Ban
pursude the kynge Glorienx, and Mynados, and Colufer: these
thre kynges he chaced sooll by hym-self, thourgh the wode, and
the tother felowes were parted, her xx and here x, here xv, in
som place more than in a-nother, and so endured the chase of hem,
that in no wise wolde hem suffre to ascape till it was cler day,
and be that tyme were so many slayn and diffouled, that of CC<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
that were at the begynnynge ne ascaped not xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  But now lete
vs speke of the kynge Arthur that pursueth after the kynge Rion.</P>
<P>  So longe Arthur enchased the kynge Rion, that he hym
atteyned in a depe valey be-twene a litill wode and a medowe
at a passage of a litill brooke that com rennynge of two welle
sprynges of a mountayne, and the sonne was so lowe, that for the
mounteynes and the wode hit was all derke, and ther ouer-toke
Arthur the kynge Rion, and than he cried, "Turne the, coward
Geaunte, or thow shalt dye fleynge, ffor thow seist well ther is
no moo here but thow and I."  And whan the Geaunte
vndirstode the kynge that so hym maneced, he helde ther-of grete
dispite, ffor he saugh that he semed a-geyn hym but a
childe.  Than he returned toward hym with his betell in his honde, and
put his targe hym be-forn that was of the bon of an Olyfaunte,
and the kynge Arthur helde a shorte spere with a longe trenchaunt
heede of sharp grounde steill, and ronne to-geder wroth and
maletalentif that oon a-gein that other, and that oon desiraunt of
pris and honour, and that other covetouse to a-venge hys shame
and his harme.  The kynge Arthur com faste, for he was meved
from fer, and Rion hym a-bode with his betill in his honde, and
Arthur hym smote so sore with this spere thourgh the shelde,
though it were neuer so harde, that the stiell passed through two
plites of the hauberke on the lifte side, that the blode lepe oute
grete foyson that all the shafte was couered in blode; but for no
myght that he cowde shove, myght he not make hym to remeve
his sadill, and the spere splyndered in peces.  And whan the

<PB REF="" N="339" ID="pb.339"/>

Geaunte felte hym-selfe wounded, he gnasshed his teth and rolled
his iyen, that were grete swollen for ire and mantelent that he
hadde, and he lifte vp his betill of brasse as he that was
merveilouse   <MILESTONE N="119b" UNIT="folio"/>grete and stronge a-bove alle tho that eny man knewe in
tho dayes, and as the boke seith, he was xiiij foote of lengthe,
and half a palme be-twene his browes, and was grete and lene
and full of veynes and of senewes, and was also so grym a figure
that he was dredefull for to be-holde.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur saugh the Geaunte lifte vp his malle he douted
the stroke, and ran to hym so rudely with the body of
his horse that he bar to the erthe bothe Rion and his horse; but
soone was he vpon his foote, but first was Arthur garnysshed of
his armes er the Geaunt were reised, for Arthur was also fallen to
grounde with the frayinge that thei hurteled to-geder.  And
Arthur was wight and lifly, and yet hadde he not but xx yere of
age, and the kynge Rion hadde moo than xlij largely, and was
grete and hevy by the thirde part more than he; and as soone as
thei were vp, thei ronne ther to-geder, and Arthur griped
Calibourne, his goode swerde that he pulde oute of the ston,
wher-with that day he hadde yove many a stroke; and as soone as he
hadde it drawen oute, hit yaf so grete light as it hadde ben a grete
bronde of fire, and couered hym with his shelde, and raught a
stroke to the Geaunte er he were couered vpon the heede, and
whan he saugh the stroke comynge he caste the shelde ther a-gein,
for sore he dredde the stroke of the swerde that he saugh so
bright shynynge, ffor he knewe it was of right grete bounte; and
the kynge Arthur smote so in the malle that he helde be-fore hym
in bothe hondes that he kutte the helue a-sonder faste by the
hede, and yet was it bounde with Iren; the stroke was grete and
rudely smyten, and discended vpon the corner of his shelde, that
he slitte it to the bokill, and with the plukkynge of his swerde
a-gein to hym he made the kynge Rion for to stomble, that was
sory for his brasen malle that he hadde so loste, and than he leide
honde to his swerde, that was oon of the beste of the worlde, ffor,
as the booke seith, it was som tyme Hercules that ledde Iason
in to the Ile of Colchos, for to fecche the flees of goolde, and with


<PB REF="" N="340" ID="pb.340"/>

that swerde dide hercules sle many a Geaunte in that londe,
where Iason ledde Medea that so moche hym loved, but after he
hir failled, where as hercules hir dide helpe by his grete debonertee,
and the booke seith that Vlcan I-forged that swerde in the tyme
of Adrastus, the kynge of Greece, that many a day hadde in his
tresour.  This same swerde hadde Tideus, the sone of the Duke
of Calcedoyne, that day that he dide the message to Ethiocles
for Polemyte, and in his comynge homwarde with the same
swerde he slowgh fifty at an hill, and after wente this swerde fro
hande to hande and from heir to heir, that now hath it the kynge
Rion, that com of the lynage of hercules, that was so noble and
hardy.</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="120a" UNIT="folio"/>Whan the kynge Rion saugh his malle smyten a-sonder, he
drough this swerde that was of so grete bountee, and as
soone as it was oute of the skawberke it caste so grete claretee
that it semed a flame of fire; and the name of this swerde was
Marmyadoise.  And whan Arthur saugh the swerde that so flambed
he preised it moche in his herte, and drough hym a litill vp hit
to be-holde, and coueyted it right sore, and thought that in goode
houre were he born that it myght conquere.  And whan the
kynge Rion saugh hym stonde so stille, he with-stode and hym
a-resoned, as ye shull here.  "Sir knyght," qoud he, "I wote
neuer what thow art, but thow haste do grete hardynesse that
me durste sue or chace a-lone with-oute companye, and for the
prowesse that I se in the I shall do the grete curtesie that I dide
neuer to no man: yeve me that swerde and thyn armes, and telle
me thy name, and after thow shalt go quyte, ffor I haue grete
pite fer to sle the for that thow semest so yonge."  Whan Arthur
vndirstode the wordes of the kynge Rion he hadde ther-of grete
dispite, and ansuerde hym felly, "How wenest to take me so
lightly, that I sholde yelde me recreaunt for that thow art so
grete and so stronge.  But ley down that swerde and tho armes,
and putte the in my mercy, to do with the my plesier outerly, for
I the assure but the deth."  At these wordes lowgh the Geaunte,
and turned the heede in trauerse, and asked hym what he was,
and what was his name, and coniured hym by his creaunce to


<PB REF="" N="341" ID="pb.341"/>

sey the trouthe.  And Arthur seide he wolde telle hym by
couenaunt that he wolde telle hym what he were, and he hym
graunted.  "Now knowe thow well," qoud he, "that my name is
Arthur, of Bretaigne, the sone of Vterpendragan, that am come
to chalenge this reame that is myn all quyte, ffor the kynge
leodogan hath yove me hys doughter to my wif, and me haue
don homage alle the high barouns of this reame, and also he
hymself.  Now telle me what thow art, and what is thy name, ffor
I haue tolde the the trouthe of myn."  Quod the Geaunte,
"Seist thou trouthe that thow art Arthur, the sone of
Vterpendragon, that slough Aungis be-fore the roche of saisnes."  "Of
the same speke I with-oute faile," qoud Arthur.  "I haue made
couenaunt," quod the Geaunte, "that I shall telle the myn
name.  I do the to wite that I am the kynge Rion, of Iselonde, and of
alle the londes vn-to pastures, and yet ferther yef a man myght
ferther passe; but oon may neuer passe till that the lawes be
broken that Iudas makabeus ther sette, and as olde auncient seyn
that thei shall neuer be hadde a-wey till the a-uentures be-gynne
in the reame of logres of the seynt Graall, and it be-hoveth hym
to caste to the portes of the goulfe of Sathanye that it be neuer
seyn after, ffor it is so of soche maner, that so it moste be
fallen.  Now I haue tolde the what I am.  But I will neuer ete while I
knowe the on lyve, ffor by the it is that I am   <MILESTONE N="120b" UNIT="folio"/>thus disconfited
and chased from the felde, and ther-fore shall I a-venge my dooll
yef I may."  "So helpe me god," quod Arthur, "than shalt thow
longe be fastinge, ffor that shall neuer falle that I shall be deed
thourgh the; and lo! here my swerde that the deffieth to the
deth, and yef thow be so hardy, take now the vengaunce of hym
that the diffieth to smyte of thyn heede."  And whan the Geaunte
herde Arthur thus speke, he was so wroth that nygh he yede oute
of his witte, and griped his shelde and com with his swerde in
his honde and lifte it high to smyte Arthur on the helme, but he
caste the shelde ther a-gein and lepte a-side in the felde, and he
smote so harde that a quarter fill to the erthe, and Arthur stepped
forth and yaf hym soche a stroke by the lifte yie and made hym
a grete wounde, and yef the swerde hadde not swarued, maymed


<PB REF="" N="342" ID="pb.342"/>

hadde he ben for euer.  Whan the Geaunte felt hym wounded
and saugh the blode raile down by the lifte iye, he was nygh wode
oute of witte, and than he ran vpon hym, for he wende to take
hym in his armes, but Arthur dide lepe a-side, for a-bide that
wolde he not, and ther-with raught hym a grete stroke, and euer
he hym pursued with swerde in honde, but atteyne hym myght
he not.  And while thei demened hem in this manere, fill so that
Nascien, and Adragains, and hervy de rivell com vpon hem, that
chaced vj sarazins full fiercely, and alle vj <CHOICE><CORR>were</CORR><SIC>were were</SIC></CHOICE>   kynges, and that
oon hight Cahainus, and that other maltaillees, and the thirde
ffernicans, and the forth heroars, and the v<HI REND="sup">e</HI> Brauremes, and the
sexthe the stronge kynge Mahidrap.  These vj kynges com down
the rocher sore hem diffendinge, and the swyfte horse com dryuynge
like a tempest.  And whan the tweyne that foughten herde this
noyse and brunt of hem that fledden, and be-helde and saugh the
vj kynges that the thre knyghtes chaced, the kynge Rion was
sore a-dredde, for he knewe tho that ther com, ffor he wiste
well thei were noble and hardy, and yef he lenger ther a-bide he
knewe well that dye he moste.  Than he com to his horse and
lept vp lightly, and in the lepinge vp Arthur hym smote so harde
that he kutte a-wey a quarter of his helme that the mailes of the
hauberke a-pered all white, and a-stoned hym sore that he bowed
on his horse nekke, and yef he myght haue recovered a-nother
stroke he hadde fallen of his horse to the erthe; but the horse
was of grete force and a-ferde of the stroke, and turned to flight
with the kynge down the roche.</P>
<P>  Than Arthur lept vpon his horse delyuerly and priked after
all that he myght, and than the kynge Rion loked bakke
and saugh Arthur that dide hym enchace sore that wolde not
hym leve, and hasted hym faste towarde the foreste, and the vj
kynges, that the thre knyghtes so chaced, com so faste fleynge that
thei ouer-toke the kynge Arthur that kepte the Geaunte so shorte,
that he hadde caste his shelde to cover his hede, for soore he
dredde the goode swerde of Arthur; and while Arthur entended


<PB REF="" N="343" ID="pb.343"/>

  <MILESTONE N="121a" UNIT="folio"/>to the Geaunte, Kehenyns hym a-scride, and seide, "Turne the,
in euell tyme haste thow hym pursued, for I will hym
chalenge.  In sory tyme haste thow lefte thy felowes."  Whan Arthur herde
hym so lowde hym a-scrye, he returned with his swerde in his
honde, and ther while the kynge Rion fledde in to the
foreste.  And Arthur com to kehenyns, and he agein hym that nothinge
hym ne douted, and smote to-geder with swerdes full harde vpon
helmes.  And kehenyns smote Arthur vpon the helme that he
made hym stoupe vpon his horse nekke, and Arthur smote so hym
agein, that of his helme he kutte a quarter, the stroke was grete,
and descended be-twene the shelde and the shuldre and kutte of
his lifte arme with all the shelde; and Kehenyns ran vpon hym
to enbrace hym in the tother arme, for he was of grete
strengthe.  Whan Arthur saugh hym come he smote hym with his swerde
be-twene the honde and the elbowe, that the honde fill of with
the swerde; and whan he saugh hym-self so maymed, he cried
and brayed as a bole, and the horse hym bar what wey he
wolde.  And whan the tother v saugh that kehenyns was so araide, hem
for-thought it sore, and ronne vpon Arthur, and he hym couered
with his shelde, as he that daigned not hem for to fle.  And thei
smote at hym vp and down, where thei wende hym moste a-peire,
and thei to-hewe his shelde in many places, but thei hurte of
hym no flessh.  And he smote so ffernycans, that he slitte hym
to the teth, and than he smote to heroars vpon the shelde that
he fill to grounde; and than com the thre knyghtes, Nascien, and
Adrageins, and hervy; and than the thre kynges turned to flight
after the steppes of the horse of kynge Rion where as thei hadde
seyn hym go, and these after that so wolde hem leven.  But now
speke we of the kynge Ban that chaced the kynges.</P>
<P>  So longe enchaced the kynge Ban after the thre kynges that
he ouer-toke hem in a launde of a foreste, where thei stode
stifly, for ther thei ouertoke x of her felowes, that ronne vpon
the kynge Ban as soone as thei hym saugh, and he smote so the
firste that he mette, that he clefte the heede in two peces, and than
he smote a-nother that the shulder disseuered from the body, and
than thridde that the heede fill in to the felde, and thei hym


<PB REF="" N="344" ID="pb.344"/>

smyten vpon the helme and the shelde, but thei touched of hym
no flesshe, ffor the hauberke was of grete strenghthe, and as thei
thus foughten com Pignoras, and Sonygrex, and Gaisdon, and
magoras, that the kynge Boors hadde enchaced full harde, and
hem kepte so straite, that thei hadde no leyser hem to returne;
and so haue thei fledde till thei fill vpon hem that the kynge
Ban delyuered grete bataile; and than thei turned the heedes of
theire horse towarde hym that hem pursuwed, and he smote
a-monge hem with so grete force that he bar down Pignoras,
bothe hym and his horse, on oon hepe; and than he smote to
Sinagrex so harde that he clefe hym to the brayn, and he fill
deed.  And than be-helde the kynge Boors, and saugh his brother that
faught   <MILESTONE N="121b" UNIT="folio"/>a-gein x knyghtes, and he spored his horse so sore that
he bar a Sarazin to grounde hym and his horse, and than he
smote a-nother with his swerde that he fill deed, and the thre
kynges that he hadde chaced ronne vpon hym, and smote hym
vpon the helme be-hynde, that he stouped on his horse nekke,
but to arise was it no tyme, but he turned his horse hede a-gein
hem, with his swerde in his hande, and ther be-gan the two
bretheren a sore medle and crewell a-gein the xiij that hem
assailleden, but more thei hem damaged than thei dide hem;
but longe hadde thei not ben ther, whan the kynge Rion com
thider with the swerde drawen, sore hurte and euell affraide, and sore
bledynge of two woundes, that oon on the heede and that other on
the lifte side in the flanke, and whan he saugh the bataile of xiij
knyghtes a-gein tweyne, he dressed hym that wey with his swerde,
for fayn wolde he a-venge his anoye, and he smote at hem so
fiercely, that he made hem remeve the place fro ther thei stoden,
and by his comynge was the kynge Boors born to grounde, and his
horse vpon his body; and than he lifte vp his swerde for to smyte
the kynge Ban vpon the helme, but he couered hym with his
shelde and smote the horse with the spores to eschewe the stroke,
and he slytte the shelde as fer as the he raught, and the kynge Ban
sente hym a stroke with corsheuse, his good swerde, and he caste
his shelde ther a-geins, and the kynge Ban clefte it thourgh-oute,
and the gige also, wherby it henge by his nekke, and it fill in two


<PB REF="" N="345" ID="pb.345"/>

partes to the erthe.  And on that othir side, as soone as the
Sarazins saugh the kynge Boors fallen, thei ronne vpon hym, and
yaf hym grete strokes at the erthe, and hurte hym in dyuerse
places; and the horse, that was myghty and stronge, lay vpon
his lifte thigh, and hilde hym so straite to the erthe, that a-rise
myght he not; and whan the kynge Ban saugh his brother in
soche pereile, he praide god hym to saue fro mysauenture, for of
hym hadde he grete drede.  Than he spored his horse that wey
and smote the kynge Magoras, so that the heede fill to grounde,
and after he smote a-nother so felly, that the chyne yede a-sonder,
and than he a-bode vpon his brother that moche hym peyned to
arise.  And as thei thus foughten Com fleynge maltaillyet, and
balfinne, and the kynge Mahidrap full faste, ffor ther com thre
knyghtes that hem chaced with grete spede, wher-of that on was
the kynge Arthur, and that other Nascien, and Adragayns li
bruns, the brother of Madagot, the goode knyght of the blake yle
tournoye, that Gawein, the nevew of kynge Arthur, after toke at
Estremors, whan that he kepte in prison his cosin Galashin, that
day that he wolde hym haue hanged vpon the walles of the
town, in despite of kynge Arthur, be-fore his owne iyen, ffor that
he hadde sege be-fore town that he wolde haue take be strength,
and for that the kynge hadde slain oon of his nevewes at a
poynt, that hadde be by-fore the town, as this boke shall tell yow
more clerly here-after, whan the mater cometh ther-to.  The
fourthe felowe that com   <MILESTONE N="122a" UNIT="folio"/>after with these thre knyghtes was
hervy de rivell, the banerer of the rounde table, and as soone as
these thre com ther as the kynge Rion faught hym-self, x a-gein a
sooll knyght, thei dressed hem to the presse and greved hem all
that thei myght.  And the kynge Boors hadde so drawen and
pulled as he that was of grete strengthe, that he a-roos with grete
peyne, and saugh his brother in grete toyle that vigerousely hym
diffended, and than he smote maltailliet that he disseuered the
shulder from the side and he fill deed to the erthe, and he hente
the horse that was of grete bounte and lept in to the sadill, and
a-noon rode in to the presse, and smote so sore the kynge Rion
vpon the helme, that he slitte it in two partes, and he hym


<PB REF="" N="346" ID="pb.346"/>

paide a-gein so grete a stroke that his shelde clef a-sonder,
and ther be-gan a medle be-twene hem two full fell and crewell;
and the tother foure that were come to socour the kynge Ban
smote on hem so rudely that ech bar oon deed to the erthe all
blody.  Ther was slayin mahidrap, and balfinnes, and Gloriex,
and mandones, where-fore the kynge Rion was full wroth, for thei
were his nygh kyn.  And whan kynge Rion saugh this
myschaunce turne vpon hym so grete, he was so wroth that nygh he
was oute of his witte, and he helde his swerde naked and ran
vpon Arthur and wende to smythe hym on the heede, but he
glenched a-side, for sore he dredde the stroke of the Geaunte, and
he smote so harde in the shelde that he slitte it in to the myddell,
and whan that he wende to pulle a-gein his swerde the kynge
Arthur smote hym on the arme that sore he hym hurte, and he
lefte the swerde stykinge in the shelde, that sore felt hym hurte,
and was wode for wrath, and Arthur caste down the shelde with
the swerde, for it dide hym but gref.  And when the Geaunte
saugh that he hadde so loste his swerde he was full of grete
sorowe, and ran vpon Arthur with his horse and caught hym by
the shuldres, and wolde haue hym born with force, and so he
sholde haue don yef he hadde leiser, for he was of grete strengthe.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur felte the Geaunte that so hym helde he caste
the swerde to the erthe, for he was ferde leste he sholde
haue taken it from hym by force, and than clippid his horse in
bothe his armes a-boute the nekke; and the Geaunte pulled and
drough, but he myght hym not a-race from the sadell.  And the
kynge Ban be-helde and saugh the strife be-twene the Geaunte
and Arthur, and a-noon spored his horse that wey, for he hadde
of hym grete drede; and the Geaunte saugh hym come, he lefte
Arthur, for sore he douted the kynge Ban, and ran vpon hym
with his handes that were grete and square; and the kynge Ban
hym smote with corsheuse, his goode swerde, that he rente his
hauberke be-twene his sholderes and wounde hym right depe;
and whan the kynge Rion felt hym so sore wounded, and saugh
his felowes ly at erthe deed bledynge, he hadde grete drede,   <MILESTONE N="122b" UNIT="folio"/>ffor
he hadde nothinge hym to diffende, and turned the horse, that


<PB REF="" N="347" ID="pb.347"/>

was of grete bounte, and wente fleynge as faste as he myght
renne.  And thei lete hym passe, for it was nyght; and he wente
so wroth that for litill he hadde gon oute of witte; and he cursed
his feith and his creaunce, and seide he wolde neuer cesse in all
his age till that he were a-venged, and as soone as he com in to his
contre he wolde sende for his grete hoste so that no londe sholde
a-gein hym endure till he hadde confounded all Bretaigne and all
the peple ther-ynne, and take the kynge Arthur and his helpers,
and do hem be flayn all quyk.  Thus wente kynge Rion, makynge
grete sorowe and weymentacion in to his contrey.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ban socoured the kynge Arthur from the
kynge Rion, that so wolde a-born hym a-wey, he com
to Arthur and asked hym yef he hadde eny harme.  And he
seide, "Nay."  Than seide Ban, "Where is youre
swerde?"  And Arthur seide it was at erthe, "ffor I caste it down as soone as
the shrewe com rennynge on me to gripe me in his armes; and I
haue wonne the richest iewell, and that I love more than the
richest Citee that I haue."  "What thinge is that?" seide the
kynge Ban.  "That shall ye se a-noon," quod Arthur.  Than he
sette foot to grounde, and yede firste to Calibourne and putte it
in the skaberke whan he hadde dried it clene, and than com to
his shelde, where-ynne stake the swerde of kynge Rion, and he
drough it oute and toke the shelde, and com to his horse and
lepte vp, and than shewde the swerde to the kynge Ban, and it
shone so bright that Arthur hadde ther-of grete ioye, and preide
god sende hym som a-uenture ther he myght it assay and prove
yef it were so grete of bounte as it hadde bewtee.  And thei
were ner the Citee than thei wende, but er thei com ther hem
fill soche a-uenture that ther was noon so wight ne hardy but he
hadde I-nough to done.  But now resteth a litell of hem, and
speke of the kynge leodogan.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge leodogan saugh that the Geauntes were so
discounfited, he chaced hem full vigerously till it was
derke nyght; and he and his men slough many.  Than fill it
that the kynge leodogan and Cleodalis his stiwarde departed from
theire peple, for the foreste was derke, that no man that thei

<PB REF="" N="348" ID="pb.348"/>

hadden wiste not where thei were be-come; and whan the kynges
men saugh it was so derke nyght they be-gonne to returne; but
the knyghtes of the rounde table wolde not returne, ne the
felowes of kynge Arthur, but chace the Geauntes full harde, and
many of hem thei slowen; and the storye seith that the kynge
leodogan and Cleodalis chaced so faste Ydras and Atalas
lamnachour and Caulus and Dorilas, these were fer from her peple in the
forest; and whan thei hadde longe fledde, thei ouer-toke xij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of
her companye at were sory and wroth for theire losse and damage,
and whan these foure saugh the socour, thei cried, "Now at hem,"
and whan these be-helden and saugh thei were but tweyne that
chaced foure kynges,   <MILESTONE N="123a" UNIT="folio"/>thei ronne vpon hem full fiercely, and thei
drough hem to two okes that were grete and full of leves, and
ther-to thei sette here bakkes.  Ther was the kynge leodogan at
erthe and hys horse slayn vndir hym; and whan Cleodalis saugh
hym on foote he alight and sette the kinge on his horse, and bad
hym gon hys wey and he wolde a-bide ther.  And whan the kynge
saugh the trouthe of his stiwarde, he be-gan to sighen full sore
vndir his helme and repente in his herte of that he hadde hym sore
forfeted, and thought in his herte that this bounte wolde he hym
quyte yef he scape a-lyve, and alwey thei hem deffenden a-gein
her enmyes that hem assailed full harde, but the Oke hem socoured
sore that was at theire bakke.  But a-while resteth of hem and
speketh of Guyomar and Synados, that were cosins germain, that
wele hadde don all the day in bataile.</P>
<P>  This Guyomar and Synados pursude so the sarazins thourgh
the foreste, that thei loste alle her peple, that thei cowde
of hem neyther here ne seen, and hadden so chaced xij Geauntes
full harde, and the xij hadde longe fledde, till thei mette   . of
theire felowes that wente sore affraide, and these ne wiste of hem
nothinge till thei were euen fallen vpon hem, and than these com
so sharply that ech of hem bar oon to grounde; and whan the
sarazins saugh thei were but tweyne, thei drough theire swerdes
and assailed hem right harde.  And thei hem diffended full
vigerously, ffor thei were full noble knyghtes and hardy; and a-noon
ther com to hem a-nother knyght, that was cleped ydiers, and


<PB REF="" N="349" ID="pb.349"/>

whan he was come he knewe hem a-noon and helped hem
vigerously.  But of hem also resteth a-while the tale, and telleth of
the auenture that fill to Antor, that hadde norisshed Arthur, and
to kay the stiwarde, and Gifflet, and lucas the botiller, and to
marengis, and Gorgain his felowe, and to Blecys the blake, that
was in theire companye, and to Blioberis, and Galescowde, and to
lait hardy, and Colegreuaunt, and kehedin le bel: these xij
chaced faste the sarazins, and many thei slough, thourgh the
foreste.</P>
<P>  So longe chaced these xij thourgh the foreste, that was derke
for shadowe of the bowes, and also of the nyght, that
sodeynly thei fill vpon the kynge Ali patin, that hadde CC sarazins
in his companye wele horsed, that were full angry for the damage
of the kynge Rion, and for that thei wiste not where thei were
be-come; and whan these xij hadde hem so sodeynly ouertaken,
thei rode in a-monge hem fercely, and thei returned and be-gonne
a bataile right stronge, ffor these xij were full worthi knyghtes
and noble.  Ther was stronge fight and harde, that dured till
mydnyght was paste er thei departed, and on that other side the
knyghtes of the rounde table were departed in thre partees: in
that oon part were xij, in a-nother xx, and in that other
xxv; and with the kynge Arthur were thre, that ledde hym
towarde Toraise, in talmelide, and alle the tother weren  <MILESTONE N="123b" UNIT="folio"/>returned
whan thei hadde hem a-while conveyed.  And whan thei come
be-fore the Citee of Danablise, and eueriche ne fonde not his
companye, thei trowed that thei were alle deed; and whan the
two kynges were not founden, the kynge Arthur ne the kynge
leodogan, thei made grete sorowe, and wende thei hadde ben alle
deed; but yet thei a-boode to heere som tidinges, and logged
hem in the medowes, and wolde not entre in to the town, but
wacched till it was day.  Here leveth now of hem and speketh
of Merlin.</P>
<P>  Now, whan the Geauntes and the sarazins fledde oute of the
feilde discounfited and the chace was be-gonne, the booke
seith that Merlin sewed a companye that were well x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, till thei
fill in to a launde that was depe in the foreste.  This companye


<PB REF="" N="350" ID="pb.350"/>

ledde the kynge Galad, that was lorde of the londe cleped
Pastures, and as soone as thei were entred in to this launde, Merlin
caste an enchauntement, that he made seme ther com rennynge
so grete a water in her wey be-fore hem, that was so depe and
brode and ther-to blakke, that com down fro the sides of the
mounteynes so rudely, that ther was noon so hardy but he ther-of
hadde drede; and whan thei wolde haue turned a-gein, thei saugh
a-rise soche a storme and a wynde so grete, that thei wiste not
whiche wey to turne, and a-boode stille all nyght in this maner
wise, that thei wente nother bakke ne forewarde; and why Merlin
made this enchauntement hit is right and reson that the trouthe
be declared whi was the cause.</P>
<P>  This was the trouthe, that in the marche of Tamelide and of
Bredigan west-warde towarde the londe of the kynge Rion
was a reame full riche, that the kynge Amant helde in his
baile.  In this reame werred the kynge Vterpendragon in his lif-tyme
longe, ffor that the kynge Amaunt wolde not be-come his liege
man, and his londe was so stronge that litill he hym douted; but
Vterpendragon greved hym sore with his werre, and conquered
vpon hym a Castell that was stronge and riche, and was clepede
Carroie.  This Castell hadde in fee v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> knyghtes, that eche yere
thre monethes oughten ther to warde, whiche seison of the yere
that the lorde wolde hem somowne, and the lordship lasted xx
myle on euery side.  This Castell yaf Vterpendragon to the kynge
Boors of Gannes in his lyve to hym and to his heires all the lordship,
and as soone as the kynge Bohors hadde it in his baille, he yaf it
to Guynebant, his brother, that was a goode clerke and a wise,
and at armes wight and hardy yef nede were, and therfore was
the kynge Amaunt angry; and whan he herde that the kynge
Rion was entred in to the londe of kynge leodogan, and on that
other side in to Bretaigne were entred the Saisnes, the kynge
Amaunt be-thought hym that he myght come neuer in better
poynt to conquere his Castell that he so longe hadde loste, and
sente after peple and assembled   <MILESTONE N="124a" UNIT="folio"/>vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and rode forth till he
com in to the launde ther as was the kynge Galad, and hys peple
that were x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, that a-bode ther for drede of the grete water that


<PB REF="" N="351" ID="pb.351"/>

Merlin made to apere.  The friday erly in the witsonwike, that
was a feire morownynge and a softe, and yet was not the water
ne the enchauntement lefte, the sarazins lepte to horse and rode
forth her wey, but thei hadde but litill wey riden, whan thei
mette the kynge Amaunt, that rode towarde the Castell of Carroye
with all his hoste.  Whan the kynge Galad saugh the kynge
Amaunt he ran vpon hym, for he wende that it hadde be the peple
of kynge leodogan that hadde hem pursued; and thei were well
horsed on bothe partyes, and smyten to-geder fiercely, and be-gan
a grete bataille and fell, for ther were many goode knyghtes and
sure, and the bataile be-twene hem dured all the day.  But more
of hem speketh not the booke at this tyme, but returneth to kynge
Arthur and kynge leodogan, and his felowes Nascien, and
Adragain, and hervy de rivell.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur hadde take vp the swerde that was lefte in
his shelde and hadde shewed to his felowes thei were
gladde, for moche thei hym preised and comended, and than thei
toke theire wey towarde Danablaise.  And whan thei wende haue
ben in the streight lane, thei wente oute of her weye, for thei
fonde on the lifte side an olde wey that was moche and grene,
and grete shadowe of grete wode full of leves, as in the moneth
of may, and a litill was it derke, for the mone was not vp, that
was at fulle thre dayes be-fore; and whan thei hadde gon a-while,
thei herkened and herde grete noyse of strokes in the foreste of a
bataile, and thei drough that wey as the lane hem ledde, and as
thei com nygh, thei vndirstode the voise of theire peple that yet
were fightinge with the Geauntes, that thei hadde chaced in the
foreste.  Than thei drough towarde the noise that thei herde, and
lefte her wey and gan ride faste, and the mone was risinge, and
as thei com nygh thei saugh a grete bataile of thre knyghtes, that
full harde foughten agein   . sarazins.  And whan thei com so
nygh that thei myght hem kenne, Arthur knewe it was Guyomar
and ydier, but of Synados wiste noon of hem what he was, saf that
thei saugh he was wight and hardy; and hem preised moche the
vij felowes, that com nygh to the bataile, and lete renne theire
horse so faste, that thei made hem alle to fremysshe, and leide on

<PB REF="" N="352" ID="pb.352"/>

grete strokes on bothe sides, and many thei sloughen and some
caste to grounde wounded sore, and Arthur assaied right well his
swerde Marmyadoise, that he conquered of the kynge Rion, ffor
the storie witnesseth that he his owne body slough of hem
x.  And whan the thre knyghtes saught that thei hadde so riche
socour, thei yaf hem a fressh assaute, and eche of hem thre bar
oon to the grounde, and in short tyme thei hurlled hem so, thei
and the thre knyghtes   <MILESTONE N="124b" UNIT="folio"/>that were com hem to socoure, that thei
haue alle slain saf v, that turned to flight down the wode, and
thei after that were full talentif hem to sle, yef thei myght hem
take; but litill while hadde thei chaced these v, whan thei herde
medlinge, and harde strokes vpon sheldes, and vpon helmes, that
all the wode ther-of resounded.  Than spake the kynge Ban to
the kynge Bohors, and seide that all nyght be-houeth hem to
disporte in bateillinge, and the kynge Arthur seide, "That pleseth
me well till that I haue well assaide my goode swerde."</P>
<P>  "How, sir," quod the kynge Ban, haue ye not yet well it
proved and assaied at thys firste enuaie?" "No," quod
Arthur, "for thei were to fewe peple, and on that othir side ye
and other so hem so arayed that I myght it not assaye at my
volunte."  Than at this wordes loughen alle the knyghtes, ffor
well hadde thei seyen his prowesse that he hadde don, and seide
that he sholde be a noble knyght yef he myght live to age.  And
as thei spake thus, thei approched the bataile that was grete and
felenouse, and than thei saugh C sarazins that fought a-gein xij
knyghtes, where-of foure of hem were on foote, and viij on horse,
that right well hem deffended, and thei that were on foote
deffended hem right well and stronglich, and than thei knewe
well, that thei were of her companye, that com with hem to
Tamelide alle xij.  And the foure that were on foote, that oon
was Antor, and that other Gosnain, and the thridde Gales, and the
fourthe Blioberis, and the fifte ly lais þe hardy, that was smyten
down in sight of hem alle, but vigerously thei hem
deffended.  And whan Arthur saugh Antor on foote hit nedeth not to aske, yef
he ther-fore were angry, for he shewed it well in grete haste, ffor
he priked in to the presse with swerde redy drawen, and smote


<PB REF="" N="353" ID="pb.353"/>

so the firste that he mette that he slitte hym to the girdill, and
after the secunde that the hede fill to grounde, and than the
thirde, and after the fourthe, and be-gan soche assaute a-monge
hem that down wente all that he with his swerde raught.  And
than he preised well the goode swerde that was the kynge Rion,
and seide that Calibourne ne a-vailed but litill a-gein this goode
swerde, ffor it wrought well at his talent.  And also his felowes
smote in a-monge hem, that eche of hem slough oon at her
comynge in; and whan these saugh thei hadde soche socour, thei
be-gonne newe a-gein the bataile merveilous.  Ther was the
stronge stour and sore bataile, ffor noble and hardy were the
knyghtes that were come to the socour, and by theire prowesses
were the fyve knyghtes horsed that were on foote, and than thei
yaf hem a sharpe shour that thei were disconfited and chaced oute
of the place, and haue hem so araied, that there ne scaped but
xiiij that alle ne were slayn and maymed.  And whan thei hadde
hem a-while enchased, than thei returned a-gein full gladde and
ioyfull of the a-uenture that god hadde hem sente. <NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.9">At the end of this paragraph in the MS. are the following words—"sente withe swerde redy drawne," added in a later hand.</NOTE> 
    </P>
<P><MILESTONE N="125a" UNIT="folio"/>Whan Arthur and his felowes hadde holpen and delyuered
the xij knyhtes, as ye haue herde, and thei were
returned a-gein, hit fill that thei mette Merlin with the Dragon in
his hande that com hem a-geins, and as soone as he saugh hem
comynge he gan to whowpe, "A here, Arthur, ride faste and
haste yow a litill more and alle youre companye, ffor ye knowe
not the grete damage that is towarde, but god helpe, ffor the
kynge leodogan and Cleodalis the stiwarde fighten a-gein moo than
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> Geauntes and sarazins, and thei be now smyten down of
theire horse, and shull a-noon be loste but ye hem socour.  Now
come on faste after me, for I go."  And whan thei herde what
Merlin seide thei smote theire horse with spores, and the dragon
that Merlin bar yaf oute of his throte soche light that thei myght
well se alle here felowes though it hadde be the derkeste nyght
in all the yere, and thei rode so faste be-fore and after, that thei
come to tweyne Okes wher vndir the two knyghtes foughten full


<PB REF="" N="354" ID="pb.354"/>

sore, as thei that hadde I-nough of herte and of valour and
force.  But sore were thei oppressed, ffor bothe were thei on foote, and
ofte fill thei on knees.  When Merlin and the other companye
come to the medle that so hadden dured of the two knyghtes, tho
was the kynge leodogan fallen to the erthe, ffor he was so wery
for trauaile of strokes that he hadde yoven and receyved, that he
myght no lengere sustene, for all day hadde the kynge endured
traueile of strokes, and ther-to hadde he no myster, ffor he was
of grete age.</P>
<P>  Whan the Geauntes saugh the kynge leodogan so wery that
he myght no lenger sustene on his feet for the traueile
that he hadde all the day endured in the bataile, so that he lay at
the erthe, and ther was no man that hadde seyn hym in that
plite but he wolde haue hadde pite.  Whan the kynge was fallen,
the Geauntes spored theire horse that wey who that myght
sonneste that noon a-bode other, ffor thei wende a-noon hym to
take or to sle at hir wille; but Cleodalis strode ouer hym with
his swerde in his hande that so well hym diffended that noon was
so hardy to sette on hym hande; and thei hym assailed full
harde, and launched at hym speres and swerdes, and perced his
hauberke in many places, and wounded hym full sore; but for
noon hurte ne wounde that thei hym made wolde he not forsake
his lorde.  And at laste the kynge a-roos, and gan to helpe
Cleodalis with all his power, for he hadde ben a noble knyght in
his yowthe, and he hadde grete pite of hys stiward Cleodalis,
that so a-bandoned his body for the diffence of hym; and than
he seide a pitouse worde, "Ha! Cleodalis," qoud he, "I crye
the mercy of the trespace that I haue don a-gein the, ffor I se
well I am come to myn ende;" and ther-with he fill on kne to
the grounde be-fore hym, and toke his swerde wepinge as he that
to hym hadde forfeted, and praied to hym take of hym that was
right.  And whan he saugh his lorde so meke a-gein hym, and
that he putte hym in   <MILESTONE N="125b" UNIT="folio"/>his mercy, he wept tendirly and reised the
kynge be the hande and claymed hym quyte of alle trespaces;
and while he lifte vp the kynge a grete Geaunte smote Cleodalis
with a swerde vpon the helme that he bar hym down to the


<PB REF="" N="355" ID="pb.355"/>

grounde, and than the kynge hym diffended sore and merveillously
well from them that wolde hym haue take; and thei hym assailed
harde and hurte hym that he gretly a-peired, but soone thei made
hym to falle down by Cleodalis; and whan Cleodalis saugh hym
down he lept vp on foote as lifly as he hadde noon harme ne
dissese, and yet was he full dispitously wounded.</P>
<P>  Thus diffended the ton the tother whan thei fellen; and whan
Cleodalis was so mate that he myght no lenger helpe, than
diffended the kynge, and whan the kynge was so feinte that he
myght no lenger, he cried and seide to the stiward, "Ha!
Cleodalis, feire frende, diffende youre body, for I may no
lenger."  And he lept vp, and bad hym be sure and haue no drede while
that he myght lyve.  Thus contened these two goode men a-boute
mydnyght, and than com Merlin prikinge and his companye; and
a-noon Merlin cried to his felowes, "Now let se who is a knyght;
here may ye prove youre hardynesse and youre prowesse, and be
not dismayed though thei be many, for ye shull haue socour of a
partye of youre felowes."  Than thei smyte in a-monge hem with
so grete raundon as horse myght renne, and slough and maymed
grete plente, but soone were thei at grete myschef, but yet thei
smote hem so in her comynge In, that thei be come to the worthi
men vnder the Oke, that yet foughten as well as thei myght, but
moche was a-peired theire strengthe and her breth.  Than were
thei harde rescowed and sette on horse who it grucched, and than
were thei xxv knyghtes full noble men and well helpinge, and
many thei kilde and maymed.  But whan Isdras and Acalas and
Colocallus saugh the grete damage that so small peple hem dide,
thei helde ther-of grete dispite, and than thei cried vpon here
men, "Now, gentill knyghtes, at hem; haue ye not shame that
so fewe peple so longe agein vs endure that yet we be vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
fightinge men, and thei ne be but oon handefull of peple.  Now lete
vs a-venge the damage that thei haue us don to oure
frendes."  Whan the sarazins vndirstoden this thei ronne vpon hem and
harde thei hem assailed; and than thei hem diffended right wele,
and gretly were thei to a-lowe and to preise.  Ther dide Arthur
merveilles, and the kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors and Nascien; 

<PB REF="" N="356" ID="pb.356"/>

these foure were paraunt a-bove alle the tother, ffor these
dide soche prowesse with her owne bodyes that it was wonder;
and the other xxj diden well also the ton for the tother that
merveile was it to wite how thei myght so moche suffer or
endure.  And whan Merlin hadde brought hem in medle, he lefte hem
and rode in to the foreste, and mette with other xij knyghtes and
brought hem to the bataile;   <MILESTONE N="126a" UNIT="folio"/>and than be-helde Nascien and
Adragains, and saugh thei were of her felowes of the rounde
table.  Than be-gan the stour full merveillouse; and Merlin rode
a-gein in to the foreste where hym liked, and the xxxvij knyghtes
a-bode stille a grete while, that moche prowesse dide of armes;
and a litill a-fore day Merlin come a-gein with xx knyghtes in
his companye; and thei smote in to the medle a-noon as thei
were come, ffor well thei were a-raied of armes and of horse,
but well it shewed by theire armes that thei hadde not alwey
leyen at reste.</P>
<P>  Whan thei come to the bataile her felowes were at grete
myschef, and thei ronne amonge hem with swerdes
drawen and slough and caste down in her comynge all that thei
raught, and thei saugh this that were come firste how thei were
of the rounde table.  Than com that oon a-gein the tother, ffor
thei were full noble and hardy, and Merlin was a-monge hem,
that bar the dragon; and than he com to Arthur and to the
kynge Ban and to the kynge Bohors, and cleped hem to hym, and
thei com.  "Will ye wite," quod Merlin, "how these shull be
discounfited?"  And thei seide that thei wolde fayn knowe in
what manere.  Quod Merlin, "Ther ben but foure in this place
that hem holde to-gether."  "And whiche ben thei?" quod kynge
Ban.  "Sue me," quod Merlin, "and I shall hem yow
shewen."  Than Merlin smote in to the presse so harde that he bar down
with his horse breste whom that he mette, and bar the dragon in
his hande, that yaf so grete light that oon myght well se a-nother;
and whan Merlin mette the thre kynges he shewde hem to the
kynge Arthur, and seide, "Now may ye assaye the gode swerde
that ye haue conquered."  And he be-heilde hym that he hadde
desired gretly for to seen, and thought wele that it were thei


<PB REF="" N="357" ID="pb.357"/>

that Merlin hadde spoken of; but neuer so soone myght he not
come, er Nascien mette with the kynge Colocaullus and smote
hym with his swerde vpon the helme that he slitte his heede to
the teth, and he fill down deed.  "Now let se," quod Merlin,
"what ye will do, for now is ther oon lesse."  And Arthur, that
hilde the goode swerde drawen, smote the kynge ysdras, that he
made the heede falle to grounde; and the kynge Ban smote Acolas,
that the shulder disseuered from the body so depe that the longes
apered; and the kynge Bohors smote Dodrilas an Amyrall thourgh
the helme to the brayn.  And whan the other felowes saugh how
these foure hadde don so well, than thei yaf hem a fressh assaut,
that there was noon but he made a sarazin falle to grounde, owther
deed or wounded.  And whan the Geauntes saugh hem deed that
were lordes and her gouernours, and the grete damage that these
hem diden, thei seide that a grete fole were he that wolde suffre
to be slain; and than thei turned to flight thourgh the foreste
that noon ne a-bode other.  And thei wolde hem haue enchaced,
  <MILESTONE N="126b" UNIT="folio"/>but Merlin seide "Nay, recche not hem nothinge yow to chace,
ffor soone shull thei mete with folke that shall do hem I-nough of
sorowe and care."  And than thei gan to repeire a softe paas till
thei come to the issu of the foreste, and than gan it to shewe day,
whan thei com to the tentes ther the cristin were logged, and the
wacche hem knewe and com hem a-geins and made of hem grete
ioye, ffor well thei wende that alle hadde ben deed; and a-noon
was the tidinges knowe thourgh the hoste that com was the kynge
Arthur and his companye.  And the kynge leodogan made
appareile her mete grete plente, for thei hadde fasted longe, but first
thei slept and rested; and whan thei weren vp and redy thei ete
and dranke grete plente, ffor I-nough thei hadde wher-of, and
also thei hadde it well deserued; and whan the clothes and the
bordes weren vp, thei dide geder all the grete auoir that thei
hadde conquered, and sette it all on an hepe; and Arthur it
departed be the counseile of Merlin, that the kynge leodogan
wolde not medle ther-in, for nothinge neuer after he hadde yoven
his doughter to kynge Arthur, and that he knewe hym and the
tweyne noble kynges that with hym weren, he wolde nothinge


<PB REF="" N="358" ID="pb.358"/>

hym entermete but hem to serue and honouren with all his
power.  And whan Arthur hadde departed all the auoir that nothinge
was lefte, he lete enquere thourgh the hoste yef ther were eny
yonge bachelere, that wolde ought gete or wynne and go with hym
ther as he wolde hem lede, and he wolde hem yeve so moche at
theire repaire, that neuer after sholde thei be power.  And than
ther com so many of oon and other, that it was a wonder, ffor
moche thei desired to be in his companye for the grete valour that
was in hym euer more; and than thei swore and seiden that thei
sholde hym neuer faile.  And he with-hilde in to a xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> <HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and
moo he myght haue hadde yef he wolde, but he seide he wolde
not lete the reame be vnstuffed of peple, but thei myght hem
well deffende yef eny enmyes entred in to the londe; but thus
moche he seide, that yef nede were and that he sente for hem, that
thei sholde come to hym.  And thei ansuerde, and seide thei wolde
with goode will, were it neuer in to so straunge londe thei wolde
hym serue.</P>
<P>  And than departed thei a-sonder, and the kynge Arthur, and
the kynge Bohors, and the kynge leodogan, and the
companye of the rounde table, rode forth to Toraise and the xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> <HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
sowdiours of Tamelide, and whan thei hadden riden a-while, the
kynge Bohors toke leve and rode to the Castell Charroye, and
ledde with hym the xl felowes, that thei hadde brought in to
Tamelide, and as many knyghtes of that reame, that thei were
well v<HI REND="sup">C</HI>, and so thei spedde her iourneyes that thei com to the
Castell of Charroye with-oute eny encomber, and ther thei made
of the kynge Bohors grete ioye, ffor longe hadde he not be ther
be-fore, and ther he a-bode viij dayes full.  But now resteth the tale
a-while of hym and of his felowes, and of the kynge Arthur and
his companye, and returne to speke of the kynge Amaunt,   <MILESTONE N="127a" UNIT="folio"/>that
faught with the kynge Galad.</P>
<P>  Full grete was the bataile and the stour mortall, ther as the
kynge Amaunt and the kynge Galad weren I-mette, ffor
the sarazins were x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; but many ther were of goode knyghtes
and hardy and yonge bachelers with the kynge Amaunt.  And
the bataile dured so all day, that alle the x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> were disconfited


<PB REF="" N="359" ID="pb.359"/>

ne hadde ben oon a-uenture, ffor the meyne of ysdras, that were
well v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, that all nyght hadde foughten with the kynge Arthur in
the foreste, happed to falle to hem, and that was for hem gret
myster, ffor the x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> were so beten and slain, that ther was lefte
but v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  Ther was stronge stour and mortall, for thei were at
grete myschef the peple of kynge Amaunt.  But yet this helped
hem wele, for the sarazins weren wery for trauaile, and that all
day be-fore hadde foughten in bataile, and waked all nyght, and
ther-fore thei were the more hevy and at mysese; but so fought
thei on that oon part and on that other, that the kynge Galad
turned to the flight all disconfited, and ne escaped past vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that
alle ne were slain and hewen, and of the peple of kynge Amaunt
ne lefte not right many.  Ther hadde the kynge Amaunt grete
losse of peple, and grete doell made thei that were lefte a-lyve
for her frendes.  That nyght logged Amaunt and his men by a
launde side in the wode, and were full mate and pensif for her
kyn and frendes, that thei saugh ly in myddes of the launde, and
made so grete sorowe, that of all that nyght thei neither ete ne
dranke."</P>
<P>  On the morowe were the bodies sought, and leide on a
mounteyne, and made grete diches in the erthe, and caste in the
corses, and while thei thus were at soiour, ther com tidinges how
the kynge Bohors was come to the Castell of Charroye for to se
the place, for longe hadde not he ben there, and than the kynge
Amaunt enquered how moche peple he hadde brought in his
companye, and it was tolde hym, that thei myght well be vj<HI REND="sup">C</HI>, and
than he seide to his counseile, that he wolde not entre in to the
londe, for hym was lefte so small peple, but he wolde aspie to
a-bide hym in some place on the wey, ffor thei ben but v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> and we
ben yet vij<HI REND="sup">C</HI>, and yef thei come I hope to spede all other-wise
than and thei a-bide.  Thus devised the kynge Amaunt his volunte
where-of he myght wele have a-biden yef hym hadde liked; but
many a man weneth to a-venge his shame that it doth
encrece.  But now cesseth a litill while of the kynge Amaunt and of kynge
Bohors till a-nothir tyme, and speke of the kynge Arthur and his
companye, that gon towarde the town of Toraise.

<PB REF="" N="360" ID="pb.360"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Arthur and his companye com to Toraise,
thei were richely resceyved with grete honour; and
ther thei soiourned two dayes, and the thridde day com the
kynge leodogan to the kynge Arthur, and hym somowned to
spousen his doughter Gonnore; and Merlin seide that he moste
firste do a-nother grete werke; and the kynge asked what;   <MILESTONE N="127b" UNIT="folio"/>and
Merlin seide that he moste firste passe in to the reame of Benoyk,
and tolde hym for what nede; but that was in counseile, for he
wolde not haue the thinge knowen of no man that sholde go
thider.  And whan he herde the nede, he praide hym to repeire
a-gein as sone as he myght.  And Merlin seide he neded not
nothinge ther-of hym to prayen, and bad make hem redy, "for
to-morowe moste we remove."  Quod Arthur, "Shall we not
a-bide the kynge Bohors, that is at the Castell of
Charroye?"  Quod Merlin, "Ye shull a-byde hym at Bredigan, youre
castell."  And Arthur seide that all sholde be at his wille.  Than thei hem
appareilleden, and on the morowe sette hem on here wey.  And
so departed the kynge leodogan and the kynge Arthur, and kisten
at the departynge; and Gonnore hym praide soone to come a-gein,
"ffor neuer," quod <SUPPLIED>she</SUPPLIED>, "shall I be in ese of herte vn-to the
tyme that I yow se a-gein."  And the kynge seide that he wolde
he were come a-gein oute of the contrey.  And the kynge  Ban
toke a messager, and sente to the Castell of Charroye to the kynge
Bohors his brother; and thus departeden oon from a-nother.  And
the kynge Arthur and Merlin wente be-fore, and the knyghtes of
the rounde table, and the xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> sowdiours that he hadde
with-holden in that londe.  And the kynge Ban sente to his brother
Bohors to come to hym to Bredigan, ffor thei were on the weye,
and ther-fore he sholden hym haste as faste as he myght; and so
spedde the messangier that he com to the kinge Bohors, and tolde
how his brother was in the weye after the hoste, that be-fore hym
wente; and the kynge Bohors so dide also; and hym conueyed
Guynebans his brother till he com in to the foreste perilouse, that
after was cleped the foreste saunz retour, as the booke shall
reherse hastely.




</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.21"><PB REF="" N="361" ID="pb.361"/>
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXI.  
<LB/>ADVENTURES OF BAN AND GUYNEBANS; BOHORS' FIGHT WITH AMAUNT; MEETING OF THE CHILDREN WITH KING ARTHUR.</HEAD>
<P>Whan the kynge Ban and Guynebans his brother were entred
in to the foreste, thei ne were but lx in her companye,
and fill that thei entred in to a grete high wey, and rode till thei
com depe in to the foreste, and than thei fonde a-uenture full
merveillouse, ffor thei fonde a medowe that was closed a-boute
with wode, and fonde with-ynne the feirest daunses of the worlde
of ladies, and of maydenes, and knyghtes, the feireste that <CHOICE><CORR>euer</CORR><SIC>eueuer</SIC></CHOICE>  
hadde thei seyn in her lyve; and on the tother side thei sigh a
scaffolde, and in that scaffolde sette a knyght that was of a l
wynter age, and ther satte also the feirest lady of the
worlde.  And whan the kynge saugh the lady of so grete bewte, he light
on foote, and Guynebans his brother, and alle the other wente fort
to se it; and whan she saugh hem com, she roos a-geins hem as
she that was curteys and well lerned, and voyded hir wymple,
ffor well she wiste thei come for to see; and hir salude the kynge
that spake firste, and she salued hym a-gein full debonerly, and
than thei satte alle vpon the fresshe herbes and grene, and
behelden the feeste and the ioye and the carols that   <MILESTONE N="128a" UNIT="folio"/>thei saugh
before hem.  And Guynebans be-helde the lady with goode chere,
and so moche he his herte and his entente, that she satte so nygh
his herte that he thought on no-thinge but vpon hir.  And than
seide the maiden, that goode fortune hadde that lady that soche
ioye myght haue euer hir lif with-oute faillinge.</P>
<P>  Whan Guynebans vndirstode that how the lady seide, he
seide that she sholde it haue, yef the lettynge were not in
hire; and she seide that in <SUPPLIED>hire</SUPPLIED> sholde it neuer be letted.  "Now
I praye yow," quod she, "telle me how."  "Certes," quod
Guynebans, "yef ye will yeve me youre love, for alle dayes of youre
lif, I shall make the carole endure in this manere, that alle men
and wymen, that come this wey and se the carole thei shull a-bide


<PB REF="" N="362" ID="pb.362"/>

and make ioye, till that a knyght come that neuer in his lyf falsed
his love, and with that also he moste be the beste knyght that
shall be in his tyme."  And she seide that sholde she neuer see,
but praide hym to holde that he hadde hight.  "Now telle me,"
quod Guynebans, "hadde ye <CHOICE><CORR>euer</CORR><SIC>eueuer</SIC></CHOICE>   eny lorde?"  And she seide,
"Nay;" but that she was as clene mayden as whan she com oute
of her moder wombe; "and also," quod she, "I am lady of the
reame cleped the londe susteyne."  Than seide Guynebans that
he was redy to parforme the <CHOICE><CORR>couenauntes</CORR><SIC>comenauntes</SIC></CHOICE>;   and she graunted
as for hir parte as she that was of grete bewte.  And the olde
knyght seide that he sholde do sette ther a cheyer, that euer
more sholde be redy for the knyght in to sitte, that sholde be so
trewe in lovynge whan he were come.  And the kynge Ban seide,
sith it is come here-to that he sholde haue a riche crowne of
his, with the whiche the knyght sholde be crowned, for well he
hadde it deserued.  Than assured to-geder Guynebans and the
mayden for to holde couenauntes with goode herte and trewly
while hir lif dured.  In soche manere, seide she, that yef
Guynebans deyed firste be-fore hir, that the carole sholde not lette till
that he com, that neuer hadde be false in his lovynge.  Than caste
Guynebans his enchauntements, and stablisshed the caroles like
as ye haue herde, that neuer sholde cesse no tyme, till that he
com, saf the right hour of dyner and of soper, and the resonable
houres to slepe and reste.  And whan the carole was sette and
stablisshed, than seide the mayden, that he sholde make yet
a-nother pley that neuer myght faile, and that all the worlde
ther-of myght speke after his deth.  Than Guynebans hym-self
made with his owne handes a Chekier of golde and Ivory half
parted, ffor he was right sotill of soche crafte, as he wolde hym
entirmete, and the pownes, and all the other meyne were golde
and yvory fresshly entailled.</P>
<P>  Whan Guynebans hadde made redy the Cheker and the
chesse, that oon myght well ther-with pleyen alle that
wolden, he made soche a coniurison by his art,   <MILESTONE N="128b" UNIT="folio"/>that alle tho that


<PB REF="" N="363" ID="pb.363"/>

were sette for to pleyen, ther ne sholde be noon, but that the
chesse sholde hym maten, wheder he wolde or noon, in that oon
of the corners of the cheker; ne neuer sholde the same cheker be
mated, till the beste knyght of the worlde dide it mate, and also
he moste be of soche grace, that neuer he falsed his love, and
ther-to hym be-hoveth to be kynges sones and quenes.  Thus as
ye haue herde hath Guynebans stablisshed the carole and the
Chekere, and after made he many a feire pley, and taught the
mayden, wher-with she wrought many tymes, after that he was
deed; and after made he the castell Tornoyier, and the karoles
that Meranges fonde after at the Citee of Nameles, where as noon
arraunt knyght sholde not cesse to karole, till that a certein
knyght com thider.  In soche manere were bothe karoles wrought,
and whan Guynebans hadde made this thinges, departed the
kynge Ban with all his companye, and than Guynebans hym
conveyed on his wey, and soone after departed, and comaunded
the kynge to god, and returned a-gein to his lady, and ther was
after all his lif.  And the kynge rode till he com to Bredigan,
where the kynge Arthur was, and a-noon as Merlin saugh hym
come. he lough right lowde, and the kynge Arthur asked whi he
dide so laugh.  And than he toke the kynge Arthur, and the
kynge Ban by the handes, and drough hem a-part, and Merlin
asked of the kynge Ban, and coniured hym by the feith that he
ought vn-to hym, whi it was that he lough.  And Merlin seide
it was for Guynebans.  And than he tolde to Arthur of alle the
pleyes and caroles that Gynebans hadde made for his love, and
than lough Arthur, and seide to the kynge Ban that this mariage
wolde he haue stole hadde no Merlin I-be.  And thus thei laughed
and iaped, and the kynge Ban asked of Merlin, yef he knewe
what the knyght was, that sholde make the Carole to cesse, and
Merlin seide that he was not yet nother gete ne born, and
ther-fore ne enquereth no more ther-after, for ye shull wite more at
leiser.  Thus thei soiourned at Bredigan at ese and ioye, and
a-boode for the kynge Bohors.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Bohors hadde soiourned at the castell of
Charroye viij days, the barouns of the contrey made

<PB REF="" N="364" ID="pb.364"/>

him grete ioye, and on the ix<HI REND="sup">th</HI> day brought hym on his weye
ffragein the Castelein more than half a myle, and than departed
that oon from the tother; and as soone as the kynge Bohors was
departed fro the Castell, the kynge amaunt hadde witinge by
asspie, that tolde hym how he yede to Bredigan, where the kynge
his brother and the kynge Arthur dide hym a-bide.  Than the
kynge Amaunt made his peple lepe to horse, and were of hem
vij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> that were lefte of the bateile, and rode forth till thei come to
the foreste perilouse at the entre towarde the Castell of Charroye,
ther as the kynge Bohors sholde come; and on that other side
logged hym in tentes and pavilouns with-ynne the foreste, that he
were not parceyved till thei saugh the kynge Bohors come; and
on that other side the kynge Bohors com ridynge till he com ther
as the kynge Amaunt was a-bidinge, that made his peple hem to
arme.    <MILESTONE N="129a" UNIT="folio"/>Whan the kynge Bohors saugh the pavilouns, he asked
what peple thei were; and oon seide that it was kynge Amaunt,
that was com thider hym for the espie; and whan he vndirstode
that, than he drough hym a litill a-side by a river and comaunded
hys men hem to arme hastely.  Thus were bothe partes armed
all nyght, and on the morowe as soone as thei saugh the day
appere, bothe parties lepte to horse and rode eche a-gein other,
and whan thei saugh that thei sholde mete, the kynge Bohors
sente to the kynge Amaunt for to come speke with hym sool
by hym-self, and he com with goode will, ffor he was a goode
knyght and a trewe; and as soone as thei were mette, than seide
the kynge Amaunt, "Sir, this is soth that ye haue sente for me
to speke with yow, and I am comen for to shewe how ye do me
grete wronge of a castell of myn that ye haue me be-rafte, and
ther-fore I pray yow that my castell be to me a-gein delyuered,
be couenaunt that I shall be youre frende for euer more er eny
more debate ther-fore be made."  "Sir," quod the kynge Bohors,
"as touchinge the Castell, I toke noon from yow, but he toke it
to whom the fee be-longed, and that was Vterpendragon, of whos
soule god haue pite, whos man ye owe for to be and yelde hym
servise.  But ye were so full of pride that ye deygned not to do
hym seruise ne homage, and ther-fore he toke it fro yow, for ye


<PB REF="" N="365" ID="pb.365"/>

wolde not be his man, and yaf it to me for to kepe, for many day
I haue hym serued.  And yet shall I make to yow a feire plee:
com with me to Bredigan where the kynge Arthur me abideth,
and do hym homage, as the barouns seyen that ye owe for to do,
and I shall yelde yow the castell all quyte."  "Will ye noon
othirwise do?" quod the kynge Amaunt.  "Sir," seide the kynge
Bohors, "no; for of yow I holde right nought, but be-come
trewe liege man to the kynge Arthur, and I shall yelde yow the
castell that I haue in my baillye."  "That will I not do," quod
the kynge Amaunt, "ffor neuer will I ben his man."  "And
seth ye will not leve my counseile, that I can no more
sey."  Than seide Amaunt, "Ye haue brought hider with yow a fewe
peple, and also I haue here a fewe of myne, and yef we fight
to-geder it may not be with-oute grete harme on bothe sides, but
ther-fore lete vs do in other manere.  Ye be here for the right of
kynge Arthur that ye holde for lorde; now lete vs than fight
to-geder body for body, by this couenaunt: that yef ye me
conquere the Castell to be youre quyte, and I to go with yow to
Bredigan and do homage to the kynge Arthur for all my londe,
I and alle my barouns; and yef it be so that I yow conquere,
yelde me the Castell and go yowre-self quyte, for other thinge of
yow will I not aske, and thus may ye eschewe alle periles and
stintyn alle strives."  "And yef oon of vs dye," quod the kynge
Bohors, "what shall come ther-of thanne?"  Quod Amaunt, "Yef
ye me sle, my men shull go with yow, and do homage to the kynge
Arthur; and yef so be that ye be slain, the Castell to be myn,
and alle youre men to be quyte, and go what wey thei will,
and yef thei will be-come my men, I   <MILESTONE N="129b" UNIT="folio"/>will right gladly hem
receyve."</P>
<P>  Than thei assured to holde these covenauntes, and made alle
hir men to be sworn to holde the same with-oute
faile.  Than wente the two lordes in to a faire launde, and thei were
well armed at alle poyntes, and eche of hem helde a grete spere
with hedes of sharpe grounde stiell, and bothe were thei moche
knyghtes and stronge and of high prowesse, but the kynge
Bohors was somwhat the larger man of bones.  And as soone as


<PB REF="" N="366" ID="pb.366"/>

thei com in to the launde, Vlfin com to hym, a Bretell, and Kay,
and Gefflet, and Antor, and alle xl knyghtes of her companye,
and seide, "Sir, what purpose ye to do? will ye fight with this
kynge body for body?  Doth not so, but go we on hem alle
to-geder, for thei shull not a-gein vs endure, for haue ye no doute,
though thei be moo than we, thei shull be disconfited.  Neuer
mote the kynge Arthur vs holde but we hem <CHOICE><CORR>conquere</CORR><SIC>coquere</SIC></CHOICE>, and make
hem alle come to youre mercy or thei shull alle be deed; and on
the tother side, yef we suffre yow to fight in this manere, we
shull be blamed of youre brother, and of the kynge
Arthur."  "Holde youre pees," quod the kynge Bohors, "for sithe he hath
me atised to bataile I will it neuer leve, for than sholde I neuer
haue honoure, and therfore speke no more ther-of, I praye yow,
for my love."  And whan thei saugh it wolde noon othirwise be
thei it suffred.</P>
<P>  On the tother side bith come to kynge Amaunt, Gingabresell
and his lorde Brandelis, and seiden, "Sir, what is this
that ye will do? so wise a man as ye be, ought not soche thinge
to vndir-take to put hym-self in a-uenture of deth for covetise of
londe, ne other auoir."  Quod Amaunt, "God helpe me neuer
yef I do euer other-wise, for owther I will all gete or all
lese."  "Now I shall telle yow, than," quod Geromelans, "what ye shull
do: take the bateile a-gein the beste knyghtes of theym yonder,
and we shull fight with hem, and so may we be of yow more
sure."  "Neuer noon other," quod the kynge Amaunt, "shull
fight saf he and I, for so haue I hym ensured and he me."  "Now
wite ye well, than," quod Geromelans, "yef yow mys-happe, as
god diffende, we will make hym noon homage, ne the kynge
Arthur, ne no man that of yow eny londe doth holde."  Whan
the kynge Bohors vndirstode the contencion of the kynge and his
nevewes, he cleped Vlfin and Geret de lamball, and seide, "Go
to the kynge Amaunte, and sey I sente hym to wite that I
wolde he make no pleet, ne noyse to no man of his companye, of
that he hath me graunted, ffor yef it falle that I haue of hym
the better, I will that alle his men go quyte where so thei
will."  And thei wente and tolde to Amaunt as the kynge Bohors hadde

<PB REF="" N="367" ID="pb.367"/>

hem comaunded; and whan Amaunt herde this he comended hym
moche.  Than he com in to the myddill of the launde, where the
kynge Bohors a-bode redy, and a-noon as the kynge Amaunt was
comen, thei with-drough a-side of bothe parties, and thei moved
  <MILESTONE N="130a" UNIT="folio"/>a-noon as thei that thought longe it taried er the bataile were
be-gonne.  Thei leide theire speres be-fore theire brestes, and
smote theire horse with the spores, and mette vpon the sheldes
and with helmes, and hurteled so to-geder, that eche of hem was
so a-stoned, that hem semed that the fire fill oute of her
iyen.  And it fill that the kynge Amaunt fell of his horse to grounde so
astonyed, that he wiste not whether it was nyght or day; and so
he lay longe while at the erthe.  And the kynge Bohors was also
so sore astonyed of that harde encountre, that he lay longe while
vpon the arson of his sadill; but well he kepte hym from fallinge,
for he was of grette prowesse, and a-roos lightly and drough oute
his swerde, that was of grete bounte, where-with his sone Lyonell
afterwarde yaf many a grete stroke, as ye shull heren her-after
rehersed whan tyme cometh.</P>
<P>  As soone as the kynge Bohors hadde oute his swerde he smote
faste a-boute hym, and wende to fynde the kynge
Amaunt.  Than he be-helde and saugh he lay at the erthe vp-right, and he
helde the swerde in his honde all naked, and griped his shelde,
and come to hym that yet lay on the grene, and putte the poynte
of his swerde on his shelde and be-gan to pouke hym, and cleped,
"Rise vp, kynge Amaunt, for to longe haste thow slepte and the
day passeth, and I haue moche for to ride, and ther-fore thow
doste no curteysie to tary me so longe."  After a longe while the
kynge Amaunt com oute of swowne, and hadde herde the kynge
Bohors clepe, and vndirstode what he seide, and preised hym
moche in his herte for that he hadde so longe a-biden hym
with-oute smytinge, and that he was more curteyse and deboner than
he wolde haue ben to hym yef he hadde ben in his power.  Than
he lepte vpon his feet lyghtly and drough oute his suerde oute of
scauberke that was full fyn, and was a-shamed for that he hadde
founde hym at erthe ligginge; he couered hym with his shelde,
and com to the kynge Bohors and caste at hym a stroke, and he


<PB REF="" N="368" ID="pb.368"/>

caste his shelde ther a-gein, and he smote so harde that he slitte
it to the bokell; and the kynge Bohors yaf hym a-gein soche a
stroke thourgh the helme that he slytte it in two partyes, that it
fill down a-boute his sholderes that it toke a-wey his sight from
his hede.  Whan he felte hym-self so blynded he lepte bakke and
cutte a-sonder the laces of his helme and caste it a-wey, and than
couered hym with his shelde, for sore he douted his heede,
whereon was no more but the coyfe of mayle.  Whan the kynge
Bohors saugh the kynge Amaunt that so hadde loste his helme,
he cleped to hym and seide, "Kynge Amaunt, come make pees
with the kynge Arthur, and do hym his homage, for grete damage
it were yef thow sholdest here thus dye, ffor thow seiste how it is
the be-fallen, and yet thou art of feire age, and me hevyeth sore
the to sle."  "But thow," quod the kynge Amaunt, "yelde the
and putte the in my mercy.  Trowest thou me so soone to haue
conquered, for myn helme that I have caste of,   <MILESTONE N="130b" UNIT="folio"/>that dide me but
noye.  Now deffende the, for I the diffye," and with that the
kynge Amaunt ran on hym right wroth, and wende to smyte
hym on the heede, but the kynge Bohors, that moche cowde of
skirmerie, resceyved the stroke on his shelde, and he smote so
harde that a gret quarter fill on the launde.  Than launched oute
the kynge Bohors a grete stroke, and made semblaunt to smyte
ther as he wolde not, and Amaunt caste ther agein his shelde,
and the kynge Bohors with-drough his stroke a-nother wey,
and smote the kynge Amaunt on the heede, that he cleft hym
down to the sholderes, and he fill deed to the erthe
vp-right.  Whan the kynge Bohors saugh the kynge Amaunt dye, he was
right sory, and seide he hadde leuer haue take hym, quyk,
and that he sholde haue made his pees with the kynge
Arthur.  And whan Guygebresill, and Brandelis, and Guyromelans saugh
the kynge Amaunt was deed, thei turned with CC knyghtes,
and seide that neuer sholde thei love the kynge Arthur, ne
no man that to hym belonged; and CCC be lefte, and seide
thei wolde go with the kynge Bohors to the kynge Arthur
and do theire homage, ffor a better lorde than he myght thei
noon haue.


<PB REF="" N="369" ID="pb.369"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Amaunt was deed the kynge Bohors cleped
hys companye, and seide that gladly wolde he ther make
an hospital where-ynne a man myght euer after serue oure lorde
god for the soule of hym as longe as the wolde dured, and that
oure lordes body myght be sacred ther-ynne, and his seruyse seide
and don, for the victorye that god hadde hym yoven.  Ther was
a clerke that many a day hadde hym serued, and he com be-fore
the kynge and asked of hym this yefte, and seyde he wolde gladly
a-bide there yef hym liked; and the kynge hym graunted, and yaf
hym rentes, and lefte with hym of his auoir grete plente for to
make the hospitall, and ther lefte the clerke in this manere, that
was after a goode man and a holy of lif.  And whan the kynge
Bohors hadde made entiere the kynge Amaunt, and by-sette the
rentes to the clerke, he rode forth till that thei com to Bredigan,
where that he fonde the kynge Arthur, and the kynge Ban, his
brother, and Merlin, that to hym made right grete ioye.  As soone as the
kynge Bohors was a-light, he seide to the kynge Arthur, "Sir,"
quod he, "here be a party of the knyghtes of the kynge Amaunt,
that beth come to yow in my condite, and sey that thei will do
homage and holde theire londes of yow, and thei be worthi men
and riche and high Barouns, as I am do to vndirstonde, of the
beste of that londe.  Now, take theire homages, and hem resceyveth
as ye owe to do."  And the kynge Arthur seide "thei be welcome,
and wite thei right well, that neuer will I do to hem but well
while that thei will me love, ffor thei love me and I will love
 hem, and yef thei me hate I shall hem haten."  And these com
forth and dide hym homage a-bouten CCC; and whan thei hadde
don theire homage the kynge Arthur asked hem tidinges of the
kynge Amaunt, and what man he was in his contrey; and thei
gonne to wepe sore, and seiden how he was deed.</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="131a" UNIT="folio"/>"How," qoud Arthur, "sey ye trouthe that he is
deed?"  and thei seide, "Ye, with-oute faile;" and than thei
tolde all the trouthe how the kynge Amaunt departed oute of his
londe for to go to the Castell of Charroye, and how thei wente
be-fore in to the wey, ther the kynge Bohors sholde come for to
fight with hym, and how thei foughten body for body, and how


<PB REF="" N="370" ID="pb.370"/>

the kynge Amaunt was deed, and tolde hym all theire traueyle,
that nothinge lefte thei vn-tolde that thei cowde on
thenke.  Whan the kynge Arthur and the kynge Ban herden of the
prowesse that the kynge Bohors hadde don thei were gladde, and
preised hym moche and comenden; and alle men seiden a-noon
as thei it wisten, that neuer hadde thei herde of two so noble
men as were the two bretheren, and seide well that yef thei two
ne hadde not ben, the kynge Arthur hadde all loste.  Thus thei
soiourned at Bredigan thre dayes full, and than sente the kynge
to enquere for workemen and labourers with mattokkes and
shoveles till he hadde well v<HI REND="sup">C</HI>.  Than thei wente to the tresour,
as Merlin hem taught, in the foreste, and lete digge in the erthe
and fonde the tresour that neuer er was seyn, and toke it oute of
the erthe, and charged Cartes and Chariettes in tonnes, that thei
hadde brought thider grete plente; and whan thei hadde all the
tresour charged, thei made it to be condited to logres, where as
Arthurs nevewes dide a-bide.  And Merlin made hem digge depe
vndir an Oke till thei fonde a vessell of lether, and ther-in xij
the beste swerdes and the feirest that eny man nede to
seche.  These ledde the kynge Arthur to logres with his tresour, till that
thei were come to Court, that thei sholde on be emploide.  And
as soone as the children herde speke that the kynge Arthur
hir oncle was comynge, thei lepte on theire horse and rode agein
hym alle to-geder, that noon ne lefte but wente alle gladde and
myrie that neuer peple myght make more ioye.  And whan thei
com nygh, Merlin toke the kynge Arthur a-part and the two
kynges, and made hem a-light vnder a feire tre, for to a-bide the
children that com, and comaunded her hoste to ride all wey forth
till that thei come to logres, and take theire logginges, and ese
hem all by leiser.  And whan thei herde the comaundement of
the kynge thei passed forth with-oute more a-bidinge, and mette
with the cheldren, that com with grete Chyuachie.  And whan
thei mette the routes, thei asked where was the kynge Arthur;
and thei hem shewde the tre ther he was a-light; and the
childeren hem dressed that wey that moche hem dide haste.  And
Gawein wente be-fore, that thei helde for maister and lorde, and

<PB REF="" N="371" ID="pb.371"/>

thei hadde right, for he was the beste taught and the moste
curteise that euer was, and in whom was lefte vilonye, and the wisiste
that myght be whan he com to Chiualrie.</P>
<P>  Whan thei com to the tree ther the kynge was a-light,
and these other two kynges with hym, and the knyghtes
of the rounde table; and as soone as the children hem saugh thei
a-light a-foote from theire horse and wente a-foote ther as these
knyghtes were   <MILESTONE N="131b" UNIT="folio"/>sette vpon the fresshe herbes in the shadowe of
the foreste; and hem a-venteed and keeled, for it hadde be hoote
all the day, and the hadde riden all the day armed, for doute of
the saisnes that were in the londe, and it was a-boute the ende of
maye.  Whan the knyghtes of the rounde table saugh the children
approche nygh, that eche hadde take other hande in hande
godely, and alle were thei well clothed, and richely a-raied and
full of grete bewte, and semed well that thei were alle come of
gode issue, and it be-com hem well, that thei com so entreprised,
and thei helde it a grete debonerte that thei helde to-geder so
feire.  And whan the knyghtes hem saugh come, thei roos a-geins
hem; and whan thei com nygh Gawein hem salued, that was of
the chief and the eldeste, and than he seide, "Feire lordinges,
we seche the kynge Arthur, wherefore we praye yow that ye will
vs shewen where he is, that we may hym knowen."  At this
worde ansuerde Nascien, and salued hym a-gein debonerly, and
seide, "My feire sones, lo, hym yonde, ther tho noble men ben
sette, and he is also the yongeste of alle," and shewde hym with
his fynger.  And whan Gawein hym saugh he paste forth, and seide,
"Sir, gramercy," and com that wey ther the kynge was and his
felowes; and thei stode vpon foote, as soone as thei saugh the
children come.</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein saugh his oncle and his felowes, he and alle
the children kneled down and salued the kynge and his
companye, for hym and his felowes that were with hym
I-comen.  "Sir," quod Gawein, "I am come to yow, I and my brethern
and my cosins, as to my liege lorde, and these other be come also
for the goode that thei here speken of yow, and for to seche oure
armes of yow, and that it plese yow for to make vs knyghtes,


<PB REF="" N="372" ID="pb.372"/>

and shull gladly yow serue, as we owe to do, yef oure seruise
may yow plese, and I sey not but that thei haue yow serued, ffor
somme ther ben here that, while ye haue ben oute of contrey, haue
deffended youre londe as wele as it hadde ben their owne a-gein
alle youre enmyes, and have be in helpinge to alle hem that ye
lefte it to kepe, and seth thei come, haue thei suffred many a
grete trauaile, and I will well that ye it wite, for to a goode man
ther sholde be reported honour and bounte whan he hath don,
and of a shrewe oweth oon consele, for he hath no herte it to
guerdone, ner the iyen power a gode man to be-holde, ne to
knowe the haluendell of the bounte that in hym is."  Whan
the kynge vndirstode the childe that so wisely spake, he toke
hym by the hand, and a-noon comaunded hem alle to a-rise;
and thei did his comaundement.  And than the kynge a-resond
hem, and asked of Gawein what thei were.  "Sir," seide Gawein,
"er ye knowe more by vs wolde we wite youre volunte, and after
that demaunde vs that yow plesith, and we shull telle yow gladly
that we knowen."  Whan the two kynges herde the wordes of
the childe, thei helde hym right wise, and seide to the kynge
Arthur that he seide   <MILESTONE N="132a" UNIT="folio"/>right.  And than spake the kynge Arthur,
and seide, "Ffeire frendes, I will with-holde yow with right
gladde chere, and will make yow knyghtes, bothe yow and youre
companye of myn owne, and ye be right welcome, and I will
that fro hens-forth that ye be my frendes and my felowes and of
my prive counseile and lordes of my court."  And whan the
childeren herde how the kynge spake, thei kneled and hym
thonked; and the kynge toke hem by the hondes, and seide to
Gawein, "Ffeire frende, now telle me what ye be, and of youre
felowes telle me the verite, ffor longe me thinketh it to wite."</P>
<P>  "Sir," quod the childe, "men clepe me by my right name,
Gawein, the sone of kynge loot, of leoneys and of
Orcanye, and these thre that I holde by the hondes beth my
brethern, and the name of that oon is Agrauayn, and the tother
is Gaheret, and the thridde Gaheryes; and oure moder hath do
vs to vndirstonde that she is youre suster on hir moder side; and
thise gentilmen ben oure cosins germain, as oure auntes sones,


<PB REF="" N="373" ID="pb.373"/>

and the name of the lesse, that is shorte and fatte, is Galashin,
and is sone to kynge Ventre, and this other, that is longe and
yonge, is sone to kynge Vrien, and his name is Ewein, and this
Gentilman is his brother on his fader side, and is cleped also
Ewein, and these tweyne other, that ye se holde to-geder, thei be
gentilmen of high lynage, ffor this feire broun is sone to the
kynge Belinans, of South walis, and is nygh cosin to Galashin;
and these other tweyne be nevewes to the kynge of Strangore
and ben nygh sibbe to Galashin; and these other tweyne ben
nevewes also to the kynge of Strangore, and the name of that
oon is Kay destranx, and the tother Kehedin; and these other
tweyne, that ther stonde to-geder, aperteyne to the kynge loot,
my fader, and be Erles sones, and oon is cleped Ewein white
hande, and the tother Ewein esclins, and the tother Ewein Cyuell,
and the tother Ewein de lyonell; and this other gentilman, that
is of so grete bewte, that is so moche and semly and well shapen
of body and of alle membres, is nevew to the Emperour of
Costantynnoble, and his name is Seigramor, and is come with vs
be his debonerte and his fraunchise to take armes, and that ye
hym make knyght, and he will yow gladly serue with gode will,
and will that he and I be felowes in armes while hym liketh to
a-bide in this contrey; and these other gentilmen that ye seen
aboute vs where-of be so grete plente ben alle frendes and
kynnesmen, and haue lefte her londes and hir honours for to come serue
yow for the grete love that the haue to yow."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Arthur hadde herde Gawein thus speke, he
leide his arme a-boute his nekke, and seide, "He is right
well-come," <SUPPLIED>and hym kiste</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.10">These three words are obliterated in the MS.</NOTE>   and made of hem grete ioye, and
than his brethern and his cosins, and to segramore he made
merveilouse ioye; and whan he hadde welcomed hem alle, than he seide
to Gawein, "Gawein, feire nevewe, com hider, and that I yow
enffeffe ye will take the Constabilrie of myn housolde and of all
  <MILESTONE N="132b" UNIT="folio"/>the lordship of my londe after me, and fro hens-forth to be lorde
and comaunder of alle hem that ben in my londe, for I will it so


<PB REF="" N="374" ID="pb.374"/>

be."  And Gawein kneled, and seide, "Sir, gramercy;" and the
kynge hym feffed with his right glove, and than he reised hym
vpon his feet, and than lept to theire horse, and rode forth to
logres.  And whan the kynge entred in to the Citee his suster
com a-gein hym, the wif of kynge loot of Orcanye, and with hir
com Morgne le fee, hir suster, that was so grete a clergesse.  And
whan the kynge hem knewe he made of hem grete ioye, for longe
tyme hadde he not hem sein; and thei kissed as brother and
suster.  And thus thei come to the maister paleys, that was
hanged with clothes of silke, and strowed with fressh herbes softe
and swote smellinge, and maden grete ioye thourgh the town all
day on ende and all nyght, so that no man may reherse the ioye,
and the gladnesse of all the peple.  The same nyght the kynge
comaunded the children to go wake in the cheiff mynster till on
the morrowe be-fore messe, that no lenger he wolde a-bide.  And
the storie seith this was the quynsyme after Pentecoste; and ther
was the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and lxj knyghtes of
the rounde table with these children all day, that hem in no wise
wolde leven.</P>
<P>  Whan it com be-fore the tyme of high messe, Arthur toke
Calibourne, his gode swerde, that he drough oute of the
ston, and by the counseile of Merlin ther-with he girde Gawein,
his nevewe, and than he sette on the spore on the right hele, and
the kynge Ban vpon the lifte hele, and after that the kynge
Arthur yaf hym the acolee, and bad god make hym a gode
knyght, and after he a-dubbed his thre brethern also, and yaf
eche of hem a suerde of tho that were founde in the tresour that
Merlin taught; and than the tweye sones of kynge Vrien, and
than Galashin, and Dodinell, and Kay, and Kehedin, and to
eueriche of these he yaf a swerde of the tresour; and than the
kynge a-dubbe Seigramor, with soche garmentes as he hadde
brought from Costantynnoble, for he was come well a-raide of
alle thinges that be-hoveth to a newe knyght; and the kynge
girde hym with a gode swerde, that he hadde brought out of
Constantynnoble, that his graunsire the kynge Adrian hadde hym
yoven; and than he sette on his right spore, and the kynge

<PB REF="" N="375" ID="pb.375"/>

Bohors his lifte spore, and than the kynge Arthur yaf hym the
acolee; and than he dubbed the iiij cosins, Ewein White honde,
and Ewein Esclyn, and Ewein Cyuell, and Ewein de lyonell, and
Alain and Acon, and to ech of these v he yaf a swerde of tho that
were of the tresour; but the storie seith that Dodynell hadde
noon, but he hadde the swerde that was the kynges Amaunt,
and the kynge Bohors hym it yaf, for that he was somdell of
hys kyn.</P>
<P>  Whan these children were thus a-dubbed, than eche of hem
a-dubbed soche companye as thei wolde lede of soche
as thei hadde brought with hem; and whan thei were alle redy thei
wente to high messe, that the archebisshop sange, and whan masse
was don thei com   <MILESTONE N="133a" UNIT="folio"/>a-gein to the paleise to mete, and ther helde
Arthur grete court and grete feste, and it nedith not to speke of
the meesse ne the seruise that thei hadde that day, for it were
but losse of tyme; and after mete wolde these yonge bachelers
haue reised a quyntayn in the medowes, but the kynge hem
diffended by the counseile of Merlin, for that the contrey was so
trouble and full of werre, and the cristin sore turmented with
saisnes that were entred in the londe.  Thus lefte the enuysenx
of these yonge bachillers and newe knyghtes at this tyme, and
soiourned in the town iij dayes.  And the kynge departed grete
richesse to yonge bachelers that he with-heilde, that of alle parties
were come grete plentee, ffor ther com so many of oon and other
that thei were lx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> what on horsebak and on foote, with-oute
hem that he hadde brought out of the reame of Tamelide.  And
in the mene-while that thei soiourned in the town, Morgne le fee
a-queynted hir with Merlin, and was with hym so prive, and so
moche she was with hym that she knewe what he was, and many
merveilles he hir taught of astronomye and of egramauncye, and
she helde it right wele.  And on the thridde day spake Merlin to
the kynge, and badde hym appareile for to move, ffor Pounces
and Antony and ffrolle ben entred now in to the reame of
Benoyk, and also the peple of the kynge of Gaule, and also
Claudas the kynge de la desert.  And Arthur seide he was redy
to go whan hym lyked, for he a-bode but his comaundement.


<PB REF="" N="376" ID="pb.376"/>
</P>
<P>  Than seide Merlin, "Comaunde alle youre hoste to be redy
armed for to move at mydnyght, and take with yow of
this londe xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of the reame of Tamelide, and xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> ye
shull leve in this town, ffor this reame may not be lefte
with-oute peple, and lete Doo of Cardoell of hem haue the gouernaunce;"
and thus ended her counseile.  And than the kynge comaunded
Gawein as Merlin hadde seide, and a-noon Gawein dide his
comaundement, and made hem redy appareilled; and hem
departed and disseuered a-sonder, and hem he logged in the medowes
of logres alle that sholde with hem go.  And whan he hadde do
thus he com to the kynge and to Merlin, that he saugh in
counseile to-geder, and seide how all was redy.  And whan Merlin
hym saugh, he bad the kynge aske hym what was the knyght
that ledde hym to socour his moder in the medow of
glocedon.  And he hym turned and seide, "Sir, how knowe ye this, and
who hath this to yow I-tolde."  "Certes," quod the kynge, "he
that tolde me knoweth alle these thinges well I-nough."  "So
helpe me god, sir," seide Gawein, "I knowe not what he was,
for I saugh hym neuer be-fore ne after."  "Now," quod Merlin,
aske hym yef he knewe hym that brought hym the letter from
his cosin Ewein, the sone of kynge Vrien."  And whan Gawein
saugh and be-helde hym that satte by the kynge, he asked whi
he made the kynge hym so demaunde; and than he be-thought
hym a-gein wisely, and remembred the wordes that Doo of
Cardoell hadde to hym seide.  And the kynge asked yef he hym
kenned.  And he seide, "Nay; but oon dide me for to
vndirstonde that it was Merlin, but trewly I knowe hym not; and
many other bountees   <MILESTONE N="133b" UNIT="folio"/>and seruyses hath he me don, ffor
Seigramor, the emperoures nevew, he made me delyuer from pereile of
deth, and my moder, and my cosin Ewein, and also oure-self at
the castell of Arondell, and he is the man of the worlde that I
wolde faynest knowe this day."  "Ye shull knowe hym I-nough,"
quod Merlin, "whan hym liketh."  Than be-gan the kynge to
laugh right lowde, and seide, "Gawein, feire nevew, sitte down
here by me, and I shall telle yow that I knowe."  And he sette
hym down be the kynge, and ther were no mo but thei thre.


<PB REF="" N="377" ID="pb.377"/>

Than seide the kynge to Gawein, "Feire nevew, lo, here the
gode man by whom ye wente to the Castell of Arondell, where
that ye fought with the saisnes that day that Dodynell the sauage
and Kay destranx and his neveu com oute of her contrey; and
ther-fore now thonke hym of the servises that he hath yow don,
and well ye owe so to do, and to love hym for his gode herte that
he hath to yow."</P>
<P>  "Sir," seide Gawein, "I can not I-nowgh hym quyte as he
is of worthynesse, but thus moche I sey, that I am all
his and at his comaundement, and he is so wise that knowe I
well that he knoweth all my corage that I haue to hym."  And
he seide, "Ye," that he knewe well his herte, and that he wolde
with hym ben a-queynted and be oon of his privees; but he bad
hym that he sholde not telle no creature of nothinge that he seide
to hym were he neuer so pryve ne frendly; "and ye shull se me,"
quod he, "in so many gises that I will not be knowe of no man,
ffor moche is the enuye for covetyse in this worlde."  And Gawein
seide that neuer wolde he speke ther-of to no creature of the
erthe."  Thus was Merlin aud sir Gawein a-queynted be-fore his
Oncle; and whan thei hadde longe spoke to-geder, than seide
Merlin, "Feire frende, go take youre leve of youre moder, and
than goith to the hoste, and make youre peple go to horse-bak
a-noon after mydnyght, and than goith forth youre wey towarde
Dover to the portes, and do appareille vesselles and assemble
shippes at the ryvage, so that youre vncle, whan he cometh and
the two kynges in his companye, that beth worthy men, may
entere with-oute lenger lettinge; and, for godes sake, loke ye do
hem worship and honour, ffor though thei be the kynge Arthurs
men, yet ben thei comen of higher lynage than is he; and loke ye
lete no man knowe what wey that ye shull go."  And Gawein
seide it sholde be don as he hadde devised.  Than departed
Gawein, and toke leve of his moder, that was right wise <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE>
moche hym loved, and comaunded hym to god to diffende hym from
euyll.  And he departed and com to the hoste, he and his brethern,
and sir Ewein, his cosin, that moche hym loved, and Galashin, and
Dodinell, and Seigramor, and Ewein a-voutres, and the foure

<PB REF="" N="378" ID="pb.378"/>

cosins that alle were cleped Ewein, and Kay destranx, and
Kehedin, his nevew, these ne departed gladly a-sonder; these hadde
the hoste in gouernaunce, as sir Gawein hem assigned, so that alle
were at the comaundement of my lorde sir Gawein.  And a-noon
after mydnyght Gawein made trusse sommers and other cariage,
and made goode wacche a-boute the hoste,   <MILESTONE N="134a" UNIT="folio"/>that ther ne ascaped
noon aspie; and thei hit kepten that the booke hath rehersed, and
than thei rode forth a softe paas till thei come to the port of
Dover.  And the kynge Arthur a-bode at logres, and Merlin, and
the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and the xlj knyghtes that
thei ledde in to Tamelide, and the knyghtes of the rounde
table.  And sir Gawein made serche all the ryvages, and take shippes
and assembled a grete navie.  And whan Merlin knewe that all
was redy, he sente to the kynge, and made hym move be nyght,
and seide er thei moved, that thei sholde a-ryve at the Rochell, and
badde hem do make her men rowe hem vp thider, "and whan ye
beth a-rived, loke that ye move not till that ye se me a-gein."
Quod the kinge, "Shull ye not than come with vs?"  "No,"
quod Merlin, "but ye shull ly ther but oon nyght, whan ye shull
se me with yow."  With that departed that oon from that other,
and Merlin wente in to Northumbirlonde to Blase, his maister, that
of hym was right gladde, for hertely he hym loved, and asked
hym how he hadde don seth he departed; and he hym tolde alle
the thinges as thei were be-fallen, and Blase hem wrote in his
booke; and whan Merlin com to that he be-hoved to telle of the
damesell that he loved paramours; and Blase was ther-of right
hevy, for he douted she wolde hym disseyve and that she sholde
lese his grete witte, and he gan hym to chastise; and he hym
tolde soche prophesies as were for to come, and of other that
sholde falle in other londes, as ye shull here here-after, and alle
blase wrote in his boke; but now returne we to speke of the
kynge Arthur.




</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.22"><PB REF="" N="379" ID="pb.379"/>
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXII.  
<LB/>BATTLE BEFORE THE CASTLE OF TREBES.</HEAD>
<P>  Now seith the storye, that the firste day of Iuyn departed
the kynge Arthur from Logres, and in that mery seson
rode Arthur forth, and the two kynges with hym, till thei come
to Dover, and entred in to the shippes with-oute more tariynge,
and hadde goode wynde and softe, and goode maroners hem for
to gide, till thei come to the Rochell with-oute eny trouble or
annoye, and logged hem in tentes and pavelouns with-oute the
towon, and abode Merlyn, and he com on the morowe at mydday as
he hadde promysed the kynge Arthur, and the thre kynges made
to hym grete ioye, and namely Gawein that hym loved so well,
and Merlin loved hym for the grete trouthe that he knewe in hym,
and ther thei soiourned, and rested and maden goode waicche on
the weyes and passages, that noon wente ne com that eny tidinges
myght brynge to theire enmyes.  But now resteth a while of hem,
and returne to speke of Leonce, the lorde Paerne, and Pharyen of
Trebes that were so goode men and trewe to theire lorde.</P>
<P>   Whan Merlin was departed from Leonce of Paerne, and hadde
tolde hym that Pounce and Antony and her companye
com with xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and ffrolle a Duke of Almayne with
xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, Leonces sente for peple fer and nygh of kyn and frendes and
sowdiours, till he hadde x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of the reame of Benoyk of horsmen
with-outen fote-men with whiche he stuffed   <MILESTONE N="134b" UNIT="folio"/>his forteresses, and
Pharien on that other side com oute of the reame of Gannes with
x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> horsmen, with-outen the peple on foote whiche he lefte to
kepe the Citees and Castelles, and brought viteles on alle parteis
in to stronge townes, and closed the prayes from theire enmyes
that nought myght thei wynne on forreye, and whan thei hadde


<PB REF="" N="380" ID="pb.380"/>

spedde so all theire ordenaunce, Pharien drough hym to Gannes
with all his hoste, and Leonces in to Benoyk with all his hoste,
and a-bide so in this manere till tydinges com to hem, that her
enmyes were entred into the londe that sette on fire ouer all
ther as thei myght eny harme do; but litill thei founde in the
contrey to take to, ffor all was turned from theire power into
stronke fortresses, and therfore Claudas de la desert was full of
sorowe and hevynesse, for well he supposed ther-by that thei
hadde some warnynge in some manere of her comynge.  But yet
ther-fore ne lefte not the forreyours to renne thourgh the londe,
but litill cowde thei fynde, and whan thei hadde ronne vp and
dowon thei repeired agein to the grete hoste, and than toke
counseile what thei sholde do, and than thei a-corded to sette seige
be-fore the castell of Trebes, and thider thei rode and loigged hem
in the medowes ther-by, but it was fer of, ffor the castell stode
on an high hill, and at the foote of the castell was the maras, depe
on alle sides, and ther-to was noon entre saf a litill cawchie that
was narowe and straite of half a myle of lengthe.  In these
medowes loigged hem Pounces and Antonyes on that oon side, and
on that othir side ffrole the Duke of Almayne, and on that othir
side Claudas de la deserte, and on the fourth parte the peple of
the kynge of Gaule; that Randolf, the stiwarde of Gaule, dide
condite, whiche was a bolde knyght and an hardy, and eche of
these hadde xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men at his baner.  Thus was the castell of
Trebes beseged on foure parties, and kepte so cloos that noon
myght entre ne come oute, but that he were a-noon taken and
well thei wende to take the castell be famyn, ffor of noon assaute
hadde thei no drede, for noon myght come ther-to for the maras
that was so nygh, and thus thei be-seged longe the quene Helayne
and hir suster that were with-ynne, and hadde grete drede leste
thei sholde haue be taken some maner treson; and many tymes
thei wepten for theire lordes, that so longe hadde ben from hem
and thei hadde herde of hem no tidinges.  And Grascien hem
counforted wele and badde hem be nothinge dismayed, ffor
withynne shorte tyme thei sholde have socoure, and seide he dide but
a-wayte vpon the hour that theire tweye lordes were comynge.

<PB REF="" N="381" ID="pb.381"/>

In this maner dide Grascien hem counforte, and his son Banyns,
to a-voide the hevynesse of the two quenes.</P>
<P>  This Banyn was a bolde squyer and hardy, and nygh cosin
to Leonce the lorde of Paerne, that was cosin to the two
kynges, and whan he knewe that the Castell was be-seged, he
sente to Antyaume the stiwarde, that he sholde come speke with
hym.  And he come a-noon in all haste, and than Leonce badde
hym appareile his men, ffor this nyght, quod   <MILESTONE N="135a" UNIT="folio"/>he, be-hoveth vs to
ride, and ye and youre peple shull a-bide me in the foreste of
briogne at the welle in the myddell of the launde, and loke ye
demene yow so, that noon knowe what wey we shull ride, and
sette soche warde a-boute the hoste, that noon departe to telle eny
tidinges to oure enmyes, and he seide this sholde be do so that in
hym sholde be no defaute.  With that departed Antyaume the
stiwarde, and dide as Leonce hadde hym comaunded.  And Leonce
toke his nevew and sente hym to Gannes to Pharien and badde
hym come in to the foreste of Briogne, in to the place that was
assigned in soche as he knewe was myster; and this spedde hym
so that he dide his message well and feire.  And whan Pharien
that Leonce was meved on his wey, he arraied hym hastely and
garnyyshed the town with soche peple as he saugh was nede, and
rode forth be the moste vn-cowthe weyes that he knewe, and
hadde in his companye well x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and also Leonce rode forth, he
and Antyaume, till thei com into a grete valey, all closed with
wode, in the foreste of Briogne, as Merlin hadde hym
assigned.  And the hoste was so well kepte that noon issed oute; and ther
thei a-bode till that Pharien com with his peple; and ther thei
dide a-bide till on the monday be-fore the feste of seynt John,
that moste be on the sonday next after.  And whan Merlin knewe
that thei were redy, and that thei abode but the socour that he
hadde hem promysed.  Then he it seide to the kynge Arthur,
and to kynge Ban, and to his broþ
er, and to Gawein, these
v were of oon counseile.  And than seide Arthur to Merlin,
"What shull we do now in this?"  Quod Merlin, "I will a-noon
right that ye devide youre peple who shall go be-fore, and who
shall go after."  Quod the kynge, "Devise it ye, for ye knowe


<PB REF="" N="382" ID="pb.382"/>

beste what is for oure moste spede."  "With gode will," seide
Merlin, "but this may not be taried."</P>
<P>  Than Merlin firste of all called Gawein and seide, "Goode
frende, take x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of soche as yow like beste, saf only
the knyghtes, of the rounde table for hem shull ye not haue, but
ye shull haue the xl knyghtes that youre vncle, the kynge, and
the kynge Ban brought oute of Tamelide; and ye shull haue also
the newe knyghtes and take with yow as many of other that ye
be x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> in all; and drawe yow in to a parte of the felde, and take
youre baner to Vlfin to bere, whiche is a noble knyght and right
trewe, and do this a-noon right."  Whan Gawein herde the
comaundement of Merlin he departed, he and his felisship and Vlfin,
and stode a-side with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> on a part by hem-self.  And than Merlin
called the kynge Ban and seide, "Kynge Ban, com forth gentill
kynght, for ye shull lede the secunde bataile, and ther shull be
x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> in youre companye, and we shull se how well ye shull do for
the socoure of youre londe, and how ye will yow a-venge vpon
Claudas for the damage that he doth in youre reame, and doth
purchese euery day."  "Sir," seide the kynge Ban, "so be it as
ye will devise, and yef ever I shall haue ioye, it is thourgh god
and yow, and by my lorde the kynge Arthur."  Quod Merlin,
"Go, dissever youre peple, and a-raie hem a-noon for to ride
a-gein her enmyes."    <MILESTONE N="135b" UNIT="folio"/>Than the kynge Ban dissevered oute x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men on a part of yonge knyghtes and noble men of armes.  After
that Merlin cleped the kynge Bohors, and seide, "Sir, ye shull
lede the thirdde bataile, and in youre companye shull be the foure
hundre knyghtes of the londe of the kynge Amaunt, and of hem
of Carmelide, so that ye be x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men well araied, and whan tyme
is sette yow on the wey delyuerly, and loke that in yow faile no
chyualrie, ffor now shall it be sene how ye will do for to delyver
youre enmyes oute of youre londe."  "Sir," seide the kynge
Bohors, "we shull do as will vouchesafe, the beste that we may;"
and than the kynge Bohors dissevered his peple, and made hem
to be armed and lepe to horse.</P>
<P>  Then seide Merlin to the kynge Arthur, "Sir," quod he,
"ye shull lede the fourthe bataile, and in youre companye


<PB REF="" N="383" ID="pb.383"/>

 shull be the knyghtes of the rounde table, ffor thise shull
not faile yow for no drede of deth."  Than the kynge comaunded
Nascien, and Adragain, and Hervy de rivell, to arme and aray
hem; and thei so diden in all haste.  Than toke Merlin the
dragon and cleped kay the stiward, and seide, "Sir, ye shull
bere the baner of the kynge Arthur, for it is youre right; and
loke that in yow be shewed knyghthode, and wote ye what ye
shull do.  Ever whan ye come vpon youre enmyes loke that ye
ride streight to the grete baner."  And Kay toke the baner and
seide, "Sir, with goode will."  Whan these wardes were departed
and dissevered, it was wele a-boute mydday, and thei made hem
redy and sette hem to mete; and whan thei hadde eten, the lordes
yode to counseile, for to aske Merlin what thei sholde do.  Quod
Merlin, "I shall telle yow this nyght at the firste somme ye shull
meve so that to-morow at even ye be at Trebes; and thei ly ther
at sege in foure places, ffor euery prince holdith his siege by
hym-self; and in euery part is xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men and euerich of oure
wardes shall go smyte on euery hoste, so that thei be assailed on
alle foure partes.  But thei make gode waicche and stronge,
and ther-fore we moste worke wisely."  "How, Merlin,"
quod Arthur, "have thei than moche more peple than we
haue?"  "Ye, Sir," quod Merlin, "more be the haluendell; but ye shull
haue feire socour of xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that shull come to yow all be tyme,
ffor thei loigge but foure myle from the hoste, with-ynne the
foreste of brioke."  "And how shull thei knowe oure
comynge?"  quod the kynge.  "Sir," seide Merlin, "I shall go for to fecche
hem."  "Who shall than condite oure hoste?"  quod the
kynge.  "Blioberis," seide Merlin, "shall go be-fore that well knoweth
the passages by the wey that I shall hym tecche, and in the
dawnynge of the day loke ye sette on alle to-geder ther as ye
shull here an horne blowe right high and lowde, and ye shall se
a grete flame of fier renne a-bove in the heir on high, and ther-of
take goode hede; ffor than shall the socour be redy that I shall
yow sende."  "Sir," seide the kynge, "whan shull ye meve
thidirward?"  "A-noon right," quod Merlin, "for in this may
be no tariynge, and ther-fore to god I yow comaunde."

<PB REF="" N="384" ID="pb.384"/>
</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="136a" UNIT="folio"/>With that departed Merlin from the kynge Arthur, and
a-noon, as he was oute of the hoste, he vanysshed a-wey
so sodeynly that thei wiste not were he be com, and er it was
passed noone of the day he com into the hoste of Leonces of
Paerne, that a-boode nothinge elles but tidinges that he sholde
lepe to horse; and than com Merlin be-fore hym ther as he and
Pharien were, and Antyaume and Grascien.  And than seide
Merlin, "Leonces, what a-bidest thow?  whi got thow not to
horse, thow and thy peple?  ffor thow canst not come so soone
thider, but thow shalt fynde ther the kynge Arthur with all his
hoste."  And whan he vndirstode that, he made hym grete ioye,
and seide that he was welcome, and so seide all the companye;
and a-noon thei asked tidinges of theire lordes, and he seide that
in short tyme thei sholde hem well seen, "ffor thei ride now a
grete spede; but devise a-noon youre wardes and I shall lede
yow to the hoste."  "Sir," seide Leonces, "gramercy, ffor now
knowe I well that we shull spede well while ye be in oure
companye."  With that wente the foure felowes, and departed her
peple into foure parties, and the stiwarde toke v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and dissevered
hem on a part, and Grascien other v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and Pharien other v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,
and Leonces toke theym that was lefte, that were well v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and
moo, and made hem to be well armed and a-rayed.  But now
cesseth a while of Merlin, and of leonces, and speketh of the kynge
Arthur and his companye.</P>
<P>  Now seith the storye that as soone as the kynge Arthur and
Merlin were departed; the same hour Arthur dide meve
on his iourney euery warde after other, and Blioberis rode in the
warde of sir Gawein all be-fore, as he that beste knewe the
passages.  Ther myght oon haue seyn many a riche garnement and
many a fressh banere of riche colour wave in the wynde, and the
seson was myri and softe, and the contre feire and delitable,
ffor many feire medowes and forestes ther weren, in whiche these
briddes singen with lusty notes and cler, and than reioyse the
corages of these yonge lusty bachelers that to conquere loos and
pris and honour haue lefte theire londes and her contreyes, and
the swete songe of these briddes remembred their armous whiche


<PB REF="" N="385" ID="pb.385"/>

thei were wonte to haue the presence, and some dide sighe full
ofte, and so thei ride forth all the nyght till it was cleir day, and
whan thei be-heilde a-boute hem and saugh, thei knewe not in
what parte thei weren; ffor so moche thei entended to theire
myry thoughtes that hem plesed that all other thinge was leide
a-side.  With that thei be come into a feire launde full of floures
vpon the river of leire, and this launde was full of floures and
swete herbes and grasse that the horse wente ther-ynne vp to the
belyes, and ther thei resten all the hoste of Arthur all the day
vnto euesonge tyme, and ete and dranke thei that ther-to haue
nede, and slepe at her ese for the place was <CHOICE><CORR>plesaunte</CORR><SIC>plsaunte</SIC></CHOICE> and
delitable, and than thei hem armed more and lesse and lepte to horse,
  <MILESTONE N="136b" UNIT="folio"/>ffor thei hadde but vij myle for to ride to the hoste ther as was
Claudas.  Ther sholde ye haue sein many fressh lusty men of
armes vpon stronge startelinge stedis, and swyfte rennynge well
covered vndir stiell, and many a riche cote of armes of silke
embrowded of dyvers colours, and many a grete spere with
trenchaunt hedes of sharp grounde steill, and many an helme and
many a shelde glistred a-gein the sonne, and rode so cloos oon
after a-nother that whan thei were renged that oon myght have
caste a glove vpon theire helmes that sholde not have falle to
grounde, er thei hadde ride a butte lengthe.  And Blioberis rode
in the vaungarde with sir Gawein, and the kynge Ban in the
secounde warde with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and rode a softe paas,
theire sheldes be-fore theire brestes, with goode talente to assaile
theire enmyes and hem-self to diffende, and rode half a myle after
the forwarde.  Whan the kynge Bohors saugh his brother forth
than he dressed hym and his peple after vpon her wey, and hadde
many a bolde knyght and hardy, and that was well seene that
day in the bataile be-fore the castell of Trebes.  And he cowde
hem lede and condite and hem helpe and socour in euery nede,
whan the kynge Bohors was departed and dissevered.  Than
Arthur and his peple made hem redy to folowen after, and whan
they were on horse ye sholde have sein many a riche garnement
and many a bolde knyght that neuer wolde faile the kynge Arthur
for no drede of deth.  And Kay rode with the baner in his hande


<PB REF="" N="386" ID="pb.386"/>

that Merlin hadde hym delyuered; and thus thei ride streite and
cloos after the kynge Bohors the space of half a myle, and thus
thei rode all the nyght till a litill be-fore the day that thei were
oute of the foreste of brioke, and were come into the playn and
com alle after a longe while be the river vnder leyer vnder the
wode side, where as thei resten vnder the Olyves till thei sie the
signe that Merlin hadde hem tolde of the braundon of fier that
sholde renne-vp in the heir; and that thei herde the noyse of the
horne that sholde blowe; and thei approched so nygh the hoste
that it was but v bowe draught be-twene; and thei saugh in the
hoste was grete plente of lightes and moche peple, and thei herde
the horse neye and the mules crie often, and thei were so nygh
that ech hoste herde the noyse of other, and thei that kepte
waicche at the siege sente oute men on horsbakke to aspie what
peple it were, and thei yeden oute and saugh their armes and
returned agein to the hoste, and tolde how thei hadde founde grete
plente of men of armes.  Whan thei of the hoste herde these
tidinges thei ronne to arme hem, and issed out of the loges and
renged hem in the playnes euerich at his baner, and eche man,
lete other haue witinge that a grete armee was come vpon theym
and thei wiste not what peple.  And Pounces and Antonye, that
moche cowde of werre, issed oute of the hoste all armed in to the
foreste of Bryoke, in to the wodes evese ther as thei sholde come,
and comaunded her peple hem for to sue, and thei so dide
delyuerly as soone as thei were armed.  And ffrolle the Duke of
Almayne come oute after and made his   <MILESTONE N="137a" UNIT="folio"/>stablie vpon a litill river
that is cleped Aroaise, and Randolf the senescall of the kynge of
Gaule come by the gardins, and Claudas the kynge de la desert sette
hym towarde the cauchie towarde the maras that com out strongly
from the loigges, and from pavelouns and gadered to the baners.</P>
<P>  And while thei entended to make hem redy and sette
hem-self in aray, in the mene tyme, Merlin com oute of his
enbusshement that wele knewe all theire laboure.  Than he toke
an horne and blewe it so lowde that all the wode resounded,
and than he caste a merveilouse enchauntement ffor he made
appere, and high in the heire a grete flame of fire as reade as


<PB REF="" N="387" ID="pb.387"/>

thunder, and ran ouer the loigges of hem in the hoste, and whan
that Arthurs peple saugh the flame of feir renne thourgh the
heir, and also herde the horne blowe, thei hem blessed and smote
the horse with the spores, and it fill so that Gawein smote thourgh
the herberough of the Duke ffrolle, and the kynge Ban thourgh
the tentes of the kynge Claudas de la desert, and the kynge
Bohors thourgh the Pavelouns of Pouncy and Antony, and the
kynge Arthur thourgh the loiginge of Randolf the Senescall of
Gaule, and than a-roos the noyse and the shoute on bothe parties,
ffor ther was throwe down many a tente and many a paveloun, and
many a man wounded and slain of hem that weren at the siege
in the loigges, ffor thei were not alle garnysshed of her armoure,
and these other hem slough and maymed, that the wounded men
cried and braied for the peynes of deth that hem distreyned; and
than the sonne be-gan to a-rise clier vpon the bright armure that
be-gan to glistere a-gein the bright sonne.  Whan Claudas and
Pounce Antony and ffrolle saugh the damage that these hem
diden, hit hem for thought sore, ffor thei trowed well that thei
hadde loste x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of her men what oon and other, and the Duke
ffrolle hadde loste moste of eny other, saf Randolf the Senescall
that saugh the grete mortalite that these hem diden that were
come out of her enbusshement; he was nygh wode for wratth, and
than he com bakke toward the tentes that he hadde lefte, for to
geder his <CHOICE><CORR>peple</CORR><SIC>ple</SIC></CHOICE> a-boute hym, and yef he and the other ne hadde
not returned a-gein to the teintes <CHOICE><CORR>that thei</CORR><SIC>th</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.11">A hole is burnt through a portion of folios 137 and 138.  The missing words have been translated from the French MS. in the British Museum (Addit. MS. 10,292) and are here inserted between brackets.  The number of the folio in the French MS. is marked at the first reading from each page.</NOTE> hadden lefte, by
my dom, ther hadde not ascaped the halvendell,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.12">The French omits all the words from <HI REND="I">and yef</HI> down to <HI REND="I">halvendell</HI>.</NOTE> and whan sir 
<SUPPLIED>Gawein</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.13">Fr. Fol. 154,</NOTE> saugh ffrolle come, he rode a-gein hym right boldely,
and he hadde in his companye <SUPPLIED>many bolde</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.14">moult de hardis.</NOTE> knyghtes that were
yonge bachelers, and ffrolle hadde yet in his companye xv<SUPPLIED><HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men of</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.15"><HI REND="sup">MI</HI> hommes.</NOTE> armes, and v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> hadde he loste that lay deed all
to-hewen, and whan thei <SUPPLIED>hadden drawen</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.16">sentraprochent.</NOTE> nygh thei smote to-geder 


<PB REF="" N="388" ID="pb.388"/>


as faste as theire horse myght renne, and at the <CHOICE><CORR>metynge
of the</CORR><SIC>me</SIC></CHOICE> hostes<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.17">assambler des os.</NOTE> was Seigramore formeste, and ffrolle that was right
wrorth com hym <SUPPLIED>agein and</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.18">fol. 154b. li vint al encontre et</NOTE> he was a moche knyght and of grete
force, and Seigramor and he mette with <CHOICE><CORR>speres right</CORR><SIC>sper</SIC></CHOICE> in
mydde the sheldes so rudely that bothe fill to grounde, and
theire horse vpon theire bodyes, but a-noon thei were lepte
on foote, ffor thei were bothe stronge and light and delyuer,
and thei drough swerdes oute of scauberk and couered theire
hedes vnder sheldes and eche ran to other and be-gonne
be-twene   <MILESTONE N="137b" UNIT="folio"/>hem two a bataile right grete and crewell, and yaf
be-twene hem soche strokes that sore were thei hurt, and ther
ne was nother of hem but he was in grete pereile of deth er
he hadde eny socour, ffor bothe were thei goode knyghtes and
theire suerdes were soche that no man nede to seche noon better,
and thus thei fought a longe tyme er thei were departed.  Whan
Gawein saugh Siegramor at erthe he rode to the rescowe, bothe
he and Vlfin that bare the baner; and on that other side com the
meyne of ffrolle to delyuer theire maister.  And thei smote
to-geder with speres thourgh sheldes and many ther were leide to
grounde on bothe sides, ffor the bataile was grete and fell that
longe endured; and with grete labour were bothe Segramor and
ffrolle sette on horse, and than be-gan a-gein the bataile so grete
that it dide but enforce more and more.  Ther dide merveillously
well the xl knyghtes that with hem were companyed.  But after
mydday was passed was no mannys doinge like vnto Gawein, ffor
he smote a-down man and horse be stroke of spere and suerde;
and also dide well sir Ewein the sone of kynge Vrien and Ewein
a-voutres, and Ewein white hande, and Galashin the sone of
kynge Ventre of Garlot; and Gaheries dide so well that euery
man hilde hym the beste knyght after sir Gawein, and also
dide well Agrauain and Gueheret and Segramor and alle the
other felowes.</P>
<P>  On that othir side faught the kynge Ban full harde with the
kynge Claudas and his peple, and ther was stronge bataile
and many were ther throwen down to the grounde vpon either



<PB REF="" N="389" ID="pb.389"/>

side; and happed so that the kynge Ban and Claudas metten in
myddell of the renges that were grete and perilouse, and as soone
as eche hadde sight of other, thei ronne to-geder with swerdes
drawen, and Claudas was a noble knyght and a sure and moche
and stronge, but he was euer enviouse a-gein alle tho that were
a-bove hym, and he smote the kynge Ban so harde vpon the helme
that the <CHOICE><CORR>sparkeles</CORR><SIC>keles</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.19">estincheles.</NOTE>   of fire fly oute brynnynge bright and astoned
hym so sore that he enclyned on <CHOICE><CORR>his horse</CORR><SIC>h</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.20">son cheval.</NOTE>  nekke; but with
grete vigour a-roos the kynge Ban and smote at Claudas to hitte
hym <CHOICE><CORR>on the</CORR><SIC>he</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.21">parmi le.</NOTE> helme, and he saugh the stroke come and wevyd
a-side, and he smote so the horse <CHOICE><CORR>nekke passinge</CORR><SIC>assinge</SIC></CHOICE> and kutte<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.22">col del cheual si le colpe.</NOTE> a-sonder the chyne, that he fill to grounde; but a-noon he lepe
on foote <SUPPLIED>ryght hastely</SUPPLIED>,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.23">moult iustement.</NOTE> but yet er he myght a-rise the kynge
Ban yaf hym soche two strokes vpon the <CHOICE><CORR>helme that nere</CORR><SIC>he           re</SIC></CHOICE> he<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.24">que par poi quil.</NOTE> made hym to falle an knees and handes to the erthe, that the
blode braste <CHOICE><CORR>oute of his hede</CORR><SIC>o            ede</SIC></CHOICE>,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.25">parmi la bouce et parmi le nes.</NOTE>   but the kynge Claudas was of
grete force and hym kepte so that he fill not <CHOICE><CORR>but covered</CORR><SIC>ed</SIC></CHOICE> his
heede<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.26">si iete lescu sor sa teste.</NOTE>   with his shelde, and com to the kynge Ban and be-gan
be-twene hem <SUPPLIED>sore</SUPPLIED> stronge bataile that was full crewell and
fell and longe endurynge.</P>
<P>  Than be-gan the kynge Claudas to blede sore, and soone
hadde the werre be fynysshed for euer more, yef thei
two myght eny while lenger have ben to-geder.  But his   <MILESTONE N="138a" UNIT="folio"/>men
hym socoured strongly, whereof he hadde mo than the kynge
Ban by the haluendell; and so were the peple of kynge Ban
gretly ouer-charged, ffor thei were but x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and thei with the
kynge Claudas were yet xviij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and not-with-stondinge thei
fought so on bothe parties that the two kynges were remounted,
and than be-gan the chaple full dolerouse and crewell and full
mortall, but nedes moste the peple of kynge Ban refuse place,
and yef he hym-self ne were alle hadde ben discounfited and
driven oute of the feilde, but he sustened the bataile so that noon
myght hym remeve more than it hadde ben a-dongon, and thus





<PB REF="" N="390" ID="pb.390"/>

thei contened longe in this maner till that mydday was
passed.</P>
<P>  On that othar side faught the kynge Bohors and Pounce and
Antonye at the tentes and pavelouns, so that moche peple
were loste of hem that were there lefte, ffor ther thei loste the
lyves; and whan Pounce and Antonye saugh the damage so grete
that so sodeinly was hem be-fallen he was wonder wroth and
sorowfull; and whan he hadde assembled his men by the foreste
where as thei dide a-reste, thei repeired toward the tentes where
thei made this occision of hem that thei founden, and whan the
kynge Bohors saugh hym come he rode a-gein hym full boldely,
his shelde aboute his nekke, with a grete growe spere of aissh
with a sharp heede of stiell, and whan Pounce saugh hym come
he launched in to the felde a-gein hym and smote the horse with
the spores a-gein hym in soche haste as he that trowed to haue
taried to longe, and mette to-geder with all the myght of bothe
horse that thei perced the sheldes, and Pounce brake his spere
vpon the kynge Bohors, and the kynge smote hym so rudely that
he made the shelde and the arme close to his side and sente the
spere heede thourgh shelde and side and made hym a grete
wounde so that the reade blode railed oute after, and he shof
ther-on so harde that he bar hym to the erthe vp-right, and ther
he lay longe astoned that noon wiste wheder he were <SUPPLIED>deed or</SUPPLIED>
a-lyve,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.27">mort ou uif.</NOTE>   and whan his men saugh hym falle thei hadde grete drede
leste he <CHOICE><CORR>were deed</CORR><SIC>w</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.28">quil ne fust mors.</NOTE> and ronne to the rescouse bothe gret and
small, and the meyne of kynge Bohors <CHOICE><CORR>come hem agens and</CORR><SIC>com</SIC></CHOICE>
hem resceyved<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.29">lor uienent al encontre et les rechouient.</NOTE>   at the spere poynte and ther was grete turment
and mortall <SUPPLIED>occision, for on</SUPPLIED> oon parte were but x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and on that
other side were xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.30">fol. 155. car il furent dune part xx<HI REND="sup">M</HI> et dautre part x<HI REND="sup">M</HI>.</NOTE>   and <CHOICE><CORR>Pounce and Antonye was rescewed
and</CORR><SIC>Pou</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.31">si fu poince antoines rescous et.</NOTE> sette on horse, and his men founde hym somdell wounded
<SUPPLIED>in the left side, but he had no wound that was like unto his</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.32">el coste senestre, mais il nauoit nu plaie que perilleuse fust a garir.</NOTE> 
deth, but he was more sorowfull for that he <SUPPLIED>had been</SUPPLIED>




<PB REF="" N="391" ID="pb.391"/>

<SUPPLIED>remeved out of his sadell than he was  </SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.33">fu cheus que.</NOTE> for greef of his
wounde, ffor neuer be-fore <SUPPLIED>that tyme had he fought with
any</SUPPLIED> knyght that myght make hym remeve oute of his sadell,  <NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.34">car onques mais nauoit widiet le archons pour le cop dun chevalier.</NOTE>
and <SUPPLIED>ther-for he wold right faine be</SUPPLIED> a-venged of that shame <NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.35">si vengeroit moult uolentiers sa honte.</NOTE>  yef he myght come in place, and <CHOICE><CORR>than al sodeynly he droughe</CORR><SIC>t</SIC></CHOICE><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.36">si traist.</NOTE> 
his swerde and rode in a-monge the turnement that longe
tyme endured <SUPPLIED>and at the laste it</SUPPLIED> <NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.37">et lors auint.</NOTE> fill so that Pounce
mette with the kynge Bohors that of hym-self shewde
mervelouse dedes of armes, and as soone as he hym   <MILESTONE N="138b" UNIT="folio"/>saugh he
remembred how he hadde hym vn-horsed and wounded, and
a-noon he ran vpon hym with his swerde drawen and smote the
kynge vpon the helme that he made hym to enclyne on his sadell
bowe be-fore, and whan Pounce wolde have recovered a-nother
stroke, the kynge spored his horse in to the stour and than
returned the horse hede and com with his swerde in his hande;
and also Pounce com a-gein hym that moche hym hated, and thei
hewen vpon helmes grete strokes that bothe were astonyed.  But
theire strokes were not alle I-like, ffor Pounce smothe the kynge
vpon the helme that he enclyned vpon his horse crowpe, and the
kynge redressed hym and yaf hym soche a buffet vpon the lefte
temple that the blode braste oute of mouthe and nose, and
ther-with he hurteled so harde on hym with strengthe of his
horse that Pounce fell to grounde and was so astonyed that he
knewe not wheder it were nyght or day, and the kynge rode
ouer hym on horse bakke all armed so often, that he was all
for brosed and swowned for anguyssh, and the kynge hadde
grete talent to a-light for to smyte of his heede, but he hadde
hym not a-right at his volunte.</P>
<P>  Whan the Romaynes saugh Pounce so diffouled vndir horse
feet of hym that nothinge hym loved thei dide presse to
the rescowe and smyten thourgh the peple of kynge Bohors all
pelly melly, and made hem resorte bakke more than a bowe
draught for thei were many mo than were with the Kynge.



<PB REF="" N="392" ID="pb.392"/>

Ther was Pounce remounted full egirly; but sore was he
diffouled and beten.  Than the stour be-gan to renewe, and
the peple of kynge Bohors were at grete myschef, for there
enmyes were double so many as thei were.  But in this manere
thei contened till mydday was passed, and on a-nother part the
kynge Arthur faught full fiercely agein Randolf the Senescall,
and the ffrensshemen, ffor he fonde hem in pavilouns moo than
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that alle were to-hewen and slayn; and whan Randolf
saugh the grete losse and the damage, he was full sory, and in
grete ire com hym a-geins with xiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that weren lefte, and
thei were bolde and hardy and desirouse to ben a-venged of the
deth of her frendes that thei saugh slayn be-fore theire <SUPPLIED>iyen</SUPPLIED>
and<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.38">iex si.</NOTE>   Arthurs men com hem a-geins as tho that were desirouse
of the werre, <SUPPLIED>and then they hadde</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.39">et orent.  <SEG TYPE="foreign">Aüirent, oirent, Orent,</SEG> is the third pers, pl. perfect of <SEG TYPE="foreign">avoir</SEG> in the Burgundian dialect of the Langue d'Oïl.  Burguy. Gram. i. 247.</NOTE>   a goode conditour that
sette light by theire enmyes, for hem semed <SUPPLIED>that they were in
nombre euen</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.40">car il uirent quil furent pris.</NOTE>   as many for as many, and resceyued hem at the
spere poynte <SUPPLIED>and they lefte there of wounded</SUPPLIED> and slayn grete
plente, <NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.41">si en laissent moult de mors et de naures.</NOTE>  ffor ther was many a gal<SUPPLIED>lant knyght slayn and
beheded, the which was gret dole a</SUPPLIED>nd sorowe<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.42">uassal ochis et decopes dont il fu grant duel.</NOTE>   to her frendes,
ffor ther were the <SUPPLIED>knyghts of the round table the which dide
grete</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.43">Illuec firent merueilles li cheualier de la table reonde.</NOTE> wondres, for thei bar down man and horse; th<SUPPLIED>at
nothinge myght stond ageyn hem.  And they</SUPPLIED> with the kynge
Arthur<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.44">et auoec els estoit lirois artus.</NOTE>   hem helped so well that he scowred th<SUPPLIED>e ranks clene whersoever</SUPPLIED> ther as he com,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.45">qui faisoit les rens esclairier par tout lo il aloit.</NOTE>   aud thourgh her grete prowesses
were the frensh <SUPPLIED>rowted and dryven owt of</SUPPLIED> the felde, maugre
who that it grucched,<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.46">et fisent tant par lor proece quil les ont rompus et iete de place a fine force ou il uolsissent ou non.</NOTE>   that thei neuer stynte till <SUPPLIED>thei</SUPPLIED>
re<SUPPLIED>tourn</SUPPLIED>ed<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.47">deuant quil uindrent.</NOTE>   upon the peple of Pounce and Antonye that
right sore greved the kynge Bohors.







<PB REF="" N="393" ID="pb.393"/>
</P>
<P>     <MILESTONE N="139a" UNIT="folio"/>And whan these com on ther was so grete toile and romour
of noyse that wonder it was to heere, and ther-with
a-roos so grete a duste, that the cleir sky wax all derk, and Kay
hem pursude with the dragon in honde that Merlin hadde take
hym to kepe, and hit caste oute of his throte many tymes so grete
flames of fiere up in to the heire so horible that alle theire hertes
trembled of hem that neuer hadde seyn it be-fore, and seide oon to
a-nother that the worlde was nygh at an ende; and, neuertheles,
the dragon had grete significacion in hym-self, ffor it be-tokened
the kynge Arthur and his power; and the flame of fiere that
com oute of the throte be-tokened the grete martire of peple
that sholde be in his tyme, and the taile that was so tortuouse
be-tokened the grete treson of the peple, be whom he was after
be-traied that dide a-rise a-gein hym by mordred his sone that he
be-gat on his suster, the wif of kynge loot as ye haue herde
rehersed be-fore, ffor whan Arthur after passed ouer see to fight
with the Emperour of Rome, and to take the reame of Gannes
and of Benoyk for the wratthe of launcelot, that hadde hym
lefte for a maltalent that was be-twene hem two for his wif, the
quene Gonnere, that he was so moche with a-queynted as the tale
shall declare here-after; but of alle these maters we shull cesse
at this tyme till that the mater falle ther-to here-after that it
shall clerly be expounded.</P>
<P>  Now seith the boke that grete was the bataile be-fore the
Castell of Trebes of the peple of Randolf, and the meyne
of kynge Arthur.  But Randolfes men haue for-sake place, and
were driven vpon the peple of Pounce and Antonye that full
short hilde the kynge Bohors and his men that grete nede hadde of
socour; and whan Pounce and Antonye sangh come theym that
fledden, he com hem a-geins and cried his ensigne, and returned
and ran firste upon the men of kynge Bohors; and whan these
saugh hem comynge thei relien and closed hem to-geder, and lete
renne at the meyne of Pounce Antonye; and the kynge Bohors
was so ouercharged that he was nygh discounfited and dryven
oute of the felde.  But as Kay com that moche hem counforted,
and tho be-gan a stronge stour and mortall, and many were ther


<PB REF="" N="394" ID="pb.394"/>

deed on bothe sides; and than thei hilde hem somwhat
peringall; and also on that other side faught sir Gawein and ffrolle of
Almayne that he made hem resorte vpon the kynge Claudas that
faught a-gein the kynge Ban of Benoyk, that was at grete
myschef; and whan these foure batailes were come to-geder that
oon sustened longe that other, and grete was the martire and
the noise of strokes of suerdes and gleives vpon helmes.  But
ther dide Gawein wondirfull dedis with his handes, ffor neuer
had eny man seyn be-fore oo man a-lone do soche merveiles as he
dide that day; and the storie seith that it was passed myd-day,
and it fill that Gawein mette with the kynge Claudas that
faught with the kynge Ban, he and a hundred with hym, and
the kynge Ban hadde   <MILESTONE N="139b" UNIT="folio"/>no moo with hym but xix, and ther-fore
was he at grete myschef; and whan Gawein com he made alle
the renges to tremble and fremyssh; and whan he saugh the
kynge Ban in soche distresse he rode in a-monge hem, with his
suerde in hande, that was of grete bounte; and it happed that he
mette firste with Claudas that sore hym peyned to greve the
kynge Ban and his peple, and Sir Gawein lifte vp his swerde
for to smyte the king Claudas vpon the helme, and he hym
couered with his shelde; and Gawein hym smote so harde that
he made it to fle in two parties, and the suerde descended upon
the hynder arson of his sadell and slitte the horse a-sonder, that
bothe fill to grounde, the horse and his maister; and so he rode
forth and no lenger hym a-bode for that he knewe hym not,
and mette so with Mysteres, that was a knyght of Claudas, and
he smote hym on the shulder that he slitte <CHOICE><CORR>hym</CORR><SIC>hy</SIC></CHOICE> to the breste;
and than he smote Antorilas that the heed fill in to the felde;
and after he leide oute grete strokes on euery side, so harde that
xx of hem hath he slayn be-fore the feet of kynge Claudas, and
so he hym stired that noon durst hym a-bide a stroke.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ban saugh the socour that god hadde hym
sente, and he saugh the merveile of the yonge knyght;
he thonked and worshiped oure lorde, and than he com to hym
and seide, "Gawein, swete frende, ye be welcome at this grete
nede, ffor, so helpe me god, the kynge Arthur hath well be-sette


<PB REF="" N="395" ID="pb.395"/>

the lordship that he hath yow yoven to lede and gouerne his
peple, ffor to a better than to yow myght he not haue yoven in
all this worlde to olde ne yonge; and I praye yow that ye
wolde graunte me youre companye this day fro
hens-forth."  "Sir," quod Gawein debonerly, "I graunte it yow with gode herte,
and I thanke yow of youre requeste.  But me be-houeth to
seche my brethern and my cosins, for I wote not where thei be
by-come and ther-fore displese yow nothinge, for as soone as
I haue hem founde, I shall to yow a-gein repaire."  "Sir," seide
the kynge Ban, "I will gladly go with yow and peyne me to
ben a-venged of myn enmy that ye dide vn-horse; and than
were the werre at an ende yef he myght be deed or
taken."  Than seide Gawein "whiche is he."  "Lo," quod the kynge
Ban, "yende is he in the blake armes flortee of siluer, and
hath that shelde de-parted of vert and gowles, and ther-ynne
a rampaunt lion of siluer, and he is now remounted while
we haue thus spoken."  "Sir," seide Gawein, "yet may we
well come to poynte this same day yef god will."  "Now lete
vs yeve hem oon assaute, ffor lo me here all redy, for I desire
nothinge more than to do hym damage," quod the kynge Ban,
"ffor by hym haue I all my harme that I haue, and that we alle
be with I-greved."  "What is he?" said Gawein.  "Hit is
Claudas de la desert," seide the kynge Ban, "that this day
so sore hath me greved."  "How," seide Gawein, "is this
he that maketh alle these peple here assemble."  "Ye, sir,
with-oute faile," quod the kynge Ban; with that thei spored
  <MILESTONE N="140a" UNIT="folio"/>theire horse that wey that thei saugh Claudas; and as soone as
he saugh hem comynge, he com a-gein hem boldely, and be-gan
the bateile stronge and crewell, and the kynge Ban, and Gawein,
and the xx knyghtes a-gein the kynge Claudas, that hadde mo
than an hundred; but thei were discounfited and chaced oute of
the place thourgh the prowesse of the two noble men; and
whan the kynge Claudas saugh the damage turne vpon hym, he
rode in to the medle, where he saw thikkest, for sore he douted
to mete with hem that manaced hym of nothinge but to smyten
of his hede; and whan Gawein and the kynge Ban saugh hym


<PB REF="" N="396" ID="pb.396"/>

go, thei preked after, and he rode here and there thourgh the
bateile, and thei after, that for nothinge wolde hym haue lefte,
saf for oon a-uenture that thei founde in the bataile he ne hadd
neuer ascaped while that Sir Gawein and the kyne Ban entended
to the bataile, and to Claudas that thei enchaced.  Gawein saugh
Agrauain his brother ly on the grounde, and his horse vpon him;
and Gueheret was on foote, with his swerde in honde; and
also he saugh Galashin, his cosin, that ffrolle the Duke of
Almayne helde be the nasell of his helme, and hadde in his
companye moo than two thousande men that dide hym helpe,
and longe tyme past thei sholde hym haue slayn ne hadde be
Segramor of Costantynnoble, and Gaheries and sir Ewein the
sone of kynge Vrien, and Ewein avoutres, and Ewein de lionell,
and Ewein white hande, and Ewein Esclains, and Dodinell the
sauage, and kay destranx and kehedin the litill, and the xl
felowes that were in Carmelide with the kynge Arthur; these
sustened all the bataile a-gein the two thousande that thei myght
not take the thre knyghtes that weren down on foote, and often
thei hem be-raften by fyn force; but now thei ben moche at the
werse for thei ben wery and mate for trauaile; and whan Gawein
saugh the myschef and the pereile of his brethern and his
frendes, he seide to the kynge Ban that he be not displesed,
for I se yonder my brother that I moste go for to socour
and to helpe, for I owe not hym to faile for no drede of
deth; and than he shewde to hym theym that were at grete
myschef; and than seide the kynge Ban, "Sir, ride forth,
for this may not be taried;" and tho thei rode as faste as the
horse myght hem bere that thei made the renges to sparble
a-brode, and smyten so tweyne the firste that thei mette, that
thei were deed with-oute respite; and than thei com ther as
Agrauain and Gueheret weren down, and slough hem faste
that thei myght a-reche with a full stroke so that noon durste
hem a-bide, but made hem place the moste hardy and the moste
vigerous, ffor soone were thei knowen for worthy men and
gode knyghtes.  Whan Agrauain and Gueheret saugh the socour
thei lept vp lightly, and eche of hem hente and horse, and

<PB REF="" N="397" ID="pb.397"/>

a shelde aboute her nekke, for I-nowe thei fonde a-boute
hem; and whan thei were vp on horse-bak thei be-gonne
a stronge stour, but Galashin was not all at his ese, ffor he
was yet a-monge the horse feet, and that for thought sore to
Gawein; and he hente a stronge spere and rode thider as
Galashin   <MILESTONE N="140b" UNIT="folio"/>was at soche myschef, and smote in to the presse
so harde that he caste down vij er he myght come ther as
he was, and than he lowed his spere and smote ffrolle so harde
thourgh the shelde that the spere hede stynte at the hauberke
of maile.  But he shof ther on so harde that he bar hym to
the erthe vp-right so rudely that sore he was hurt in the
fallinge; and than he hente the horse by the reynes, and anoon
made Galashin lepe ther-on, that ther-to hadde grete myster
and hadde gode corage, and gode will to be a-venged of his
damage yef he myght come in place; and so he dide
withynne short tyme after; ffor as soone as he was vpon horse he
smote in to the stour amonge his enmyes, wher he saugh the
Duke ffrolle a-gein sette on horse a-monge his knyghtes and his
men; and he ouer-threwe hym a-gein a-monge her hande
dispitously, and rode ouer hym on horsebak vj or vij tymes er he
myght haue eny socour of his men; and at eche tyme that
he didde releve, he smote hym with his swerde to grounde
that his men wende wele that he hadde be deed.</P>
<P>  In this manere dide Galashin ouer-throwe the Duke ffrolle
and hym diffouled er than his men myght come to voide
hym oute of the place were thei neuer so woth for his anoye or
his damage; all that Galashin dide to Duke ffrolle, Gawein
shewde to the kynge Ban, and seide, "Sir, se Galashin, my
cosin, how vigerously he hym conteneth, and boldly a-gein his
enmyes."  "Certes," seide the kynge, "who, that hath this
Galashin in his companye may a-vaunte hym-self that he hath
oon of the beste knyghtes of the worlde."  At this worde that
the kynge Ban spake, saugh thei alle the bateiles remeve;
and that oo peple smyte thourgh the tother all pelley melley
full desirouse eche other to a-paire and to damage with all
her power, ffor the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and


<PB REF="" N="398" ID="pb.398"/>

the kynge Arthur, and the knyghtes of the rounde table haue
so do in the bataile that be fin force thei made the peple of
Pounce Antonye, and Claudas men to resorte vpon the meyne
of the kynge of Gaule and vpon ffrolle of Almayne, and these
hem receyved well as noble men and gode knyghtes that weren
full bolde and hardy and coraiouse in armes.  Ther was grete
entassement of men and of horse vpon hepes; and grete and
huge was the duste that a-roos, that troubled sore theire sightes,
and whan the foure wardes were to-geder assembled, as ye
haue herde, ther was so grete foison of men and horse that
wonder it was to haue seyn; and than thei closed hem to-geder
straite eche to other.  But sore were the peple of Claudas,
a-baisshed of the perilouse metinges that thei hadde sein; and
whan that the kynge Arthur saugh that these were so ascaped
and medled a-monge the tother, he pressed after hem full
vigerously; and than ther was grete bataile and stronge fight, ffor
ther hadde the coward avauntour no nede to sitte by the
chymnyes and a-vaunte that thei hadde nother herte ne
hardynesse to be-holde hem and the prowesses of tho that hadde
lefte londe and rentes to seche and conquere pris and
worthinesse.    <MILESTONE N="141a" UNIT="folio"/>But lete vs speke of the two queenes that ben in
the Castell of Trebes.</P>
<P>  Full grete prowesse dide Arthur and his companye of the
rounde table; and the kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors
were nothinge at soiour, ne sir Gawein and his felowes, but
dide soche occision of peple that alle the felde were couered
of deed peple and wounded; and ther was so grete noyse,
and so grete cry, that foure myle oon myght here the sound
of hornes and trumpes; and whan thei of Trebes herde the
cry and the shoute of peple, thei merveiled sore what it myght
be, and wente vpon the walles for to se the merveiles; and
the tidinges ther-of com to the two queenes that thei also
become to the walles of the tower and be-helden oute of the
wyndowes on high down in to the meedes and saugh the greteste
nombre of peple that euer thei hadde seyn; and sye the dragon
that Kay bare, that caste thourgh his mouthe so grete flames of


<PB REF="" N="399" ID="pb.399"/>

fire that all the heire that was thikke of duste wax all reade
ther as the dragon wente; and whan the ladyes and the peple
of the town saugh that baner that neuer thei hadde seyen
be-forn; thei hem blesseden for the wonder that thei hadden, and
than thei dide enquere, and asked what peple thei were, and
to whom that baner be-longed, and whan the messager com
to the bataile he mette with a knyght of the ream of logres
that dide of his helme for to take a-newe, for his was all to
rente, and the knyghtes name was Bretell; and the squyer com
to hym and hym salude, and Bretell him ansuerde a-gein full
debonerly.  "Sir," seide the squyer, "I praye yow entirely
that ye will telle me what peple ye be, that fight so with the
peple of this hoste, yef it yow not displese for to telle;"
"ffeire frende," seide Bretell, "now maist thow sey to hem
ther with-ynne the Castell that yow haue hider sente.  That is
the kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors of Gannes that haue
brought the kynge Arthur of the grete Breteigne for to rescewe
their londes and theire contreyes from theire enmyes, that with
wronge and synne be entred; but now is come the terme that
thei shull be quyte of her merite, yef god kepe the force and
the power of kynge Arthur, and lo ther is his baner with the
dragon that the stiwarde bereth;" and whan the squyer
vnderstode this, he comaunded hym to god, and thanked hym of
that he hadde hym seide, and returned glad and myry for the
tidinges that he hadde herde, and thought longe till he hadde
it tolde the two queenes that were sustres, and rode as faste as
the horse myght hym bere, till he com to the castell; but for no
askinge that eny man cowde hym demaunde wolde he nothinge
telle, saf that he seide who that will ought wite, lete hym come
to the paleyse, and thus he passed forth; and whan the ladies
saugh hym come, thei com agains hym for the grete plente
of peple that thei saugh him folowinge, and whan he com
be-fore the ladies, he tolde hem the tidinges so lowde, that alle
that hym suwed myght it well vndirstonde, and hem tolde like
as Bretell hadde hym   <MILESTONE N="141b" UNIT="folio"/>seide; and whan the ladies herde these
tidinges, and thei that were with-ynne the place wiste it was


<PB REF="" N="400" ID="pb.400"/>

the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors that hadden brought
the kynge Arthur, theire lorde; thei were full of ioye and
yeden vp to the walles for to se the grettest bataile that euer
thei hadde seyn be-forn, and thei foughten longe that thei weren
wery for traueile bothe oon <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> other.  But thei of the Castell
hadde but litill while be-holden the bateile, whan thei saugh
come oute of the foreste of brioke foure baners that com full
softe oon after another the space of a bowe draught, and whan
the baners approched ner, thei knewe the baner of Antyaume
the senescall of Benoyk; and the seconde, Grascien of Trebes;
and the thridde, Pharien; and the fourthe, Leonce of Paerne;
and whan thei of the Castell saugh hem thei weren full gladde,
and fayn wolde haue issed oute yef thei myght haue hadde
licence; ffor ther-ynne were gode knyghtes and worthi men;
but it was hem deffended as dere as thei loved theire lyves, and
Antyaume approched faste; and the kynge Ban be-helde and
saugh comynge these batailes, and knewe hem well, and shewde
hem to sir Gawein.  "Sir," quod he, "nowe in shorte tyme
shull oure enmyes be put bakke, and fayn to take flight for I
se ther my baners that brynge vs riche socour, and thei be
moche to alowe;" "and where ben thei?" seide Gawein.  "Sir,"
seide the kynge Ban, "lo hem yonder," and shewde hym with
his swerde, and whan that hem saugh he knewe well ther was
gret strength of peple.</P>
<P>  Than seide Gawein, "sir, now lete vs with-drawe a litill
a-bakke, and seche out oure frendes and felowes, till
that we haue hem founden, and assembled; ffor it may not faile
but that ther shall be grete diffoulinge of oure enmyes whan we
be alle to-geder; and lete vs be all be-forn ther as ye suppose,
whiche wey thei will turne, and wite ye why I sey it; ffor whan
thei com ther as we be enbusshed that than thei may be sore
chastised, that whan the Romanys come in to theire contre that
thei may say and recorde that thei haue nother mette with
ribaudes ne cowardes; and a-nother tyme to be well ware for to
entre in to oure londes, and in to the fees of kynge Arthur,
of grete Breteyne, and lete hem well wite that in the fin thei

<PB REF="" N="401" ID="pb.401"/>

shull it not reioyse."  "Sir," seide the kynge, "I will it be at
youre volunte," and with that thei departed and drowgh a-side
oute of the bataile, and the knyghtes of the rounde table alther
firste, and the kynge Arthur, and the kynge Bohors, and after
the xl knyghtes that were sowdiours in Carmelide; and after
the xvj newe knyghtes, and whan thei were assembled, thei
were thre hundred knyghtes that weren full noble, and worthi
men, ffor thei were the flour of the hoste, and in the while that
thei were thus disseuered, so be hem-self Antyaume, the senescall,
smote in to the bataile with as grete randon as horse myght
renne, and ther was many a spere spent, and many a sore stroke
of suerdes.    <MILESTONE N="142a" UNIT="folio"/>Ther was the signe cried lowde of the kynge Ban,
and of the kynge Bohors of Gannes, and ther was many leide
deed to the grounde of men and of horse, whan that Grascien
com so harde vpon hem that thei moste nede forsake place and
spredde a-brode in the felde, and than be-gan the bataile so fell
mortall that many a fre modres childe lay stiked, and slayn
that litill hadde it deserued, where-of holy cherche was lessed
full sore of xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> thousande peple that ther was slain of oon, and
other and all that was for the vntrouthe of the kynge Claudas,
that after er he dyed he hadde euell myschef; ffor he starf in
grete age disherited as the story witnesseth; that Bohors toke
so grete vengaunce after that Launcelot hadde the reame of
Logres in hande, after the deth of kynge Ban, and the deth of
kynge Arthur; ffor he toke the heed all white hoor in the
foreste of Darmauntes, where he mette hym in gise of a
palmer; ffor he was departed oute of the reame with-oute
knowinge of eny man with thre knyves wher-with he wolde
haue morthered in treson, Bohors, and Lyonell, his brother,
that were so noble and hardy, as the tale shall shewe yow
heere-after; and ye shull here how thei were kept and
norisshed by Nymyane, the lady de lak that Launcelot brought
vp tenderly till he was a knyght.  But now of these maters
cesseth at this tyme, and repeire to speke of the bateile,
how the hostes fighten in the playn felde be-fore the castell
of Trebes.


<PB REF="" N="402" ID="pb.402"/>
</P>
<P>  Full grete was the bataile and the stour mortall, where as
these wardes of Benoyk were entred, and medled with
theire enmyes a-gein the peple of ffrolle, Duke of Almayne, and
agein the peple of Pounce Antonye, that alle were entermedled
with the peple of Arthur, that foughten full harde on that oo
part and the tother; but whan thei were spradde a-brode in the
felde oon cowde not well sey who hadde the better, <CHOICE><CORR>ffor</CORR><SIC>ffor ffor</SIC></CHOICE>   thei
on Claudas side were yet xxxv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of fightinge men, and thei
on kynge Arthurs side were xxviij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and so thei helde hem
som-what peringall; ffor the thre hundred knyghtes were
drawen oute on a part, and a-mended theire helmes, and
refresshed theire bodyes, and as soone as thei were departed the
peple of Claudas recouered, and drof hem bakke of the reame
of Logres more than thre bowe shote fro the castell, and of fin
force made hem forsake place, and the tentes and pavilouns that
thei hadden take, and sesed; but in short tyme after the dedes
wente all other wise, while that the Romayns, and the
Almaynes, and the peple of Gaule, and of la desert peyned hem
to discounfite <SURPLUS>the</SURPLUS>    theym of the reame of logres and of litill
Bretayne, that moche hadde I-hadde the worse, and all day
be-fore hadde the better.  Thei merveiled sore where theire
prowesse were be-come; but thei were not ther that hadde don
the merveiles in armes all the day   <MILESTONE N="142b" UNIT="folio"/>be-fore, and therfore were
thei gretly discounforted; ffor thei knewe of hem no tidinges,
and eche man <CHOICE><CORR>hym</CORR><SIC>hy</SIC></CHOICE> peyned sore to diffende his body, for well
thei wende that thei hadde be deed that were wonte in euery
nede hem to recouer, and while thei were in this turment
Com Pharien of Gannes, with v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and whan
Claudas saugh hem come, he knewe hem wele be the baner that
ofte hadde hym greved in many dedes.  Than he seuered a part
of his peple, and seide to Pounce Antonye and to ffrolle that
thei sholde haue mynde to do well, and breke her enmyes; "and
I shall go a-geins hem that I se newe comen, and yef I may
do so moche that I may putte hem to flight, we shall delyuer
vs wele of the surpluys; and I do yow to wite that it is the


<PB REF="" N="403" ID="pb.403"/>

man that moste in this worlde hath me greved that hem doth
gyde, and yef it myght so be that he were take or slayn, thei
hadde loste oon of her beste membres."  With that departed the
kynge Claudas with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and rode agein Pharien
with her sheldes be-fore her brestes, with  speres in fewtre and
helmes enclyned; and Pharien com ageins hem boldely as he
that was vigerouse, and of grete herte, and a wise werreour,
and also a trewe knyght and moche of stature; and whan thei
approched nygh thei lete renne to-geder as faste as horse
myght hem beren, and at that metynge were many throwe
to the grounde that neuer roos after; but at grete myschef were
the peple of pharien; ffor Claudas hadde x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and he hadde but
v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; but yet ther was stronge bataile, and sore fightinge; ffor
Phariens men were newe comen, and Claudas men were
somewhat trauayled, so that thei loste more than dide Pharien, and
yef thei hadde not be so many thei hadden alle be slain or
discounfited; but in the ende Pharien be-houed to drawe bakke
towarde the foreste fro whens he was comen, and whan Claudas
saugh hem goinge he wende well all hadde ben venquysed, and
kepte hem so short that thei hadde no power to recouer; and
that made Pharien so wo that ner he yede oute of witte, and
he cried, Gannes ofte, and many tymes the signe of kynge
Bohors; but it a-vayled nought, but the preised knyghtes wente
gentilmanly, of whom he hadde plente; ffor thei a-bode with
Pharien be-hynde hem that fledden, and yaf many grete strokes
that oon for the tother, but in the fin were thei euell ledde,
till that leonce the lorde of Paerne hem socoured right
vigerousely; and Claudas and his men were so anguysshous vpon
hem that thei desired for to discounfite, that er thei wiste Leonce
smote in a-monge hem so harde that mo than a thousande he
threwe to grounde, that fewe of hem a-roos after, for many of
hem were deth wounded, and than thei that fledde recouered
a-gein vigerously, as thei hadde not smyten no stroke of all the
day.  Ther was the bataile crewell and mortall on bothe sides,
and on that othir side full harde foughten the peple of the
reame of longres a-gein the thre princes, and grete slaughter ther

<PB REF="" N="404" ID="pb.404"/>

was on bothe parties; but sore were thei of the reame of logres
discounfited, whan thei saugh not hem that sholde hem gouerne,
and gyde, and yef ther hadde not ben   <MILESTONE N="143a" UNIT="folio"/>many goode and worthy
men alle hadde thei be discounfited, and driven oute of the
felde; and Merlin that all this knewe wiste that thei were thus
entirprised, he com thider as the kynge Ban, and the kynge
Bohors, and sir Gawein and his felowes were enbusshed, and
to hem he seide, "What, sirs, be ye come in to this countre to
be-holde the turmentis, and the prowesses of the knyghtes of
this cuntrey.  Now trewly ye be worthy to haue grete blame
for youre peple haue moche losse hadde seth ye wente from
the bataile, and sore thei ben affraide that thei may not yow
seen ne here of no tidinges, and for goddes love loke youre
soiour be so dere to hem yolden that thei that ascape from
youre handes may sey that thei of the reame of logres be nother
knaues ne harlottes, but worthi men and goode knyghtes; and
ye, sir," quod he to kynge Arthur and to kynge Bohors, "is this
the werre and the helpe, that ye do to youre frendes that haue
putte hem-self in a-uenture of deth for youre sake in many
a nede, as ye well knowe ther as alle other haue yow failed,
and ye be come hider to hide yow for cowardise; and wite
it well it shall be to yow grete reprof of moche peple, and
of yowre love more than eny other, that is, of Gonnore, the
doughter of kynge Leodogon of Carmelide, whan she knoweth
how ye haue spedde."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge vndirstode the worde of Merlin, he
bowed down the heed for shame; but he spakke no
worde er he hadde yoven a grete sigh, and he hadde grete
drede lest Merlin were toward hym wroth.  After that, Merlin
yede to Gawein, and his felowes, and seide, "Sirs, where be
now the grete prowesses that ye were wonte to atise oon to
another er ye were knyghtes, and than afterwarde ye seiden
ye wolde come turney with youre enmyes, and se how thei
cowde bere armes; and now ye seyn hem goode knyghtes and
sure, and for the drede that ye haue of hem be ye come hider
yow to hiden, and ye ne haue nother herte ne hardynesse


<PB REF="" N="405" ID="pb.405"/>

hem to a-bide."  And than he seide to kynge Ban and his
brother, "And ye lordynges what be ye come to seche in this
contrey that sholde be wise and goode knyghtes and hardy; and
well ye haue it proved that men knewe well I-nough longe
tyme past, but whi haue ye trowed these cowardes that ben
here that haue made yow here to hiden, whan ye sholde delyuer
hem that for yow ben in a-venture of deth, for to helpe delyuer
youre londe of youre enmyes; ffor thei may well sey whan
thei come in to her contrey, that thei haue be in sory seruise
whan ye haue hem lefte in her moste nede that thei hadde of
yowe."  "Trewly, sir," seide the kynge Ban, "we ne did it
but for good."  Quod Merlin, "How-so-euer ye do, euell
haue ye wrought, and therfore loke that the damage that
thei yow haue don be right, dere I solde that thei that yow
ascape haue no cause for to a-vaunten."  "Certes, sir," seide
Gawein, "as for me, I knowe well I haue don right euell,
not for than I shall lete hem well wite that I am not hidde,
yef in me be so moche valoure, though I sholde be deed or
all to hewen, and er I departe that shall thei knowe bothe
the more and the lesse.  Ne neuer cowardise that I shall do
shall neuer the kynge Arthur, myn oncle, be repreved,   <MILESTONE N="143b" UNIT="folio"/>yef
god will while that I lyve, and therfore my frendes and my
felowes and my bretheren, yef ye will be putte oute of blame
seweth me; ffor soone shall be shewed that for cowardise I
am neyther rested ne hidde."</P>
<P>  Than gan Merlin to laugh, and rode to Kay, the stiwarde,
and hente the dragon oute of his hande, and seide he
was not worthy to bere it; ffor the baner of a kynge sholde
not ben hidde, and namly in bataile, but to be born in the
formest fronte; and than Merlin rode, forth and cried with
lowde voyse, "Now lete se who shall me sewen, ffor soone
shall be shewed who is a knyght."  And whan the kynge Ban
saugh hym go, he seide to kynge Bohors, his brother, that
Merlin hath be a full noble man, and thus seide many of hem,
and with-oute faile he was full of merveilouse prowesse and
strengthe of body, and grete, and longe of stature; but broun he


<PB REF="" N="406" ID="pb.406"/>

was, and lene, and rough of heer, more than a-nother man; but
he was full well furnysshed of body and of membres, and a
grete gentilman on his moder be-halue; but of hys fader I
sey yow no more, for I-nough ye haue herde; but we finde
not that euer he leyde honde on eny man for to do harme;
but ofte whan he was in prees of peple, and bar the baner,
with the breste of his horse he bar down, bothe men and
horse.  Whan Merlin hadde take the dragon out of Kayes hande he
rode formeste vpon a blakke horse that was stronge and swyfte,
and whan he approched nygh the bateile he drof in a-monge
hem so harde, that alle thei fremysshed and brunt ther as
Pounce Antony faught, that sore hym peyned for to discounfite
hem of Logres, and well he wende that alle the beste knyghtes
hadde be slain, and therfore were thei full of hevynesse in the
castell of Tebres, and ronne to armes moo than xxvii squyers,
and issed oute alle on horsbakke, and Banyns hem ledde that
was godsone to kynge Ban, and sone to Grascien of Trebes,
and he was yet but xx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> yere of age, and was of grete
hardynesse, and a-noon smyten in to the bataile and dide right well
as of squyers for knyghtes were ther noon, and yef that thei
hadde not come so soone the other were euen at discounfiture.</P>
<P>  Than com Merlin and his companye, that were mo than
a thousande, what oon and other, and he bar the dragon
in his hande that yaf thourgh his throte so grete braundon of
fier that the eir that was blakke of the duste and powder be
com all reade; and thei that neuer hadde it sein be-fore seide
it shewde well that oure lorde was wroth with hem whan he
made soche a signe to a-pere, and than gan the chaunce to
chaunge fro hem that hadde the better; ffor as soone as thei
were comen, thei dide soche maistries of armes, that alle were
a-basshed that weren hem a-geins, ffor ther dide the kynge
Arthur wondres, for he caste his shelde at his bakke, and hilde
his swerde in bothe hondes that was of grete bounte, and slough
so many that noon myght a-gein hym endure; and the boke
seith   <MILESTONE N="144a" UNIT="folio"/>that he slough mo than two hundred, where-of was grete
harme to cristin that ther were so many deed, and all that


<PB REF="" N="407" ID="pb.407"/>

was for the reprof that Merlin hym yaf, and he hilde the
reyne of his bridill in his lefte arme, and lete hym go ther
as he wolde, and also the kynge Ban and the Bohors dide
merveiles; ffor sore thei hem peyned to be a-venged of her
enmyes, and were goode knyghtes and hardy, and euer hadde
be a-bove alle the knyghtes that hadde I-ben in theire tyme.</P>
<P>  Now seith the booke that the kynge Arthur was so depe
paste in to the bateile, that they wiste not where he
was be-come, and so was the kynge Ban and his brother, and
whan the knyghtes of the rounde table it wisten their gan
make soche a disray a-monge hem that noon a-bode other, and
so dide the xl knyghtes that ye haue herde rehersed, and the
xvij yonge knyghtes, and be-gonne so sharpe medle, eche for
other, that noon wiste which wey that thei turned, and ofte
eche of hem loste other that day, and many tymes thei metten
agein; at that returne dide Segramor wondres a-monge his enmyes,
for the storye seith that he was oon of the beste knyghtes of
the hoste; and so dide Galashin that often was he shewed, and
mustred with the fynger on bothe sides, and so dide Ewein
that no man nede sech a beter knyght, and the thre brethern
of Gawein that all day helde to-geder that for nothinge wolde
departe, and wonderly well were thei preised; and on that other
side foughten the knyghtes of the rounde table that noon
myght haue don better, and Adragain and Nascien and Hervy
de revill made the renges to tremble ther as thei wente and
com; but ouer alle other dide sir Gawein well that was so
depe in a-monge his enmyes that noon cowde sey where he
was seth he from hem departed; and thei sought hym sore vp
and down on euery side, and Gawein serched so the renges
that he mette Randolf the Senescall of Gaule, that a-noon he
ran vpon hym, for he was a goode knyght and hardy, and
Gawein hym smote in entirpassinge thourgh the helme to the
sculle, and the horse bar hym forth and the suerde descended
on the horse chyne, and kutte it a-sonder, that bothe fill on
oon hepe; and than happed he mette Dodinell the sauage,
and Kehedin the litill, in his wey that were smyten down of

<PB REF="" N="408" ID="pb.408"/>

her horse, and Pounce Antony kepte hem right short, and whan
Gawein saugh hem at soche myschef he turned that wey, and
made soche stightlynge a-monge hem that alle dide resorte
bakke wheder thei wolde or noon, and these lept lightly to
theire horse, ffor their fonde I-nowe in the place, and than thei
helde hem a-boute Gawein as longe as thei myght; but soone
thei haue hym loste that thei ne wiste where he was be-come.</P>
<P>  Grete was the stour and harde bataile be-fore the castell
of Trebes, for the knyghtes of the rounde table dide
maistres as thei yede sechinge the kynge Arthur thourgh the
bateile, but thei cowde hym not fynde for he was so fer from
hem meddelinge with   <MILESTONE N="144b" UNIT="folio"/>ffrolle and Pounce Antony, that hadde
in her companye vij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> knyghtes of the beste of her hoste, and
ther the kynge Arthur hadde with hem sharpe medle; but
noon ne durste abide his strokes, and yet he was with-outen
shelde, and he griped his suerde in bothe hondes, and whom
that he raught a full stroke was so harde smyten that noon
armure was his warante fro deth, and whan Pounce Antony
and ffrolle hym sien, a-noon thei ronne vpon hym, and he faught
with hem full harde, and many he slough and maymed a-boute
hym, and than fill that Gawein com that way with suerde in
honde, and thei than fledde on euery side, for his strokes
durste not thei abide were thei neuer so hardy, and whan he
saugh Arthur, his oncle, that faught with Pounce and ffrolle,
and with hem xx knyghtes, and ffrolle hadde hym smyten
with a spere be-twene the shuldres that he made hym to
enclyne on his horse nekke, and yef the spere hadde holden
he hadde fallen to grounde; and whan Gawein saugh the stroke
that he hadde yoven his vncle he was ny wode for ire, than
he putte vp his suerde and spronge in a-monge the Almaynes,
and raced a spere from a knyghtes hondes so felly that he
fill to grounde, and ther-with rode to ffrolle, and whan he
saugh hym come he glenched for the stroke and girde in to
the thikkest presse, and Gawein hym chaced that lightly wolde
not hym leve; but ffrolles knyghtes smote be-twene hem two,
but Gawein hym smot so rudely thourgh the shelde and the


<PB REF="" N="409" ID="pb.409"/>

hauberke a-gein the lifte shulder that the heed and the shafte
shewed on that other side, and he swowned for peyne that
he felte, and his men assembled a-boute hym, and grete doell
made, for well thei wende he were deed delyuered.</P>
<P>  Whan ffrolle was vp of swownynge he made the tronchon
to be pulde oute, and to bynde his wounde that sore
bledde, and lept on his horse as well as he myght for sore it
hym greved, and as soone as Gawein saugh hym falle he
returned to his vncle that full harde faught with Pounce Antony,
and with the peple of Randolf, that was remounted; and
Randolf peyned to a-venge the stroke that he hadde of
Gawein.  Ther-with com Gawein in a-monge hem, and smote a-boute
hym on bothe sides, that he hath delyuered his vncle and
dide soche maistres that noon durste his strokes a-bide, ne holde
place a-gein hem two; than fill that Gawein mette Pounce
Antony, and hym soche a stroke on the sholder that the
swerde kutte the boon, and in the ffalinge he hurte hym sore,
and than he smote Randolf thourgh the helme in to the flesshe
that he fill to grounde all blody, that alle men wende he
hadde ben deed; and that the batailes ruseden and were driven
vpon the bataile of kynge Claudas that faught with leonce
of Paerne and Pharien, and whan alle these baners and alle
these bateiles were assembled, thei smyte thourgh the bateile
of Arthur alle entermedled; and ther than was grete harme
on bothe sides, ffor thei that fledden stynted at the bataile
of Claudas, and whan Arthur saugh hem thus go he cleped
Gawein, and seide, "feire nevew, holde yow a-boute me,   <MILESTONE N="145a" UNIT="folio"/>ffor
me semeth that thei be goynge, and therfore kepe yow with
me."  "Sir," seide Gawein, "thei haue right to go, for the
abidinge here for hem is not goode.  But lete vs go faste after
and helpe thei were discounfited."  "In all haste than," seide
the kynge; and while thei helde this talkynge, the Ban and the
kynge Bohors com on with swerdes naked in her handes, all
blody, and chaced and slough all that thei myght a-reche
before hem; and of this happed well to Randolf and to Pounce,
that thei were horsed a-gein er the chace was be-gonne; and


<PB REF="" N="410" ID="pb.410"/>

whan these foure frendes were mette thei made grete ioye,
and than be-gan the chace after the other that fledden, and
hem fill than a-uenture that thei mette thre of her folowes of
the rounde table that well hadde don all the day, and that oon
was Nascien, and that other Adragain, and the thridde hervy
de Rivell, and than were thei vij full noble knyghtes and
hardy; and it was past noone, and the sonne was high and
hoot whan the chace be-gan, and kay fonde the kynges shelde
on the grounde liggynge, and he it saugh he hadde grete drede
that the kynge were deed, and made a squyer take the shelde,
and badde hym folowe after hym, for he wolde loke yef he
cowde finde kynge Arthur.</P>
<P>  And euer he folowed the chace a-monge other that stynte,
neuer till thei come vpon the bateile of Claudas ther
thei stynte longe, ffor thei were moche peple, and kay folowed
so the chace till he fonde the kynge Arthur and the kynge
Ban and his brother, and he was right gladde that he hadde
hem so founden, and yede to hange his shelde aboute his nekke;
and than com Merlin with the dragon, and cried, "Now on hem,
gentill knyghtes, for alle be thei discounfited."  And Gawein
hadde hente a spere, and spronge be-fore and smote the kynge
Claudas, that he perced the shelde and hauberke, and thourgh
the lifte flanke, and shof ther-on so harde that he bar hym to
grounde vpright, and rode ouer hym on horse-bak, that Claudas
swowned for sorowe; and Gawein leide honde to his swerde
and smote in to the thikkest of the presse, and passed thourgh
the stour as thikke as thei weren entassed, and  his felowes
spake moche of the prowesse that thei saugh hym do; and
Claudas men ronne for to rescowe theire lorde the more and
the lesse, and drough hym oute of the presse with grete peyne,
and sette hym on horse, and ther-with com Agrauain, and
Gueheret, and Gaheries, that wonderly well hadde don all the
day, and whan thei saugh Claudas men assembled thei smote
on hem so harde that thei made hem remeve place.  Ther
was the kynge Claudas a-gein born to grounde, and wounded
in thre places with-oute the wounde he hadde of Gawein that

<PB REF="" N="411" ID="pb.411"/>

ner he was the deth, and foule diffouled a-monge the horse
feet; but yet his men haue rescowed hym, but firste hadde
thei grete losse.</P>
<P>  Grete was the bateile in the medowes be-fore Trebes ther
as Claudas was vn-horsed, and remounted a-gein, and
than fill that her bateiles sparbled a-brode, and that oon smote
in a-monge that other, and tho departed Pounce Antony, and
ffrolle the Duke of   <MILESTONE N="145b" UNIT="folio"/>Almayne, and Randolf of Gaule, and the
kynge Claudas so euyll araied, that vn-nethe myght thei ride,
and the other were not alle in hele, and whan thei saugh the
losse and the damage vpon hem so grete thei were nygh wood
for anger, and asked what wey thei sholden goo.  "Sirs,"
seide Claudas, "I rede we go to the desert, for that is the
beste repeire that we haue; and the nexte, and we shull go
by the foreste in the shadowe vndir molait, and olde wey that
I knowe; but I am so euell a-raied that euell may I endure
to ride," and while thei spake thus com alle the bateiles
to-broken that oon vpon the tother.  Than be-gan the chace so
grete, and the duste to a-rise, that thei knewe not whiche wey
to turne; and the kynge Bans men ouer-threwe and slough so
many, that all the felde was strowed full of deed bodyes and
wounded.  And the kynge Bohors men wente be-fore to the
passages, that thei knewe as soone as thei saugh this
discounfiture, and Arthurs men hem enchaced full harde and strayte
and slowgh, and toke whom thei wolden, and ther the chace
endured in this maner all the day till nyght; and ther thei
hadde prisoners grete plente, and the kynge Claudas, and
Pounce Antony, and Randolf, and ffrolle kepte hem-self as well
as thei cowde; but litill peple thei ledde, ffor the booke seith
that of lx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that thei were at the bygynnynge ne ascaped not
the haluendell, ne thei ledde not x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, but fledde thourgh the
wilde foreste to saue theire lyves.




</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.23"><PB REF="" N="412" ID="pb.412"/>
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXIII. 
<LB/>THE DREAM OF THE WIFE OF KING BAN; THE DREAM OF JULIUS CESAR, EMPEROR OF ROME.

</HEAD>
<P>  Thus were the foure princes discounfited, as ye haue herde
be the witte of Merlin, and whan thei hadde chaced
hem to the nyght, thei returned with grete plente of prisoners,
and com be-fore the castell of Trebes, where thei were loigged in
tentes and pavilouns of thiers that were discounfited, and made
grete ioye and feste all the nyght, for thei fonde the loigginges
well stuffed of all that neded to man, that nothinge failed, and
whan thei were herberowed that nyght wacched the hoste Pharien
and Grascien, that thei were not assailled of somme maner peple,
and the kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors ledde the kynge
Arthur and sir Gawein and the knyghtes of the rounde table,
and the xl knyghtes that ye haue herde named, and the newe
knyghtes in to the castell of Trebes where he made to hem
grete ioye and feste, and were well iijC knyghtes of the contrey;
and that nyght were thei well serued of all that
be-hoved.  But who that was gladde or noon ther was noon like to the
ioye of the two queenes that were sustres, whan thei saugh
theire two lordes that thei hadde so longe desired for to seen,
and thei were yonge ladyes, and of grete bewte; and gretly
thei hem peyned to honour the kynge Arthur, and alle his
companye, wher-to sholde I tarie to reherse theire seruise and
the ese of softe beddes that thei hadde that nyght, ffor thei
were serued richely as worthi men, and after soper thei wente
to reste for ther-to hadde thei nede, ffor thei were wery for
trauaile that thei hadde that day suffred; and Arthur and
Gawein, and Segramor, and Ewein, and Dodinell, and Kay,
and Antor lay in a feire chamber by hem-self, and with hem

<PB REF="" N="413" ID="pb.413"/>
<MILESTONE N="146a" UNIT="folio"/>
was Merlin that from hem that nyght wolde not departe;
and the knyghtes of the rounde table, and the newe knyghtes,
and the xl felowes layn in other chambers.  And whan the
kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors hadde hem loigged at ese
thei wente to bedde with their wiffes, and lefte grete torches
brennynge be-fore hem in chambres.  That nyght shewed the
two kynges grete love to theire wiffes.  That nyght the queene
Heleyne conceyved a childe by her lorde the kynge Ban, and
whan thei were on slepe the wiff of kynge Ban fill in to a
merveilouse drem that longe endured, that sore she was
a-feerde whan she dide a-wake, ffor she semed that she was on
a high mountayn, and saugh a-boute her grete plente of bestes
of all maner kendes, that were in a feire pasture of grene grasse;
and whan thei hadde longe tyme fedde hem on the herbes,
ther roos a-monge hem a grete noyse, that thei ronne that oon
vpon the tother to dryve oute of the pasture, and thei turned
in to two pastures; and the two partes wente on oon side and
hem ledde a grete lyon full huge and merveillouse, and on
that other side where as were not so many by the haluendell
was a grete crowned lyon maister leder, but he was not so
grete as the tother.  This lyon crowned hadde in his companye
xviij lyonsewes crowned, whereof eche of hem hadde lordshippe
and domynacion ouer the tother bestes that were turned to
the lyon crowned; and that other lyon that was not crowned
hadde with hym xxx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> lyonsewes that alle were crowned, whereof
eche of hem hadde domynacion of a parte of the bestes that
were drawe toward the lyon that was vncrowned, and whan
these beestes were thus disseuered and departed, she loked
toward the crowned lyon, and saugh iiij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> boles that alle were
teyed be the nekkes be-fore a grove, and ete at a rakke small
grasse and herbes that was newe mowen; and for the lyon
vn-crowned semed thei hadde better pasture with the crowned
lyon than hadde he, he ran upon hym for envye for to
bereve hym his pasture, and toke a partie of his bestes that he
made thre grete hepes, and thei lepe to fight with the crowned
lyon that hadde his bestes departed in to xviij mouncels, and


<PB REF="" N="414" ID="pb.414"/>

in eche mouncell was a lyonsewe that hadde lordshippe ouer hem
to gouerne hem and gide, and the iiij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> boles that weren full
fierce and full prowde and the xviij mouncels were with the
crowned lyon, and smote be-twene hem the grettest bateile that
she euer hadde seyn or herde speke; but in the fyn the bestes
with the crowned lyon be-houed to turne bakke, and the
crowned lyon was sore a-dredde to lese his pasture; and while
these beestes fought thus, as ye haue herde, the lady semed
that a grete leopart full fierce and the moste prowde that euer
was seyn, com oute of hir right thigh, and wente through
a grete valey that was right depe, and whan he was entred
in to the valey, the lady semed that a grete blaste toke a-wey
her sight that she wiste not where he was be-come; and whan
she   <MILESTONE N="146b" UNIT="folio"/>hadde hym loste he turned toward the beestes that yet
were fightinge, and saugh that the crowned lyon and his bestes
hadde moche the werse, and whan the leopart com oute of
a grete foreste that was sauage, he be-hilde the bataile of the
beestes full longe; and whan he saugh the crowned lyon hadde
the werse, he yede to helpe hym, and ran vpon the beestes
of the lyon vn-crowned that faught with hem so fiercely, that
he made hem resorte bakke, and as longe as he was a-gein
hem myght thei neuer haue the better of the bataile, and
whan the lyon that was vn-crowned saugh he myght not haue
the better while he was a-gein hym, he made departe the
bataile and a-queynte hym with the leopart, till he drough hym
on his partye, and ledde hym with hym.  And the thridde
day be-gan a-gein the bateile of the beestes as it hadde be
by-forn, and the leopart was with the lyon that was
vn-crowned; and the beestes fought so to-geder, that the crowned
lyon turned to discounfiture, and he made signe to the lyon
with-oute crowne that he sholde go crye mercy, and he so
dide, and so was made the pees be-twene the two lyouns in
soche maner that neuer after were in no wratthe to-geder; and
than the lady be-hilde the leopart to wite yef she cowde hym
knowe be eny wey, and at the laste hir thought it was the
same that com oute of hir thigh that was so woxen and


<PB REF="" N="415" ID="pb.415"/>

a-mended, and hir thought that alle the beestes of the bloy
Breteyne to hym enclyned, and all thei of Gannes and of Benoyk,
and whan he hadde alle the lordship of these beestes she knewe
not where he was be-comen.</P>
<P>  Thus she a-boode all nyght in this a-vision till it was day,
and than she a-woke all affraied of the merveile of hir
dreme; and when the kynge Ban saugh hir so affraied he asked
hir what her eyled.  And she tolde hym hir dreme as she
hadde seyn in hir slepe, and whan she hadde all tolde, the
kynge seide ther-of sholde come but goode with goddes
grace.  Than thei a-roos and wente to the firste masse bothe the kynge
and his wif as erly as thei myght; but thei wolde not a-wake
the kynge Arthur so erly, ne his companye that slepten sanourly
for the grete trauaile that thei hadde the day be-fore, and the
kynge Ban praied oure lorde with goode herte that he wolde
yeve hym the deth soche tyme as he wolde it aske.  And this
prayour made he many tymes, till on a nyght in his slepe
a voyse seide that his  prayour sholde be trewe, and that he
sholde haue the deth as soone as he wolde it aske the same
day; but ones be-fore sholde he synne dedly in a-voutre er he
dyed, but ther-of no to be dismayed, for he sholde ther-of well
a-corde with oure lorde, and he was right a goode man in his
feith and creaunce.</P>
<P>  In this dreme that the kynge Ban was, hym thought whan
the voyse departed that it caste soche a crye as it hadde
ben a thunder the grettest and merveillouse that euer he hadde
herde, and he sprange ther-with so sore ther as he hilde the
queene   <MILESTONE N="147a" UNIT="folio"/>in his armes, that nere he hadde fallen oute of the
bedde that was grete and large; and the queene was ther-with
so affraied that she myght speke no worde in a longe while,
and the kynge hym-self so that he wiste not where he
was.  And whan the kynge was come a-gein in to his memorie, he
a-roos and wente to cherche and was shriven, and than herde
the servyse of oure lorde, and euer after as longe as he lyved
was he confessed euery viij dayes, and was hoseled with the
blissed sacrement, and so dide the kynge Bohors, his brother,


<PB REF="" N="416" ID="pb.416"/>

that was a full goode man, and of holy lyvinge.  Thus was
the kynge Arthur in the reame of Benoyk, he and his men
a moneth, and ronne euery day in to Claudas londes, and
wasted it so that longe tyme after myght he haue no power
to a-rise vpon the kynge Ban; but after he a-roos a-geins hym
by the force of Pounce Antony, and by the force of the kynge
of Gaule, as ye shull heren here-after, and turmented so these
two brethern that he lefte hem noo foote londe, that thei died
in pouerte vpon the grounde, and theire yonge wiffes lefte
with-oute comfort that after were nonnes veilled in the abbey
of the royall mynster for drede of Claudas.  Ne neuer after
myght thei haue socour of the kynge Arthur, for he hadde so
moche to done in his contrey that he myght not come at that
tyme, and so the heires that thei be-gat were longe tyme after
disherited.  But in the ende kynge Arthur hem ther-to restored,
and drof Claudas oute of the londe, and yaf hem the reame of
Gaule, as the booke shall reherse.  But now we shall reste to
speke these thinges till tyme com ther-to and returne to telle
how Merlin departed from the kynge Arthur, and how he
certified the kynge Ban and his wif of dyuers dremes that
thei hadden mette.</P>
<P>  Upon a day com the kynge Ban to Merlin, and seide, "Sir,
I am gretly in dispeir of a vision that is be-falle to
me and to my wif, wherefore I haue grete nede of counseile;
and ye be the wisest man that now liveth, and ther-fore yef
it plese yow telle me what it be-tokeneth."  "Certes, sir,"
seid Merlin, "in these two a-visions there is grete significacion,
and it is no wonder though ye thereof be dredfull."  Than
asked the kynge Arthur what a-visiouns ben thei, and Merlin
hym tolde euen as the kynge hadde mette in his dreme, that
the kynge hym-self knewe well he seide trouthe.  Whan the
kynge Arthur and the kynge Bohors and sir Gawein herde the
fierce wordes that Merlin hadde seide, thei merveiled sore what
hit myght signyfie, and thoughten I-nough of many thinges,
and than seide the kynge Arthur, "ye haue tolde what were
the dremes.  Now, yef it plese yow, telle vs the be-tokenynges,

<PB REF="" N="417" ID="pb.417"/>

for it is a thinge that I wolde fayn knowe."  "Sir," seide
Merlin, "of all will I not to yow declare; ne I ought not to
do.  But I shall telle yow a partye that to yow apendeth," and than
he gan to sey,</P>
<P>  "Kynge Ban," quod Merlin, "hit is trouthe that the
lyon that is not crowned be-tokeneth a prince that
is right riche and mighty of londes, and of frendes that shall
  <MILESTONE N="147b" UNIT="folio"/>conquere xxix reames by force, and make come in his
companye alle these xxix kynges crowned; and that other lyon that
she saugh I-crowned that hadde the xviij lyonsewes signyfieth
a kinge that is right myghty that shall have xviij kynges vnder
hym, that alle shall be his liege men; and the iiij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> booles that
she saugh be-tokeneth iiij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> knyghtes, that alle shull be assured
that oon to the tother eche of hem to helpe, and not faile for
no drede of deth, and alle shull thei be the kynges men, and
this prince that I spake of firste shall come vpon this kynge
for to conquere his londe.  But he shall hym diffende as longe
as he may, and whan this prince hath the better of this kynge,
than shall come a knyght vn-knowen that longe hath be loste
and helpe this kynge that the prince may not hym chace oute
of the felde ne discounfite; and this leopart signyfieth this
knyght, ffor like as the leopart fierce and prowde a-bove alle
other bestes, so shall he be the beste knyght that shall be in
hys tyme, and by that knyght shall the pees be made be-twene
the prince and the kynge that so sore shull haue
foughten.  Now," quod Merlin, "haue ye herde your a-vision and the
tokenynge, and now I moste departe for moche haue I to do in
other places," and whan thei hadde I-herde the merveile of the
dreme that Merlin hadde tolde, thei were more a-baisshed and
more pensef than thei were be-fore; and than Arthur asked yef
he wolde declare eny othir wise to theire vndirstondinge, and
he seide, "Nay."</P>
<P>  With that departed Merlin oute of the kynge Bans house,
where-as the kynge Arthur was with grete companye
of knyghtes, and this was on the feeste of seynt John; and Merlin
wente to his love that a-boode hym at the welle, for to holde


<PB REF="" N="418" ID="pb.418"/>

the couenaunt that she hadde with hym I-made, and whan she
hym saugh she made to hym grete chere, and ledde hym in to
the chambres so prively that he was not a-perceyved of no man;
and she asked and enquered hym of many thinges, and he her
taught all her askynge for the grete love that he hadde to
hir; and whan she saugh he loved hir so wele, she asked hym
how she myght make a frende for to slepe and not to a-wake
till that she wolde, and Merlin knewe well all hir thought, and
neuertheles he asked her whi she enquered and ye he wiste it
wele I-nough.  Quod she, "for I wolde make my fader a-slepe
alle the tymes that I wolde speke with yow, whos name is
Dionas, and my moder, that thei aparceyve neuer of yow ne me,
ffor witeth it well thei wolden me sle yef thei parceyved of vs
two ought."  These wordes seide the mayden ofte to Merlin,
and it fill on a day that thei were in a gardin by the fountayne
hem to disporte, and were sette vpon an ympe, and the mayden
made hym to slepe in hir lappe, and hilde her so with hym
that Merlyn loved hir merveillously wele.  Than the maiden
required hym so that he taught hir to make oon slepe, and he
knewe hir menynge right wele; but neuertheles he it hir taugght,
bothe that and many other thinges   <MILESTONE N="148a" UNIT="folio"/>ffor so wolde oure lorde; and
he taught hir iij names that she wrote for to helpe hir-self at
alle tymes whan she sholde with hym ly, that were full of grete
force, ffor neuer as longe as thei were vpon hir, ne myght neuer
man touche her flessly; and fro thens-forth she tysed euer Merlin
to come speke with hir, for he ne hadde no power to dele with
hir a-gein her will, and ther-fore it is seide that woman hath
an art more than the deuell.  Thus Merlin a-bode viij dayes
full with the damesell; but we fynde not in no writinge that
euer he required eny vilonye of hir ne of noon other; but she
it douted sore whan she knewe what he was, and ther-fore she
garnysshed hire so a-gein hym; and in tho viij dayes he taught
hir many wonderfull thinges that eny mortall herte cowde
thinke of, thinges paste and of thinges that were don and seide,
and a partye of that was to come; and she putte hem in
writinge, and than Merlin departed from hire and com to


<PB REF="" N="419" ID="pb.419"/>

Benoyk, where the kynge Arthur rested, that gladde were whan
thei saugh Merlin.</P>
<P>  After that Merlin was repeired fro Benoyk as ye haue herde,
Gawein with a grete companye of knyghtes and men
of armes rode in to Claudas londes, and brake the bourghes and
townes, and sette fire all a-boute, that alle the mene peple fledde
the contrey, and these ronne be-fore the yates of de la desert and
distroyed alle that thei myght fynde, and Claudas ne noon of
hys companye ne durste not meve, and than departed from
Claudas, Pounce Antonye, and ffrolle of Almayne, and Randolf
the senescall of Gaule sory and wroth for the losse and damage
that thei hadden, and swore that neuer sholde thei love the
kynge Ban; and as soone as thei myght be a-venged thei sholde
yelde hym his guerdon as for soche seruise.  But some weneth
to a-venge hym of his shame, and he doth it encrece.  Thus
lefte Claudas pore in the Citee de la desert, ffor he cowde not
haue iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men on horsbak, but after he recouerd all his londe
and was riche, as the storye shall declare here-after, be the
helpe of the kynge of Gaule and of Pounce Antonye, that
repeired from Rome with grete power; but it was in euell
hour, for he was slayn by the handes of kynge Ban be-fore
Trebes.  But Claudas hadde so moche peple that he leide sege
be-fore the Castell as ye shull here afterward, whan tyme
cometh ther-to.</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein and his companye hadde wasted the londe
and the contrey, and taken alle the richesse, he
returned to Benoyk to his vncle; and Merlin was come from his
love and boode after Gawein, and whan he was come thei were
gladde whan thei hym syen, and for the grete richesse that thei
broughten, and ioyfull weren of the victorie that thei hadden;
and on the morowen thei toke theire wey towarde Gannes, a
Citee plentevouse of all goodes, and ther thei were right well
come, for it was right, and the kynge Bohors peyned hym to do
hem honour and well to serue, as he that full well cowde   <MILESTONE N="148b" UNIT="folio"/>it do;
and ther thei soiourned two dayes, and the thridde day thei
rode forth to the Rochell, and ther entred the see.  Whan the


<PB REF="" N="420" ID="pb.420"/>

kynge Arthur, and the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and
sir Gawein sholde entre in to the shippes thei toke Merlin in
counseile, and Merlin hem comaunded that as soone as thei were
a-rived at the porte, in no wise that thei tarye not but two
dayes.  But hastely go theire wey in to the reame of Carmelide,
and lede with hem but thre thousande men of armes, and that
thei be chosen of the beste of the hoste.  "Ffeire frende," quod
Arthur, "shull ye not come with vs; thenke ye not to be at
oure mariage."  "Sir," seide Merlin, "I haue a thinge for to
do that I moste nede performe er I come in to the bloy
Breteyne.  But ye shull but litill space be in the reame of Carmelide, er
I shall be with yow;" with that departed that oon from that
other, and Arthur and hys companye wente towarde the see, but
ther-of moste we reste a-while, and speke of Merlin and his
auenturis.</P>
<P>  As soone as Merlin was departed from Arthur, he wente
in to the forestes of Rome that were thikke and depe,
and in that tyme Julyus Cesar was Emperour; but it was not
that Julyus Cesar that the deed knyght slough in his pavilion
of Perce.  But it was that Julius that Gawein, the nevew of
kynge Arthur, slough in bateile vnder logres at the grete
disconfiture that after was be-twene hym and the kynge Arthur
that hym diffied, and what the cause was <CHOICE><CORR>that Merlin</CORR><SIC>that Merlin that Merlin</SIC></CHOICE>   wente
that wey, it is reson it be declared.  This <CHOICE><CORR>is</CORR><SIC>it</SIC></CHOICE>   throuthe that this
Julyus cezar hadde a wif that was of grete bewte, and she hadde
with hir xij yonge men araied in gise of wymen, with whom
she lay at alle tymes that the Emperour was oute of hir
companye, ffor she was the most lecherouse woman of all Rome;
and for the dredde that theire beerdes sholde growe she lete
a-noynte her chynnes with certeyn oynementes made for the
nones, and thei were clothed in longe traylinge robes, and theire
heer longe waxen, in gise of maydenes and tressed at theire
bakkes, that alle that hem saugh wende wele thei were wymen;
and longe thei endured with the Empresse vn-knowen.  In


<PB REF="" N="421" ID="pb.421"/>

this tyme that the Emperesse ledde this lif, it fill that a mayden
com to the Emperours court that was the doughter of a prince,
and the name of this prince was matan, Duke of Almayne; this
mayden com in semblannce of a squyer, and this matan the
Duke ffrolle hadde disherited and driven out of his londe, and
she com to serue the Emperour, ffor she wiste not where her
fader ne moder were be comen, and she was moche and semly,
and well shapen and demened hir well in all maners that a man
ought, saf only eny vylonye, and neuer was she knowen but for
a man by no semblante, and so a-boode with the Emperour, and
was of grete prowesse, and peyned tendirly to serue well the
Emperour and plesed hym so well that she was lorde and gouernour
of hym and his housolde; and the Emperour hir loved so well that
he made hir knyght atte a feeste of seint John with other yonge
  <MILESTONE N="149a" UNIT="folio"/>squyers, wher-of were mo than CC, and after made hir stiward
of all his londe.  Than the newe knyghtes reised a quyntayne
in the mede of noiron, and be-gonne the bourdinge grete and
huge, and many ther were that dide right wele, but noon so
well as dide Grisandoll, for so she lete hir be cleped; but in
bapteme her name was Anable.  This bourdinge endured all day
on ende till euesonge that thei departed, and Grisandols bar
a-wey the pris a-monge alle other, and whan the Emperour saugh
Grisandoll of so grete prowesse, he made hym stiward of all his
londe and comaunder a-bove alle that ther weren, and Grisandols
was well beloved of riche and pore.  And vpon a nyght after it
fill that the Emperour lay in his chamber with the Emperesse;
and whan he was a-slepe he hadde a vision that hym thought
he saugh a sowe in his court that was right grete be-fore his
paleys, and he hadde neuer seyn noon so grete ne so huge, and
she hadde so grete bristelis on her bakke that it trayled on the
grounde a fadome large, and hadde vpon hir heed a cercle that
semed of fyn golde, and whan the Emperour a-vised hym wele
hym thought that he hadde seyn hir other tymes, and that he
hadde hir norisshed vp; but he durste not sey of trouthe that
she were hys, and while he entended to a-vise hym on this
thinge he saugh come oute of his chamber xij lyonsewes, and


<PB REF="" N="422" ID="pb.422"/>
  
com in to the courte to the sowe, and assailed hir oon after
a-nother, whan the Emperour saugh this merveile he asked his
Barouns what sholde he do with this sowe by whom these
lyonsewes hadde thus leyn, and thei seide she was not worthi to be
conuersaunt a-monge peple, ne that no man sholde ete nothinge
that of hir come, and Iuged hir to be brente, and also the
lyonsewes to-geder; and than a-wooke the Emperour sore affraied
and pensif of this a-vision.  Ne neuer to man ne to wif wolde
he it telle, for he was full of grete wisdom.  On the morowe as
soone as he myght se the day, he a-roos and yede to the mynster
to here messe, and whan he was come a-gein he fonde the barouns
assembled, and hadde herde messe at the mynster and the
mete was all redy; and whan thei hadde waisshen thei satte to
mete, and were well serued.  Than fill that the Emperour fill
in to a grete stodye, wher-fore all the courte was pensif and
stille, and ther was noon that durste sey a worde for sore thei
dredde for to wrathe the Emperour.  But now we moste turne
a litill to Merlin that was come in to the foreste of Romayne
to certefie these thinges and these a-visiouns.</P>
<P>  While that the Emperour satte at his mete a-monge his
Barouns thus pensif, Merlin come in to the entre of
Rome and caste an enchauntement merveilouse, ffor he be-com
an herte the gretteste and the moste merveilouse that eny man
hadde seyn, and hadde oon of his feet be-fore white, and hadde
v braunches in the top, the grettest that euer hadde be seyn,
and than he ran thourgh Rome so faste as all the worlde hadde
hym chaced, and whan the peple saugh hym so renne, and
saugh how it was an herte the noyse a-roos, and   <MILESTONE N="149b" UNIT="folio"/>the cry on
alle partyes, and ronne after grete and small with staves and
axes, and other wepen, and chaced hym thourgh the town, and
he com to the maister gate of the paleys where-as the Emperour
satte at his mete, and whan thei that serued herde the noyse
of the peple, thei ronne to the wyndowes to herkene what it
myght be, and a-noon thei saugh come rennynge the herte and
all the peple after; and whan the herte com to the maister paleys
he drof in at the yate sodeynly, and than he ran thourgh the


<PB REF="" N="423" ID="pb.423"/>

tables a bandon and tombled mete and drynke all on an hepe,
and be-gan ther-in a grete trouble of pottis and disshes; and
whan the herte hadde longe turned ther-ynne he com be-fore the
Emperour, and kneled and seide, "Julius cezar, Emperour of
Rome, wheron thinkest thow, lete be thi stodyinge for it
a-vaileth nought, ffor neuer of thyne a-vision shalt thow not
knowe the trouthe be-fore that man that is sauage the certefie,
and for nought is it that thow stodyest ther-on eny more."
Than the herte hym dressed and saugh the yate of the paleyse
cloos, and he caste his enchauntement that alle the dores and
yates of the paleise opened so rudely that thei fly alle in peces,
and the herte lept oute and fledde thourgh the town, and the
chace be-gan a-gein after hym longe till that he com oute in
to the playn feeldes; and than he dide vanysshe that noon sey
where he be-com, and than thei returned a-gein, and whan the
Emperour wiste the herte was ascaped he was wroth and lete
crye thourgh the londe that who that myght brynge the sauage
man or the herte sholde haue his feire doughter to wif, and half
his reame, yef that he were gentill of birthe, and after his deth
haue all; and lepe to horse many a vailaunt knyght and squyer
of pris, and serched and sought thourgh many contrees, but all
was for nought, ffor neuer cowde thei heere no tidinges of that
thei sought, and whan thei myght no more do thei returned
a-gein.  But euer Grisandols serched thourgh the forestes, oon
hour foreward, another bakke that so endured viij dayes full;
and on a day as Grisandol was a-light vnder an oke for to praye
oure lorde to helpe and to spede for to fynde that he sought, and
as he was in his prayours the herte that hadde ben at Rome
com be-fore hym and seide, "Auenable, thow chacest folye,
ffor thow maist not spede of thy queste in no maner, but I shall
telle the what thow shalt do.  Purchese flessh newe and salt,
and mylke and hony, and hoot breed newe bake, and bringe
with the foure felowes, and a boy to turne the spite till it be
I-nough rosted, and com in to this foreste by the moste vn-couthe
weyes that thow canste fynde, and sette a table by the fier,
and the breed, and the mylke, and the hony vpon the table,

<PB REF="" N="424" ID="pb.424"/>

and hide the and thi companye a litile thens, and doute the
nought that the sauage man will come."</P>
<P>  Than ran the herte a-grete walope thourgh the foreste, and
Grisandol lept to horse and thought well on that the
herte hadde seide and thought in his corage that it was somme
spirituell thinge that by hir right name hadde hir cleped, and
thought well that of this   <MILESTONE N="150a" UNIT="folio"/>thinge sholde come some merveile;
and Grisandol rode forth to a town nygh the foreste vij myle,
and toke ther that was myster, and com in to the foreste ther
as he hadde spoke with the herte as soone as he myght, and
roode in to the deepe of the foreste, where-as he fonde a grett
oke full of leves, and the place semed delitable, and he a-light
and sette theire horse fer thens, and made a grete fier, and sette
the flesshe to roste, and the smoke and the sauour spredde
thourgh the foreste, that oon myght fele the sauour right fer;
and than sette the table be the fier, and whan all was redy thei
hidde hem in a bussh.  And Merlin that all this knewe and that
made all this to be don couertly that he were not knowen drough
that wey that he were not knowen with a grete staffe in his nekke
smytinge grete strokes from oke to oke, and was blakke and
rough for rympled and longe berde, and bar-foote, and clothed
in a rough pilche; and so he com to the fier, ther as the flessh
was rosted, and whan the boy saugh hym come he was so a-ferde
that he fledde nygh oute of his witte; and he this com to the
fier and be-gan to chacche and frote a-boute the fier, and saugh
the mete and than loked all a-boute hym and be-gan to rore
lowde as a man wood oute of mynde, and than be-heilde, and
saugh the cloth spredde and soche mete ther-on as ye haue
herde, and after he be-heilde towarde the fier, and saugh the
flesshe that the knaue hadde rosted that was tho I-nough, and
raced it of with his hondes madly, and rente it a-sonder in peces,
and wette it in mylke, and after in the hony, and ete as a wood
man that nought ther lefte of the flessh; and than he eete of the
hoot breed and hony that he was full and swollen grete, and
somwhat was it colde, and he lay down by the fier and slepte;
and whan Grisandol saugh he was on slepe she and hir felowes


<PB REF="" N="425" ID="pb.425"/>

com as softely as thei myght, and stale a-wey his staffe, and
than thei bounde hym with a cheyne of Iren streytely a-boute
the flankes, and than delyuered hym to oon of the companye by
the tother ende of the cheyne; and whan he was so well bounde
he a-wooke and lept vp lightly, and made semblaunt to take his
staff as a wilde man, and Grisandolus griped hym in his armes
right sore and hilde hym stille, and whan he saugh hym so
bounde and taken, he hilde hym as shamefaste and mate; and
than the horse were brought forth and he was sette vpon oon
of hem, and bounden to the sadell with two bondes, and a man
sette be-hynde hym that was bounde to hym and enbraced hym
by the myddill, and so thei rode forth her wey, and the sauage
man loked on Grisandolus that rode by hym, and be-gan to
laugh right harde, and whan Grisandolus saugh hym laughe he
approched ner and rode side by side, and a-queynted with hym
the beste that he myght, and enquered and asked many thinges,
but he ne wolde nought ansuere, and Grisandol asked why he
lough, but he wolde not telle.  Saf that he seide, "Creature
formed of nature chaunged in to other forme fro hens-forth
be-gilynge alle thinges venimouse as <CHOICE><CORR>serpent</CORR><SIC>sepent</SIC></CHOICE>, holde thi pees, for
nought will I telle the till that I com be-fore the Emperoure."</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="150b" UNIT="folio"/>    With that the sauage man hilde his pees and spake no
more, and rode forth to-geder, and Grisandolus of
this that he hadde seide spake to his companye, and thei seide
that he was wiser than he shewed, and that som grete merveile
sholde falle in the londe.  Thus thei ride spekynge of many
thinges till thei passede be-fore an abbey, and saugh be-fore the
yate moche pore peple a-bidinge almesse, and than the sauage
man lowgh right lowde; and than Grisandol com toward hym
and swetly praide hym to telle wherefore he lough, and he loked
proudly on trauerse, and seide, "Ymage repaired and disnatured
fro kynde, holde thy pees, ne enquere no mo thinges for nought
will I telle the but be-fore the Emperour;" and whan Grisandolus
this vndirstde, he lete hym be at that tyme and no more thinge
hym asked, and here-of spake thei in many maners.  Thus thei
ride forth all day till nyght, and on the morowe till the hour of


<PB REF="" N="426" ID="pb.426"/>

prime, and fill that thei passed by-fore a chapell where a preste
was toward masse, and fonde a knyght and a squyer heringe the
seruyse; and whan Grisandolus saugh this, thei a-light alle the
companye, and entred in to here the masse, and whan the
knyght that was in the chapell saugh the man bounde with
chaynes he hadde merveile what it myght be, and while the
knyght be-heilde the man that was sauage, the squyer that was
in an angle be-hynde the chapel dore come a-gein his lorde, and
lifte vp his hande and yaf hym soche a flap that alle thei in the
chapell myght it here, and than returned thider as he com fro
all shamefaste of that he hadde don, and whan he was come in
to his place he ne rofte no-thinge, for the shame lasted no lenger;
but while he was in returnynge, and whan the sauage man
saugh this, he be-gan to laugh right harde, and the knyght that
was so smyten was so a-baisshed that he wiste not what to sey
but suffred; and Grisandolus and the other companye merveiled
sore what it myght be.  A-noon after the squyer com a-gein to
his lorde, and yaf hym soche a-nother stroke as he dide be-fore,
and wente a-gein in to his place, and the sauage man hym
be-hilde and be-gan to laughe right harde, and yef the knyght
be-fore were a-baisshed, he was than moche more, and the
squyer that hadde hym smyten returned sorowfull and pensif to
the place that he com fro, and hilde hym-self foule disceyved of
that he hadde don, and whan he was in his place he rought
neuer, and Grisandolus, and the companye merveiled right sore,
and herden oute the seruise be leyser, and in the mene while that
thei thoughten vpon these thinges that thei hadde seyn, the
squyer com the thridde tyme and smote his lorde sorer than he
hadde don be-fore, and ther-at lowgh the wilde man sore, and
be that was the masse at an ende, and than Grisandolus and
alle wente oute of the chapell, and the squyer that hadde
smyten his lorde com after and asked Grisandolus what man it
was that thei hadde so bounde, and thei seide that thei were
with Julius cezar, Emperour of Rome, and ledde to hym that
sauage man that thei hadde founded in the foreste, for   <MILESTONE N="151a" UNIT="folio"/>to
certefie of a vision that was shewed hym slepinge.  "But, sir,"


<PB REF="" N="427" ID="pb.427"/>

seide Grisandolus, "tell me wherefore hath this squyer yow
smyten thre tymes, and ye ne spake no worde a-gein, haue ye
soche a custome," and the knyght ansuerde that he sholde it
wite in tyme comynge.</P>
<P>  Than the knyght cleped his squyer and asked hym be-fore
Grisandolus wherefore he hadde hym smyten, and he
was shamefaste, and seide he wiste neuer, but so it fill in his
corage, and the knyght hym asked yef he hadde now eny talent
hym for to smyte, and the squyer seide he hadde leuer be deed,
"but that," quod he, "it fill in my mynde that I myght not kepe
me ther-fro," and Grisandolus lough of the merveile.  Than seide
the knyght that he wolde go to court with hem for to here what
the sauage man wolde sey, and with that thei rode forth on her
wey, and Grisandolus by the sauage mannes side, and whan thei
hadde a-while riden, he asked the wilde man wherfore he lough
so thre tymes whan the squyer smote his lorde, and he loked on
hir a trauerse, and seide, "Ymage repeyred semblaunce of
creature wherby men ben slayn and diffouled rasour trenchaunt
ffountayne coraunt that neuer is full of no springes holde thy pees,
and nothinge of me enquere, but be-fore the Emperour, for nought
will I telle the," and whan that Grisandolus vndirstode the
fell wordes that he spake, he was all a-baisshed and pensef,
and durste not no more enquere, and rode forth till thei come
to Rome, and whan thei entred in to the town, and the peple
hem parceyved thei wente all a-geins hym for to se the man that
was sauage, and the noyse was grete of the peple that folowed,
and be-hilde his facion as longe as thei myght, and so thei
conveyed hym to the paleise, and whan the Emperour herde the
tidinges he com hem a-geins, and mette with hem comynge vpon
the greces, and than com Grisandolus be-fore the Emperour, and
seide, "Sir, haue here the man that is sauage that I to yow
here yelde, and kepe ye hym fro hens-forth for moche peyne haue
I hadde with hym," and the Emperour seide he wolde hem well
guerdon, and the man sholde be well kepte, and than he sente
to seche a smyth to bynde hym in chaynes and feteres, and the
sauage man badde hym ther-of not to entermete, "ffor wite it

<PB REF="" N="428" ID="pb.428"/>

right well," quod he, "I will not go with-oute youre leve," and
the Emperour hym asked how he ther-of sholde be sure, and
he seide he wolde hym asure by his cristyndome.  Quod the
Emperour, "Art thow than cristin?"  and he seide, "Ye
withoute faile."  "How were thow than baptized," seide the
Emperour, "whan thow art so wilde."  "That shall I telle
yow," quod he, "This is the trouthe that my moder on a day
com from the market of a town, and it was late whan she entred
in to the foreste of brocheland, and wente oute her way so fer
that the same nyght be-hoved hir to lye in the foreste, and
whan she saugh she was so a-lone be hir-self she was a-feerde
  <MILESTONE N="151b" UNIT="folio"/>and lay down vnder an oke and fill a-slepe, and than com
a sauage man oute of the foreste and by hir lay, be-cause she
was sool by hir-self.  Durste she not hym diffende, ffor a woman
a-loone is feerfull, and that nyght was I be-geten on my moder,
and whan she was repeired hom, she was full pensif longe tyme,
till that she knewe verily that she was with childe, and bar
me so till I was born in to this worlde and was baptised in
a fonte, and dide me norishe till I was grete, and as soone as
I cowde lyve with-outen hir, I wente in to the grete forestes
for by the nature of my fader be-houeth me thider to repeire,
and for that he was sauage I am thus wilde.  Now haue ye
herde what I am."  "So god me helpe," seide the Emperour,
"neuer for me shalt thow be putte in feteres ne in Irenes
seth thow wilt me graunte that thow will not go with-oute my
leve."  Than tolde Grisandolus how he dide laugh be-fore the
abbey and in the chapell, for the squyer that hadde smyten his
maister, and the dyuerse wordes that he hadde spoken, whan he
asked where-fore he dide laugh, and he seide that neuer wolde
he nought sey till he com be-fore yow, and now is he here, and
therfore aske hym why he hath so often laughed by the wey,
and than the Emperour hym asked, and he seide he sholde it
knowe all in tyme, but sendeth first for all youre barouns and
than shall I telle yow that and other thinges, with that entred
the Emperour in to his chamber and the sauage man and his
prive counseile, and ther thei rested and disported, and spake of


<PB REF="" N="429" ID="pb.429"/>

many thinges, and on the morowe the Emperour sente to seche
his barouns hem that he supposed sonest to fynde, and than thei
come a-noon bothe oon and other from alle partyes.</P>
<P>  On the fourthe day after the sauage man was comen, where
that the lordes were assembled in the maister paleise, and
the Emperour <SUPPLIED>brought in</SUPPLIED> this sauage man and made hym to
sitte down by hym, and whan the barouns hadde I-nough hym
beholden thei asked why he hadde for hem sente, and he tolde hem
for a vision that hym be-fill in his slepynge, "ffor I will that it
be expowned be-fore yow," and thei seide that the significacion
wolde thei gladly heren.  Than the Emperour comaunded this
man to telle the cause why that he was sought, and he ansuerde
and seide that he wolde nothinge telle till that the Emperesse
and hir xij maydones were comen, and she com a-noon with
gladde semblaunce as she that yaf no force of nothinge that
myght be-falle, whan the Emperesse and hir xij maydones were
come a-monge the barouns, the lordes roos a-gein hir and dide
hir reuerence, and as soone as the sauage man hir saugh
comynge he turned his heed in trauerse and be-gan to laughe
as in scorne, and whan he hadde a-while laughed he loked on
the Emperour stadfastly,   <MILESTONE N="152a" UNIT="folio"/>and than on Grisandolus, and than on
the Emperesse, and than on hir xij Maydenys that weren with
hir, and than he turned toward the barouns, and be-gan to
laughe right lowde as it were in dispite, whan the Emperour
saugh hym so laughe he preied hym to telle that he hadde in
couenaunt, and whi that he lough now and other tymes, with
that he stode vp and seide to the Emperour so lowde that all
myght it heren.  "Sir, yef ye me graunte as trewe Emperour
be-fore youre barouns that ben here that I shall not be the werse
ne no harme to me therfore shall come, and that ye will yeve
me leve as soone as I haue yow certefied of youre a-vision I
shall telle yow the trewe significacion," and the Emperour hym
ansuerde and graunted that noon harme ne annoye to hym sholde
be don, ne that he sholde come hym no magre to telle hym that
he was so desirouse for to heren, and that he sholde haue leve
to go whan hym liste.  "But I praye the telle me myn a-vision


<PB REF="" N="430" ID="pb.430"/>

in audience of alle my barouns what it was, and than shall I the
better be-leve the significacion whan thow haste me tolde, of
that I neuer spake to no creature," and he ansuerde as for that
sholde hym not greve, and ther-fore wolde he not lette and
than he be-gan the a-vision.</P>
<P>  "Sir," seide the sauage man to the Emperour, "it fill on
a nyght that ye lay by youre wif that is here, and
whan ye were a-slepe ye thought ye saugh be-fore yow a sowe
that was feire and smothe, and the heer that she hadde on her
bakke was so longe that it trailed to grounde more than a
fadome, and on hir heed she hadde a cercle of goolde bright
shynynge, and yow semed that ye hadde norisshed that sowe
in youre house, but ye cowde it not verily knowe, and ther-with
yow semed that ye hadde hir othir tymes sein, and whan ye
hadde longe thought on this thinge ye saugh come oute of youre
chamber xij lyonsewes full feire and smothe; and thei com by
the halle thourgh the courte to the sowe and lay by hir oon
after a-nother, and whan thei hadde do that thei wolde thei
wente a-gein in to youre chamber; than com ye to youre barouns
and hem asked what sholde be do with this sowe, that ye saugh
thus demened, and the barouns and alle the peple seide she was
nothinge trewe, and thei Iuged to be brent, bothe the sowe and
the xij lyonsewes, and than was the fier made redy grete and
merveillouse in this courte, and ther-ynne was the sowe brente
and the xij lyonsewes.  Now haue ye herde youre sweuene in
the same forme as ye it saugh in your slepinge, and yef ye se
that I haue eny thinge mys-taken, sey it be-fore your
barouns."  And the Emperour seide he hadde of nothinge failed.</P>
<P>  "Sir Emperour," seide the barouns, "seth that he hath
seide what was youre a-vision, hit is to be-leve the
significacion yef he will it telle, and it is a thinge that   <MILESTONE N="152b" UNIT="folio"/>wolde
gladly heren."  "Certes," seide the man, "I shall it declare to
yow so openly that ye may it se, and knowe a-pertly that I yow
shall sey.  The grete sowe that ye saugh signifieth my lady the
Emperesse, youre wif, that is ther; and the longe heer that she
hadde on hir bakke betokeneth the longe robes that she is ynne


<PB REF="" N="431" ID="pb.431"/>

I-clothed; and the sercle that ye saugh on her heed shynynge
be-tokeneth the crowne of goolde that ye made her with to be
crowned; and yef it be youre plesier I will no more sey at this
tyme."  "Certes," seide the Emperour, "yow be-hoveth to sey
all as it is yef ye will be quyte of youre promyse."  "Certes,"
seide man, "than shall I telle yow.  The xij lyonsewes
that ye saugh come cute of a chamber, betokeneth the xij
maydenes that be ther with the Emperesse; and knowe it for
very trouthe that thei be no wymen for it be men, and there-fore
make hem be dispoiled, and ye shull se the trouthe; and as ofte
as ye go oute of the town she maketh hem serue in hir chamber
and in hir bedde.  Now haue ye herde youre a-vision and the
significacion, and ye may se knowe yef that I haue seide to
yow the soth."</P>
<P>  Whan the Emperour vnderstode the vntrouthe that his
wif hadde don, he was so a-baisshed that he spake no
worde a longe while; and than he spake and seide that that
wolde he soone knowe, and than he cleped Grisandolus, and
seide, "Dispoile mo tho dameseles, for I will that alle the barouns
that be here-ynne knowe the trouthe;" and a-noon Grisandolus
and other lept forth and dispoiled hem be-fore the Emperour and
his barouns, and fonde hem formed alle as other men weren; and
than the Emperour was so wroth that he wiste not what to
do.  Than he made his oth that a-noon ther sholde be do Iustice
soche as was right to be a-warded; and the barouns Iuged seth
she hadde don hir lorde soche vntrouthe that she sholde be
brente and the harlottes hanged, and some seide that thei sholde
be flayn all quyk; but in the ende thei acorded that thei sholde
be brente in a fier, and a-noon as the Emperour herde the
Iugement of the barouns, he comaunded to make the fier in the
place, and a-noon it was don, and thei were bounde hande and
foot, and made hem to be caste in to the brynynge fier, and
in short tyme thei were alle brent, ffor the fier was grete
and huge.  Thus toke Emperour vengaunce of his wif, and
grete was the renomede that peple of hym spake whan it
was knowen.

<PB REF="" N="432" ID="pb.432"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan the Emperesse was brente, and thei that she hadde
made hir maydenes, the barouns returned a-gein to the
Emperour, and seide oon to a-nother that the sauage man was
right wise and avisee, ffor yet shall he sey some other thinges
wher-of shall come some grete merveile vs, and to all the worlde;
and the Emperour hym-self seide that he hadde seide his a-vision
as it was in trouthe.  Thus wiste the Emperour the lyvinge of
his wif, and than the Emperour hym called, and asked yef he
wolde sey eny more, and he seide, "Ye   <MILESTONE N="153a" UNIT="folio"/>yef he asked hym
whereof."  "I wolde wite," quod he, "wherefore thow didist
laughe whan thow were in the <CHOICE><CORR>foreste</CORR><SIC>freste</SIC></CHOICE>, and loked on Grisandolus,
and also whan thow were ledde be-fore an abbey, and in the
chapell whan the squyer smote his lorde, and why thow seidest
tho wordes to my stiwarde whan he asked why thow loughe,
and after tell me what be-tokeneth the laughter here-ynne
whan thow saugh the Emperesse come."  "Sir," seide the
sauage man, "I shall telle yow I-nowgh.  I do yow to wite that
the firste laughter that I made was for that a woman hadde me
taken by her engyn, that no man cowde not do; and wite ye well
that Grisandolus is the beste maiden and the trewest with-ynne
youre reame, and therefore was it that I lough; and the laughter
that I made be-fore the abbey, was for ther is vnder erthe
be-fore the yate the grettest tresour hidde that eny man knoweth,
and therfore I lough for that it was vnder feet of hem that
a-boode after the almesse, ffor more richesse is in that tresour
than alle the monkes beth worth, and all the abbey, and all that
ther-to be-longeth, and the pore peple that ther-on stoden cowde
it not take; and Avenable youre stywarde, that Grisandolus doth
her clepen, saugh that I lowgh and asked me wherefore, and
the couerte wordes that I to hir spake was for that she was
chaunged in to the fourme of man, and hadde take a-nothir
habite than hir owne; and alle the wordes that I spake thei ben
trewe, ffor by woman is many a man disceyved, and therefore
I cleped hir disceyaunt for by women ben many townes sonken
and brent, and many a riche londe wasted and exiled, and moche
peple slayn; but I sey it not for noon euell that is in hir, and


<PB REF="" N="433" ID="pb.433"/>

thow thy-self maist well perceyve that be women be many
worthi men shamed and wratthed that longe haue loued to-geder,
yef it were not for debate of women; but now rech the not for
thy wif, that thou haste distroied, ffor she hath it well deserued,
and haue therfore no mystrust to other, for as longe as the
worlde endureth it doth but apeire, and all that cometh to hem
be the grete synne of luxure that in hem is closeth; ffor woman
is of that nature, and of that disire, that whan she hath the
moste worthi man of the worlde to hir lorde, she weneth she
haue the werste, and wite ye fro whens his cometh of the grete
fragelite that is in hem; and the foule corage and the foule
thought that thei haue where thei may beste hir volunte
acomplish; but therfore be not wroth, for ther ben in the worlde
that ben full trewe, and yef thow haue be desceyved of thyn,
yet shall thow haue soche oon that is worthy to be Emperesse,
and to resceyve that high dignite, and yef thow wilt it be-leve
thow shalt wynne ther-on more than thowe shalt lese.  But the
prophesie seith that the grete dragon shall come fro Rome that
wolde distroie the reame of the grete Breteyne and put it in his
subieccion; and the fierce lyon crowned maugre the diffence of
the turtill that the dragon hath norisshed vndir his wynges, and
as soone as the grete dragon shall   <MILESTONE N="153b" UNIT="folio"/>meve to go to the grete
Breteigne, the lyon crowned shall come hym a-geins, and shull
fight so to-geder, that a fierce bole that is prowde, whiche the
lyon shall bringe with hym shall smyte so the dragon with oon
of his hornes that he shall falle down deed, and therby shall be
delyuered the grete lyon.  But I will not telle the significacion
of these wordes, for I owe it nought to do, but all this shall falle
in thy tyme, and therfore be well ware of euell counseile, for
grete part longeth to the.  The tother laughter that I made in
the chapell was not for the buffetes that the squyer yaf his
lorde, but for the be-tokenynges that ther-ynne ben.  In the
same place ther the squyer stode was entred, and yet ther is
vndir his feet a merveillouse tresour.  The firste buffet that the
squyer yaf his lorde signifieth that for avoure the <CHOICE><CORR>worlde</CORR><SIC>wolde</SIC></CHOICE>
becometh so prowde, that he douteth nother god ne his soule, no


<PB REF="" N="434" ID="pb.434"/>

more than the squyer douted to smyte his maister, but the riche
wolde oppresse the pore vnder theire feet; and that make these
vntrewe riche peple whan enythinge cometh to hem be
myschaunce thei swere and stare and sey maugre haue god for
his yeftes, and wite ye what maketh this nothinge but pride of
richesse.  The seconde buffet be-tokeneth the riche vserer that
deliteth in his richesse and goth <CHOICE><CORR>scornynge</CORR><SIC>sornynge</SIC></CHOICE> his pore nyghebours
that be nedy whan thei come to hym ought for to borough, and
the vserer so leneth hem litill and litill that at laste thei moste
selle theire heritage to hym that so longe hath it coveyted.  The
thridde buffet signifieth these false pletours, men of lawe, that
sellen and a-peire theire neyghbours be-hinde here bakke for
couetise and envye of that thei se hem thrive, and for thei be not
in her daungier, ffor whan these laweers sen that her neighbours
don hem not grete reverence and servise, thei thenken and
a-spien how thei may hem a-noyen in eny wise, and to make
hem lese that thei haue, and therfore men seyn an olde sawe,
who hath a goode neighbour hath goode morowe.  Now haue ye
herde the significaciouns why the buffetes were yoven, but the
squyer delited nothinge ther-ynne whan that he smote his
maister, but he wiste not fro whens this corage to hym
com.  But god that is almyghty wolde haue it to be shewed in
exsample that men sholde not be prowde for worldly richesse,
for to the couetouse theire richesse doth hem but harme that
slepen in auerice, and for-yete god and don the werkes of the
deuell, that ledeth hem to euerlastinge deth, and all is for the
grete delite that thei haue in richesse.  But now shall I telle
yow whi I lough to day whan I saugh the Emperesse comynge
and hir lechours, I do yow to wite that it was but for dispite,
ffor I saugh that she was youre wif, and hadde oon of the
worthiest men of the worlde that eny man knoweth of youre
yowthe, and she hadde take these xij harlottes and wende   <MILESTONE N="154a" UNIT="folio"/>euer
for to haue ledde this foly all hir lif; and ther-fore hadde I grete
dispite for the love of yow and of youre doughter, ffor she is
youre doughter with-oute doute, and draweth litill after hir
moder.  Now haue ye herde alle the laughtres and wherefore


<PB REF="" N="435" ID="pb.435"/>

thei were, and therfore may I go yef it be youre
plesier."  "Now a-bide a litill," seide the Emperour, "and telle vs the
trouthe of Grisandolus, and also we shull sende to digge after
the tresour for I will wite yef it be trewe," and he ther-to dide
assent; than the Emperour comaunded that Grisandolus were
sought, and so she was founden oon of the feirest maydenes that
neded to enquere in eny londe, and whan the Emperour knewe
that Grisandolus, his stiwarde, that longe hadde hym serued was
a woman, he blissed hym for the wonder that he ther-of
hadde.  Than he asked the sauage man counseile what he sholde do of
that he hadde promysed to yeve his doughter, and half his
reame, ffor loth he was to falsen his promyse of couenaunt.  "I
shall telle yow," quod the man, "what ye shull do yef ye will
do my counseile, and wite it well, it is the beste that eny man
can yeven."  "Sey on, than," seide Emperour, "ffor what
counseile that thow yevest I shall it well be-leve, for I haue
founde thy seyinge trewe."  Than seide the sauage man, "Ye
shall take Avenable to be yowre wif, and wite ye whos doughter
she is.  She is doughter to the Duke matan that the Duke
ffrolle hath disherited and driven <CHOICE><CORR>oute</CORR><SIC>oute oute</SIC></CHOICE>   of his londe for envye
with grete wronge, and he and his wif be fledde, and his sone,
that is a feire yonge squyer, in to Province in to a riche town
that is called monpellier; and sende to seche hem and yelde hem
her heritage that thei haue loste with wronge, and make the
mariage of youre doughter and Auenables brother that is so feire,
and ye may her no better be setten."  And whan the Barouns
vndirstode that the sauage man seide, thei spoke moche a-monge
hem, and seiden in the ende that the Emperour myght do no
better after theire advis; and than the Emperour asked his name,
and what he was, and the hert that so pertly spake vnto hym,
and than seide he, "Sir, of that enquere no more, ffor it is a
thinge the more ye desire to knowe the lesse shall ye
witen."  "Ffor sothe," seide the Emperour, "now suppose I well what
it may be, but shull ye telle us eny more."  "Ye," quod he,
"I tolde yow right now of the lyon crowned and of the lyon


<PB REF="" N="436" ID="pb.436"/>

volage, but now shall I telle yow in other manere, for that ye
shull be better remembred whan tyme cometh.  Emperour of
Rome," quod he, "this is trewe prophesie that the grete boor
of Rome that is signified by the grete dragon, shall go a-gein
the lyon crowned of the bloy Breteyne a-gein the counseile of
the turtell that hath an heed of golde and longe hath ben his
love.  But the boor shall be so full of pride that he will nothir
be-leve, but shall go with so grete pride with all his generacion
in to the parties   <MILESTONE N="154b" UNIT="folio"/>of Gaule to fight with the crowned lyon that
shall come a-geins hym with alle his beestes.  Ther shall be
grete slaughter of beestes on bothe sides.  Than shall oon of
the fawnes of the lyon crowned sle the grete boor, and ther-fore
I praye the yef thow wilt ought do for me er I departe that
thow do nothinge a-gein the volunte of thy wif, after that day
that thow haste her wedded, and wite well yef thow do thus
thow shalt haue profite, and now I take my leve for here haue
I no more to do."  And the Emperour be-taught hym to god seth
it myght no better be, and ther-with he wente on his wey, and
whan he com to the halle dore he wrote letteres on the lyntell
of the dore in grewe that seide, "Be it knowe to alle tho that
these letteres reden, that the sauage man that spake to the
Emperour and expounded his dreme, hit was Merlin of
Northumberlande, and the hert brancus with xv braunches that spake to
hym in his halle at mete a-monge alle his knyghtes, and was
chaced thourgh the Citee of Rome, that spake to Auenable in the
foreste whan he tolde hir how she sholde fynde the man sauage;
and lete the Emperour well wite that Merlin is maister
counseller to kynge Arthur of the grete Breteyne."  And than he
departed and spake no mo wordes.  Whan this sauage man was
departed from the Emperour, he sente in to Province to seche
the fader and the moder of Auenable and Patrik hir brother, in
the town of monpeller, whider as thei were fledde; and a-noon
thei com gladde and ioyfull of the auenture that god hadde hem
sente, and whan thei were comen thei hadde grete ioye of theire
doughter that thei wende neuer to haue seyn.  Than thei a-bide
with the Emperour longe tyme, and the Emperour restored hem


<PB REF="" N="437" ID="pb.437"/>

to here herytage that ffrolle hadde hem be-rafte.  But as ffrolle
myght he it a-gein seide, ffor he was of grete power, and so
endured the werre longe tyme.  But in the ende the Emperour
made the pees, and than he maried his doughter to Patrik, and
hym-self toke Auenable to his wif, and grete was the ioye and
the feeste that the Barouns maden, for moche was she be-loved
bothe of riche and pore, and as the Emperour was in ioye and
deduyt of his newe spouse, ther com a massage to hym oute
of Greece for a discorde that was be-twene the barouns of Greese
and the Emperour Adrian, that sholde hem Iustise, ffor the
Emperour Adrian myght vn-ethe ride for febilnesse of age, and
whan the messagers hadde spoke to the Emperour and don all
that he sholde, he toke his leve to go, and as he caste vp his yie
vpon the halle dore and saugh the letteres that Merlin hadde
writen in griewe, and a-noon he redde hem lightly, and than
he gan to laughe right harde, and shewed hem to the Emperour,
and seide, "Sir, is this trewe that these lettres seyn."  "What
sey thei," quod the Emperour, "wote ye neuer."  Quod the
messager, "Thei seyn that he that tolde yow the vntrouthe of
youre wif, and youre dreme expowned, and spake to yow in
gise of an herte, that it was Merlin of Northumbirlande, the
maister counseller of kynge Arthur of Breteyne, by whos
counseile ye haue spoused youre wif Auenable."  And whan the
Emperour vndirstode   <MILESTONE N="155a" UNIT="folio"/>these wordes he merveiled sore; and than
be-fill a grete merveile, whereof alle that were ther-ynne hadde
wonder, and the Emperour hym-self; ffor as soone as the
Emperour herde what the letteres mente, a-noon the letteres
vanysshed so sodeynly that no man wiste how, and ther-of
hadde thei grete wonder, and moche it was spoken of thourgh
the contrey.  But now cesseth the tale of the Emperour of
Rome that a-bode in his paleise gladde and myry with his wif
Auenable, and ledde goode lif longe tyme, for bothe were thei
yonge peple, ffor the Emperour was but xxviij yere of age at
that hour, and his wif was xxij, and yef thei ledde myri lif, yet
Patrik and ffoldate, the doughter of the Emperour, lyved in more
delite.  But now returneth the tale a-gein to speke of Merlin.




</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.24"><PB REF="" N="438" ID="pb.438"/>
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXIV. 
<LB/> BATTLE BETWEEN THE TWELVE KINGS AND THE SAISNES BEFORE THE CITY OF CLARENCE.</HEAD>
<P>Here seith the book that as soone as Merlin was departed
from Julius sezar, the Emperour of Rome, to whom he
hadde tolde his a-vision, he toke his wey in to the grete Breteyne,
and com in to Northumbirlande to Blaase his maister, that gladde
was whan that he hym saugh, but he was but litill while in
comynge, ffor he com theder in half a day and oon nyght ffor
he was full of grete art, and than he tolde hym all these thinges
that were be-falle in Rome, and after he tolde hym how xij
kynges and a Duke were assembled with xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men for to go
fight with the saisnes be-fore the Citee of Clarence, and tolde
hym of the grete bateile that hadde be vnder the Castell of
Trebes in the reame of Benoyk of the kynge Arthur a-gein the
Almaynes, and a-gein the Romayns, and a-gein the frenshe men
of Gaule and of la desert, and how alle were discounfited, and
how the kynge Ban hadde geten his wif with childe, soche oon
that shall surmounte alle the knyghtes that shull be in his
tyme; and whan he hadde all tolde, and Blaase hadde all writen
in his book, where thourgh we haue yet the knowynge
ther-of.  But now we moste reste of Merlin and of Blaase till a-nother
tyme, and speke of the xij princes that were assembled as ye
haue herde be-fore for to fight with the saisnes.</P>
<P>  Whan these xij kynges and this Duke weren assembled
with as moche peple as thei myght haue, thei toke
counseile, and ordeyned her wardes, and than rode forth by
nyght that thei were not seyn of no peple.  The firste warde
ledde Aguysans, the kynge de Cent chiualiers, that was a full
noble knyght, vaillaunt and hardy, and right stronge as of his
yowthe, and hadde in his companye vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes.  The
seconde warde ledde the kynge Tradiliuauns of North-Wales
that was a full goode man and a trewe, and with hym vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men

<PB REF="" N="439" ID="pb.439"/>

of armes.  The thridde warde <CHOICE><CORR>ledde</CORR><SIC>ledde ledde</SIC></CHOICE>   the kynge Belynans of
South wales, his brother, that was also a noble knyght with
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes.  The fourthe warde ledde the kynge Carados
brenbas with v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men.  The fithe warde ledde the kynge
  <MILESTONE N="155b" UNIT="folio"/>Brangore with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the vj<HI REND="sup">e</HI> ledde the Duke Escam
of Cambenyk with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men.  The seuenthe warde ledde the
kynge Clarion, of Northumbirlonde, with vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men.  The viij
warde ledde the kynge ydiers of Cornewaile, that was a feire
knyght and an amerouse, and welbeloued a-monge ladyes with
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the ix<HI REND="sup">e</HI> ledde the kynge Vrien that was a noble
knyght, and a sure of his body; but sory he was and wroth for
his sones that he hadde loste, and full sore was he greved in the
werre so that he hadde not but iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes that he
brought in his companye, but thei were bolde and hardy.  The
tenthe warde ledde the kynge Aguysans of Scotlonde, that was
wonte to be so riche a londe, and so plentevouse of goode men,
but he hath loste many in the werre that he hadde but thre<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men of armes.  The xj<HI REND="sup">e</HI> warde ledde the kynge Loot of Orkanye,
and hadde all loste bothe wif, and childeren, and all his feire
meyne, wherfore he was so sorowfull that he hadde leuer dye
than lyve, ffor so was he greved with the werre that his peple
was but small, but tho were orped knyghtes, and the beste of
all the hoste for to endure and suffre traueile of armes.  The
xij<HI REND="sup">the</HI> warde ledde the kynge Ventres of Garlot, that was a full
noble knyght and a sure, and he was full wroth in herte for his
sone that hadde hym lefte that he loved so hertely, and hadde
gretly be greved with saisnes, that he hadde in his companye
but two thousande men and thre hundred, what on horsebak and
on foote; and whan her peple were disseuered and her wardes
devided, the barouns assembled and asked oon of a-nother how
thei sholden don, and than thei a-corded to go fight be-fore the
town of Clarence, and that thei sholde not ride but by myght
and smyte sodeynly in to the hoste on all partes, ffor better is it
for vs to dye with worship than to lyve in shame; and with that


<PB REF="" N="440" ID="pb.440"/>

departed the counseile of the barouns, and eche wente to his
pavelon; and whan thei hadde souped thei comaunded her
peple to arme hem and make redy for to ride; and a-noon thei
were appareilled <CHOICE><CORR>thourgh</CORR><SIC>though</SIC></CHOICE> the hoste and rode forth on her
wey.  And ther was a spie of the kynges Hardogabran that hadde herde
all the doynge of the barouns.  This aspie paste oute of the
hoste previly, and com to the sege that was be-fore Clarence
grete and merveilouse, and tolde to the kynge Hardogabran all
the aray that he hadde seyn, and how that the cristin com
with grete spede; and whan that the saisnes vndirstoden that
the cristin were comynge, thei asked how moche peple thei
myght be in all, and he seide that thei were not xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and than
the saisnes ne sette nought ther-by, ne deyned not to arme the
fourthe part of hem.  But neuertheles the kynge Hardogabran
made the hoste to be waicched bothe day and nyght; and also
ther were xx kynges that after that thei herde that the cristin
were comynge, thei wolde neuer be disgarnysshed of her
armes.  But now we moste returne to the cristin that com ridinge.</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="156a" UNIT="folio"/>These xii princes ride so by nyght till that thei com nygh
the hoste a litill be-fore day, and the weder was
somwhat trouble and wyndy, and be-gan for to reyne; and thei in
the hoste were the hevyer of slepe, and thei toke noon hedde
that eny peple sholde come on hem at soche tyme, and whan
the cristin saugh theire herberowe that noon ne come oute ne
made no noyse, a-noon thei right theire armour; and whan thei
were redy thei departed theire peple in to thre parties, and in
that oon part was the kynge Clarion, and in that other part was
the kynge Ventres of Garlot, and Carados, and Brangores, and
Tradilyuans, and Belynans his brother; and in the thridde
partie was the kynge Aguysas, and the kynge Vrien, and as
soone as thei were disseuered thei rode a softe paas, theire hedes
enclyned vnder theire helmes, and whan thei com nygh the
tentes, thei lete theire horse go as faste as thei myght renne, and
kutte a-sonder cordes and ropes of the loiggynges, and threwe
down tentes and pavelouns, and slowh and maymed alle that thei
a-raught at her comynge, and than a-roos the noyse and the


<PB REF="" N="441" ID="pb.441"/>

showte so grete that all the foreste resounded.  Ther was grete
martire and grete occision of saisnes, er the men of armes that
sholde haue waicched the hoste were horsed, and whan thei
saugh hem so surprised thei lepe to horse and rode to the kynge
Hardogabrans tente, and blewe hornes on euery parte, and
assembled to-geder bothe armed and vn-armed, and the xx kynges
lepe to horse, and eche hadde x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men at his baner, and ronne
agein the cristen, and smote thourgh sheldes and hauberkes,
that many ther were slayn on bothe partyes; and the xij princes
suffred sore traueile, for thei were full noble knyghtes, and well
hem helped Segurades, and Drias the lorde of salerne, and Mares,
and Dorilas, and Brandins de la dolerouse garde, and Bruyns
saunz pitee.  These dide so well that neuer knyghtes myght
do better, and on that other part were to-geder the Castelein of
Gazell, and the lorde of blakeston, and the lorde of mares, and
the lorde of wyndesore, and Aliers, and Gaudius, and the nevew
of kynge Vrien, these ought not to be forgeten, for a-gein hem
myght noon armour endure were it neuer so harde.  These x
knyghtes drough to the xij princes as soone as thei saugh hem
at the logges where thei stode stifly, and foughten harde and
sore, and so many slough the cristin that the horse wente in
blode vp to the pastrouns.  But the saisnes were so many and
so thikke, that be fin force thei drof hem fro the tentes, but
thei wente not vileyusly, but as noble men and hardy; ffor
whan the worthi men saugh thei were putte bakke thei were
a-schamed, and hadde ther-of grete dispite.  Than thei assembled
and mette hem in the visages.  Ther was stronge shour, and
sore eche of hem shewde her hardynesse and his grete prowesse,
and eche of hem seide that neuer was he worthi to <SUPPLIED>be</SUPPLIED> cleped a
knyght that failed at that nede for to helpe so well that it
myght be spoke of all his lif after; with this wordes eche   <MILESTONE N="156b" UNIT="folio"/>smote
his horse with spores and cried his ensigne, and thei smyte in
so harde a-monge the Saisnes, that many ther were deed and
wounded gapinge vp-right ther as thei passed; but the saisnes
com oute of the tentes soche foyson that no man myght counte
the nombre, and hardogabran, a saisne, moche and grete oute


<PB REF="" N="442" ID="pb.442"/>

of mesure com formest; ffor the storye seith that he was xv
foote of lengthe, but he was yonge of xxviij yere of age.  This
kynge hardogabran satte vpon a grete gray stede with a spere
in his hande, grete and shorte, and hadde a staffe hanginge on
his lifte side where-with that day he made many a knyght
sory and wroth; and whan the cristin saugh this grete deuell
comynge, thei douted for to mete hym, the beste and the moste
hardyest of all the cristin hoste, and made hym wey; and
Carados of the perilouse tour hym mette, for he was the grettest
and the strengest of all the cristin hoste, and was xxx yere of
age, and as soone as he saugh the grete devell he lete renne
to hym for nothinge he hym douted, and thei mette so harde
with theire speres vpon the sheldes, and in passinge fourth thei
hurteled so harde with her helmes and sheldes that bothe thei
fill to the grounde, and theire horse also; and whan bothe
partyes saugh these tweyne falle, thei pressed to the rescowse
on bothe parties.  Ther suffred the cristin grete peyne and
traueile er that Carados myght be remounted, and the reyne
hem greved sore that thei hadde the nyght and the day, ffor
it cessed neuer of reynynge till that mydday was passed, and
thei were so wete grete and small, that vn-ethe myght thei eche
knowe other but by theire speche.</P>
<P>  Full grete was the bataile and the stour mortall for sore
eche other dide hate.  Ther dide the cristin well preve
theire prowesse, for magre hem thei sette Carados on horse, that
Bloys of Plaisshie hym brought where-from he hadde smyten
down the kynge Graalant, and matan and alibos, two yonge
knyghtes, and the lorde of Nohaut, and the Castelein of
Molehaut, mayntened the stour so well that thei ought not to be
blamed till that Carados was remounted, and than be-gan the
stour all newe for many ther were of goode knyghtes on the
cristin partye, and on the hethen side grete pride; ffor many
ther were of riche men and puyssant, and hadde soche plente
of peple that the cristen were not but litill shewed a-monge
hem, and therfore hadde thei moche the werse, for thei were
at grete myschef; and in this maner thei foughten till mydday

<PB REF="" N="443" ID="pb.443"/>

was paste, and than be-gan the day for to clere, and the sonne
to shewe out his bemes and dryed theire harneys, and than
be-gan the stour to enforce more and more.  But the saisnes
were so many that of fin force thei droff hem oute of the
feelde, and brought hem to the plaisshes, and ther thei stynted
longe tyme; ffor the kynge de cent Chiualers with-stode firste
and cleped his ensigne many tymes, and seide to the barouns,
"What   <MILESTONE N="157a" UNIT="folio"/>lordynges, wheder will ye go.  Certes full euell holde
ye the promyse that we devised hedirwarde; ffor yet be we
hooll and sounde, and oure armoure hooll also, and we be thus
discounfited that noon of vs dar shewe his valour, wele ought
we to be reproved, and well owe we to remembre that whan
we be departed oon from a-nother, that yef we be oute of sorowe
issed in to moche more dolour be we entred," and whan the
barouns vndirstode that the kynge de Cent Chiualiers hem seide,
thei returned a-gein fiercely, and eche of hem smote so the
firste that he mette, that deed he fill to grounde, and ther
be-gan the bataile more crewell than it hadde all the day
be-fore.  Ther dide the kynge de Cent Chyualiers so well that
moche was he preised and be-loved of the high barouns; ffor
er he departed his sheilde was all to daisht, that the thridde part
ne left not hooll, and his hauberke dismayled and his helme
perced, and his armes all be-soiled in blode, and his horse heed
and all the fore body was soyled with bloode and brayn, that
he myght not be knowe, but by his speche; and also ther
a-boode the kynge Vryen and Bawdemagn, his nevew, and the
kynge ydiers, and the kynge loot, and the kynge ventres, and
Dorilas, these wolde neuer leve the stour as longe as thei myght
a-bide in place, and ther thei dide the saisnes grete damage,
ffor moo thei slowgh than that thei hadde don all the day
be-fore; and whan the saisnes saugh the damage that thei hem
dide, <CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> blewen hornes and trumpes, and made soche noyse a
tempest that oon myght it heare two myle longe, and than com
Orienx a saisne with foure thousand men of armes all fressh
and newe, and frusht in to the medle so harde that they made
hem alle to remeve place, and than a-roos the noyse and the


<PB REF="" N="444" ID="pb.444"/>

chace all the day on ende till it was nyght that the cristin
myght neuer recouer for to holde place, but were all
discounfited, and yef the nyght were not so soone come vpon,
more hadde thei myshapped, and whan the saisnes hadde loste
the day light, thei returned to theire tentes and vn-armed hem,
and esed hem, and sette hem to soper, and ete and dranke
plente, and after soper thei slepe and toke theire reste as
they that well wende to be sure on all partyes, but full angry
thei were of the harme that the cristen hadde hem don that
day, and gladly ther-of wolde thei ben a-venged, yef thei myght
come in place, ffor the storie seith thei loste moo than xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men,
and the cristen loste x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>.  But now returne we to speke of
the xij princes that be full of sorowe and angre for the
disconfiture that is vpon hem turned, and seide a-monge hem that
so wolde thei it nought leten, but that thei wolden don hem
more damage er that thei wolde departed.</P>
<P>  Now whan the barouns were so discounfited, and were
somwhat fer from the tentes of the saisnes, thei a-light on
foote, and a-mended theire armours, and refresshed theire horse;
but thei were all be-soiled with bloode and myre, bothe theire
armes   <MILESTONE N="157b" UNIT="folio"/>and theire horse that no colour myght be knowen;
and whan thei were redy, thei lepte to horse and rode a softe
paas cloos to-geder so stilliche, that noon ne spake a worde till
<CHOICE><CORR>that</CORR><SIC>that that</SIC></CHOICE>   thei com to the tentes a-boute mydnyght, and fonde the
hoste all a-slepe; ffor tho thei wende to haue ben all saf for
the discounfiture that thei hadde don; and whan the cristin
com to the tentes thei ronne in with so grete raveyn, for thei
were yet xxx<HI REND="sup">ti</HI> <HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of horsmen, and thei threwe down tentes
and Pavilouns, and slowgh many of the saisnes, that noon ascaped
that fill to theire handes; and the saisnes lepte oute of her
beddes all slepy, and cried, "Treson, treson," and assembled
at Hardogabrans tente, where oon blewe a trumpe, and the
saisnes entended to nothinge elles but to renne to that trumpe,
and than thei hem armed, and a-raied as faste as thei myght;


<PB REF="" N="445" ID="pb.445"/>

and thei light vp torches, and lanternes, and fire brondes
grete plente, that the light myght haue be seyn iij myle
longe.</P>
<P>  The cristin neuer cessed to kille and to sle, and mangeled
alle that thei myght take, that the stremes of blode
ran as of a welle springe, and thus the slaughter endured all
the nyght till it was day; and whan the saisnes saugh the
grette losse and martire that thei maden, thei were woode for
wrath and ire, and than they com on fresshly as though <CHOICE><CORR>they</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE>
sholde haue all confounded in theire comynge, and the cristen
hem deffended in the beste maner.  But yet the saisnes droff
hem oute from the tentes foule and lothly; and than be-gonne
the horse of the cristin to feynte sore as they that two dayes
hadde not eten, and ther-of were thei sore discounforted; ffor
thei saugh that alle were thei in a-venture of deth.  Than
fill the barons in corage as god wolde, the yonge knyghtes that
I haue named be-fore, that thei wolde Iuste with the saisnes
for to wynne hem other horse where-on thei myght ride, or
elles thei were in grete pereile alle to perissh.  Than eche of
the barons toke a grete spere, and rode in to the renges a xl
of knyghtes of pris, and hit is reson to reherse theire names
of the worthi lordes.  The firste was the kynge ydiers of
Cornewaile, and the kynge Ventres of Garlot, and his nevew
that euer kepte hym a-boute hym; the fourthe was kynge loot
of Orcanye; the v<HI REND="sup">e</HI> was kynge Clarion of Northumbirlonde; the
sixthe was kynge Christofer, and his nevew that hilde the depe
Cite of Gaunt, and the lorde of the dolerouse garde, and Bruns
saunz pitee, and the lorde of Nohaut, and the lorde of the
forest perilouse, and the <CHOICE><CORR>kynge de</CORR><SIC>kynge de kynge de</SIC></CHOICE>   Cent Chiualiers, and the
kynge Tradylyuaunt of North wales, and Polydomas his nevew,
and the kynge Brangore, and the kynge aguysas of Scotlonde,
and Gaudin his nevew, and the Duke Escam of Cambenyk,
and the lorde of salerne, and the kynge Vrien, and Badmagn
his nevew, and the kynge Belynans of South wales, and


<PB REF="" N="446" ID="pb.446"/>

Carados de la dolerouse toure, and as many of other knyghtes
  <MILESTONE N="158a" UNIT="folio"/>that thei were well thre score.
  </P>
<P>These com in the first fronte with speres in fewtre for to
Iuste, for grete myster hadde thei of horse, and eueriche
of hem smote oon so harde that he fill deed to the grounde, or
wounded, and sesed the horse by the reynes, and wente with
hem a-side in to the feilde, and a-light from theire horse, and
lepte on hem that thei hadde wonne, and returned a-gein in
to bateile, and be-gonne to smyte down men and horse to
grounde, for to remounte her company vpon fresshe horses that
ther-to hadden grete nede, and all the day noon of hem wolde
departe from other; ffull harde and felon was the bateile ther,
as these thre score were newe I-horsed, and longe it endured;
but the saisnes dide euer encrese more and more, and made
the cristen to voyde the place, but that was with grete peyne,
ffor the saisnes peyned hem sore to a-venge the harmes that
thei hadden don, and the cristin were talentif to a-venge her
frendes, that the paynymes hadde slayn; but in the ende were
the cristin discounfited and chaced oute of the feilde.  But ther
endured grete traueile the thre score knyghtes; ffor thei kepte
hem-self all-ther hinderest for to diffende the other that feyntly
were horsed that myght no faster go than a paas; and these
thre score knyghtes wisten well that alle were thei deed or
taken yef thei hem for-saken, and so thei mayntened the bateile
as longe as thei myght suffre till that her companye was well
paste; and than thei wente her wey after, and whan thei were
ouer-taken thei with-stode and foughten with the saisnes full
harde, and whan eny of these knyghtes fill, thei alle a-boode
till he were remounted; but nought for than moche thei losten
at the laste, ffor right many of her men were slain and wounded,
and taken prisoners.  In this manere were the cristin
discounfited, and the saisnes hem chaced fer in to the foreste,
where-as thei hem leften be-cause of the nyght that com on,
and than the saisnes returned to theire loigges with grete plente
of prisoners; and alwey after that the saisnes made better
waicche than thei hadde don be-fore, and the cristin were in


<PB REF="" N="447" ID="pb.447"/>

the foreste for socour, and rode forth till thei com in to a feire
launde, and ther thei a-light on foote from theire horse and
made grete doell and sorowe for theire losse, and were so
discounforted, that thei wiste not what for to do ne whider to
go; but in the ende thei a-corded that eche man sholde go to
his repeire, and yef the saisnes come hem for to assaile eche
man deffende hym-self the beste wise that he may; with that
thei lept to horse, and eche comaunded other to god and
departed wepinge for pite that oon from that other, and eche
wente hoom to his repeire, and stuffed hem with peple, and
vitaile the beste that thei myght; and after that the saisnes
hadde hem thus discounfited   <MILESTONE N="158b" UNIT="folio"/>thei douted hem nothinge, but
ronne thourgh her londes, and brente and distroied and token
prisoners, and brought in to the hoste many prayes; and neuer
after were the kynges so bolde to isse out of her castelles and
townes for to fight with the saisnes.  But now we moste
speke of the kynge Arthur that is in the see towarde the
grete Breteyne.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.25">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXV. 
<LB/> ARTHUR'S MEETING WITH LEODOGAN; MARRIAGE OF ARTHUR AND GONNORE.</HEAD>
<P>Now seith the storie, that whan the kynge Arthur and the
barouns were assembled and entred in to the shippes,
thei sailed till thei come to the bloy Breteyne; and as soone
as thei were arived thei lepe vpon horse and ryde so day and
nyght, till thei come to logres the thirde day, and ther were
thei richely welcomed, and the moste ioye that myght be made
to eny peple; and ther thei dide soiourne thre dayes with
grete feeste; and the fourthe day remeved the kynge Arthur
and Gawein, and his brethren, and the kynge Ban of Benoyk,
and the kynge Bohors of Gannes, with thre thousande men
of armes with-oute moo, and rode so by her iourneyes that


<PB REF="" N="448" ID="pb.448"/>

thei come in to the reame of Carmelide, a two myle from
Toraise, where the kynge leodogan soiourned, and whan he
herde tydinges that the kynge Arthur com, he rode a-geins
hym, he and his meyne two myle or more, and whan thei were
mette ther was made grete ioye, and welcomynge be-twene
<CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>the the</SIC></CHOICE>   two kynges that well loved, and so dide alle the other
barouns and lordes; and whan thei com in to the town thei
fonde it all hanged with riche clothes, and strowed with fresh
herbes, and fonde ladyes and maydenes carolinge and
daunsinge, and the moste reuell and disport that myght be made;
and on that other side these yonge bachelers of pris brake
speres in bourdinge oon a-gein a-nother, and thus thei conveyed
hem vn-to the town, where-as Gonnore, the doughter of kynge
leodogan com hem for to meten.  But who so made ioye she
was gladdest of alle other; ffor as soone as she saugh the kynge
Arthur she ran to hym with armes spredde a-brode, and seide
he was welcome and alle his companye; and she kiste his
mouth tendirly, seynge hem alle that wolde, and than eche
toke other by the hande and went vp in to the paleise, and
whan it was tyme of soper thei ete and dranke grete plente,
for I-nough thei haue where-of; and whan thei hadde disported
hem a longe while after soper they wente to bedde for to resten
hem, for wery they were of traueile; and on the morowe erly
a-roos the kynge Arthur, and the kynge Bohors, and the kynge
Ban, and Sir Gawein, and Ewein that gladly roos euer erly
more that eny other, and wente to the mynster to here messe,
and than com a-gein in to the paleise a-bove, and fonde the
kynge leodogan that hadde herde messe in his chapell, and than
thei asked horse and rode forth tho vj with-oute eny moo,
and yede to disporte hem, and to se the medowes and the
river; and than the kynge leodogan a-resoned the kynge Arthur,
and asked him whan he sholde spousen his doughter, ffor he
seide   <MILESTONE N="159a" UNIT="folio"/>that it was tyme; and the kynge Arthur ansuerde that
whiche hour that hym plesed, ffor he was ther-to redy; "but


<PB REF="" N="449" ID="pb.449"/>

I moste a-bide the beste frende that I haue, ffor with-oute hym
will I do nothinge in no manere;" and than he asked whiche
was that frende, and he tolde hem how it was Merlin, "be whom
I haue recouered londe and honour, and all the goode that I
haue ellis," and whan sir Gawein vndirstode the wordes, he seide
that he hadde grete reson for to love hym well, "and eche oon
of vs oweth to desire his comynge, and wite it well he shall
come er ought longe seth that ye hit desire."  "Certes," seide
the kynge Arthur "he tolde me that he sholde be here all
in tyme."  "Than ther is no more," quod Gawein, "but lete
vs sette the day of spousaile;" and than toke thei day to-geder
the vtas after, and com thus spekynge in to the halle, and
fonde the clothes leyde, and all thinge redy, and than thei
waissh as thei ought to do, and weren serued as noble princes
sholden be; and after mete thei wente to disporte, thei that
wolde, and thus thei soiourned alle the viij dayes full.  But
now resteth a litill to speke of hem at this tyme, and returne
to the xij princes that were disconfit be-fore the town of
Clarence.</P>
<P>  After that the kynges were thus discounfited, and were
repeired eche of hem hom to his repeire; till that
tydinges a-roos thourgh the londe that the kynge Arthur hadde
passed the see, and hadde a-dubbed the sones of kynge loot,
and the twey sones of kynge Vrien, and Galashin, the sone of
kynge Ventre of Garlot, and Dodynell the sauage, the sone of
kynge Belynant of South wales, and kay destranx, the nevew
of kynge Carados, and Seigramour, the Emperours nevew of
Constantynnoble, and his felowes that hadde brought with hym;
and how the wif of kynge loot was at logres whider that his
owne sones hadde hir brought and taken hir from the saisnes;
and how the brethren hadde sworn, that neuer hir fader the
kynge loot sholde haue theire moder in companye till that he
hadde made homage to the kynge Arthur, and lete hym wele
knowe that he hadde no werse enmy than that thei wolden
be; and how that kynge Arthur hadde foughten with the kynge
Claudas and Pounce Antonye be-fore the castell of Trebes, and<PB REF="" N="450" ID="pb.450"/>

with ffrolle the Duke of Almayne, and Randolf the Senescall
of Gaule, and hadde hem alle discounfited, and chaced oute
of the feelde, and restored the two brethern to theire londes;
and how he sholde take to wif the doughter of the kynge
leodogan of Carmelide, and how he hadde discounfited the kynge
Rion be-fore the Cite of Danablaise, and how he was gon in to
Carmelide for to spouse his wif.  Of these thinges spake the
princes prively to hir counseile, and seide that thei dide grete
synne euer hym for to wrath, ffor alle these harmes   <MILESTONE N="159b" UNIT="folio"/>that to
hem was fallen was but for the synne that thei hadde don
a-geins hym, and thei dide repente sore of the hate that was
be-twene hem, yef thei myght other-wise haue don; and preiden
god hertely that thei myght come in soche poynte that thei
were acorded, be so that thei ther-by be not shamed; and so
ran the tydinges of the kynge Arthur, that the kynge loot it
herde, and wiste how that his wif was at logres, and his litill
sone Mordred, and therfore in oon manere he was gladde and
in a-nother he was wroth; gladde for that she was delyuered
oute of the handes of the saisnes, and angry for that his
children hadde sworn that neuer sholde he haue hir in
companye of hym, ne haue theire love till that he hadde made
homage to kynge Arthur; but he saugh not how he myght
with hym be acorded with his honour, but yef god wolde helpe
hym of counseile, and than he be-thought hym how Arthur
wolde sende his wif to logres Chief Citee, and as soone as he
myght knowe of hir comynge he wolde gon hir a-geins with
as moche peple as he myght haue and fight with hym, and
assay to take Arthurs wif, and for hir myght he haue a-gein his.</P>
<P>  Thus thought the kynge loot, but other-wise sholde it go,
yef god kepe the force of kynge Arthur and of Sir
Gawein, his nevew.  Than the kynge loot sente his aspies fer and
nygh, for to knowe whan the kynge Arthur sholde come from
the reme of Carmelyde, and how moche peple that he hadde
in his companye, and he hym appareiled for to ride hym
a-geins.  But of these thynges cesseth the tale at thys tyme, and speketh
of Merlin, that was with Blaase in Northumbirlande, that alle


<PB REF="" N="451" ID="pb.451"/>

these thinges hath hym tolde, and he hath hem alle in his
booke wreten; and the storye seith that as soone as the kynge
Arthur hadde seide to the kynge leodogan that he a-boode
nothinge elles but the comynge of Merlin, a-noon Merlin it
wiste, and alle the wordes that were ther seide, and that he
wiste the purpos of the xij kynges, and of the kynge loot, and
how he hadde sente his aspies, and alle he tolde to Blase, and
he wrote euer as he tolde; and Merlin com to Toraise in
Carmelide, where-as the Barons hym a-bode, and that was the
euen be-fore that the kynge sholde spousen his wif, and as
soone as the Barouns hym saugh, thei were of hym right gladde
and ioyfull, as thei that moche desired his feliship.  But now
we moste a litill turne for to speke of Gonnore the stepdoughter
of Cleodalis, the senescall of Carmelide, and of his kynnysmen
that right moche hated the kynge leodogan.</P>
<P>  Here seith the book that Gonnore, the doughter of the
senescallis wif, hadde right riche kynne of goode
knyghtes that sore hated the kynge leodogan, for the grete
  <MILESTONE N="160a" UNIT="folio"/>shame that he dide to Cleodalis of his wif, that he so longe hadde
holden in a-vouterie maugre Cleodalis, and alle his frendes, and
longe hadde thei kept prevy the hate that thei durste not
ther-of speke; but thei thought well to be wroken whan thei
saugh tyme, and it fill the same day that Merlin was come
thei were assembled of hem xvj, and spake to-geder, but at
this parlement was not Cleodalis, ne ther-of knewe no worde;
and oon of hem asked in what manere thei myght beste greve
or wrathe the kynge leodogan, and theire counseile was this:
ffor thei a-corded in the ende that thei sholde so speke to the
maistresse of Gonnore, that was Arthurs wif, that whan she
sholde be brought to bedde to the kynge Arthur, hir lorde,
this olde maistresse sholde brynge hir down in to the gardin
to disport, and ther while thei sholde sette ther the tother
Gonnore, their cosin, in stede of hir that was Arthurs wif; and
hir thei sholde sette in soche place that neuer man sholde
here-after more of hir speke, ne no man sholde wite where she
were be-come; and a-noon lete vs go and do so moche to the


<PB REF="" N="452" ID="pb.452"/>

maistresse that thus it may be don, and whan we haue brought
this a-boute, we shull be lordes bothe of the kinge and quene,
and of alle hem that be with the kynge.</P>
<P>  Than thei ordeyned that vij of hem sholde do this thefte,
and stele hir a-wey be the gardin, where-as thei sholde
be hidde, and haue ther shippe redy to putte hir ynne.  To
this counseile thei were a-corded, and thei dide so purchese
a-gein the maistresse, that she graunted hir will to performe;
and thei departed than gladde and mery as thei that wende
well to haue spedde, and ordeyned the shippe and all that was
myster; but a-noon as thei hadde this treson spoken Merlin
it wiste, and tolde it to Vlfin and to Bretell, and toke hem
a-side in counseile a-lone by hem-self, and tolde hem worde
for worde all the vntrouthe that thei purposed to don; and
whan Vlfin and Bretell herde the treson that these wolde haue
don, thei hadde ther-of grete merveile, and than thei preied
Merlin to telle how thei sholde spede of this thinge.  "With
gode will," seide Merlin.  "To morowe, at even, whan ye
haue souped, arme yow well vndir youre robes, and goth in
to the chamber next the gardin vnder the greces that is ther,
ffor thei shull come alle vn-armed saf hir swerdes, and shull
come thourgh the gardin streight to the wiket, where-as ther
shull bide till that the maistresse bringe hir to disporte.  But
loke a-noon as thei haue hir sesed that ye be no feynte her to
rescowe, ffor than a-noon haue ye her loste for euer yef thei
may bring hir to the shippe."  "Sir," seide these two goode
men, "yef god will, we shull not her lese, seth we knowe so
moche ther-of."  "And loke also," qoud Merlin, "that ye
speke here-of no worde to no man of nothinge that I haue to
  <MILESTONE N="160b" UNIT="folio"/>yow I-seide, ffor than shall I neuer yow love."  "Certes,"
seide these two noble men, "we hadde leuer be disherited and
chaced oute of the londe."</P>
<P>  Tho dide departe these thre frendes, and com in to the
halle, and fonde that the knyghtes sholde departe and
wente to theire loigginge till on the morowe that it was day,
and than a-rise the barouns and the knyghtes, and assembled


<PB REF="" N="453" ID="pb.453"/>

faste in the mynster paleise; and the kynge leodogan appareiled
his doughter so richely, as that neuer quene ne myght be better
araied, and she ther-to was so full of grete bewte that all the
worlde was gladde hir to be-holden; and whan she was all
redy, the kynge Ban toke hir on that oon side, and the kynge
Bohors on that other side, and ledde hir to the mynster of
seynt Stephene the martir.  Ther was many a baron hir to
conveien holdinge be the hondes two and two, and formest that
wente was kynge Arthur and kynge leodogan; and the other
tweyne was nexte after was Gawein and Seigramour, and than
Galashin and Agrauain the prowde, and than Dodinell and
Gueheret, and than Ewein le graunt, and Gaheries; and after
that Ewein a-voutres and kay destranx, and kay the stiward
and antor his fader; and after hem com the maiden that the
kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors ledden, that was of so grete
bewte; and she was discheueled, and hadde the feirest heed
that eny woman myght haue, and hadde a sercle of goolde on
hir heed full of preciouse stones, the feirest and the richest
that eny man knewe, and was clothed in a riche robe that
trayled to the grounde more than two fadome, that satte so
well with hir bewte that all the worlde myght haue ioye her
to be-holden; and after hir com the stepdoughter of Cleodalis,
that hight also Gonnore, whiche was right feire and auenaunt,
and hir ledde Gifflet and lucas the boteller; and after com
the newe dubbed knyghtes two and two; and after com the
knyghtes of the rounde table; and after that com the Barouns
of the reame of Carmelide and the knyghtes; and after the
burgeys of the contrey, and than the ladyes of the contrey,
and maydenes, and so thei com to the mynster.</P>
<P>  Whan thei com to the dore, thei fonde ther the goode
Archebisshoppe that ther hem a-bode, and sir Amnistan
the chapeleyn of kynge leodogan, that was a gode man of
lyvinge; and the archebisshop hem blessed, and be-fore alle
the peple wedded the kynge Arthur and Gonnore to-geder;
and the goode archebisshoppe entred in to the chirche, and sange
the high masse; and sir Amnistan hym serued, and ther was

<PB REF="" N="454" ID="pb.454"/>

riche offringe of kynges and princes, and whan the servise
was ffynisshed the kynge Arthur and the Barouns returned in to
the paleys where-as was grete plente of mynstralles, and
iogelours, and other; where-to sholde I yow devise the ioye and
the deduyt that thei hadden,   <MILESTONE N="161a" UNIT="folio"/>ffor the fourthe part cowde I
not telle.  Thus endured the ioye and the melodye all the mete
while; and after mete, whan the boordes were vppe, than
was a-rered a quyntayn, and thyder yede the newe a-dubbed
knyghtes for to bourde, with sheldes a-boute theire nekkes, and
the xl knyghtes that com in to Carmelide with the kynge
Arthur wente with hem, and also com thider the knyghtes of
the rounde table; and whan thei were comen thei be-gonne
to do maistries iolily and in myrthe as thei that were worthy
<CHOICE><CORR>men</CORR><SIC>me</SIC></CHOICE> and noble knyghtes.  So that tidinges com to sir Gawein
that satte at mete a-monge his fellowes that hadden serued;
and whan Gawein vndirstode that his frendes were ouer-sette,
he a-roos vp and asked his armes and horse, and his shelde,
and a-noon it was brought, and so dide alle his felowes, and
Gawein dide on an habergon of double maile vnder his robes
for that was euer more his custome euer as longe as he
lyved.  Nought for that he thought to do eny vilonye ne treson.  But
for he douted euer that debate sholde a-rise amonge his felowes
thourgh the dedes of some musarde, or eny treson where-of
ther were I-nowe in the londe; but whan that Gawein and
his felowes com in to the medowes where-as was the turnement
well be-gonne.  But the newe knyghtes were euell ledde, ffor
the knyghtes of the rounde table ledde hem at her volunte, and
whan that Gawein saugh that thei were so at the werse he was
nothinge gladde.  Than he and his companye wenten in that
were well foure <CHOICE><CORR>score</CORR><SIC>sore</SIC></CHOICE> a-counted, and a-noon these yonge
knyghtes com to Gawein, and asked yef he wolde be with hem,
and he seide ye, bothe now and also other tymes.</P>
<P>  Whan the xl sowdiours herde that sir Gawein wolde be
with hem at that same turnement, thei were wonder
gladde and ioyfull, and the tother were full wroth, and than
thei assured that neuer noon sholde faile other for deth ne for


<PB REF="" N="455" ID="pb.455"/>

life, and no more thei diden and that well shewed that day;
ffor thei diden so well, that the knyghtes of the rounde table
ther-of hadde envye; ffor dere sholde be bought the same
turnement, in the turnement that was made at logres, ther-as
Gawein was called lorde and maister for the wele doinge that
he ther dide, as ye shull heren here-after whan that he was
be-come the queenes knyght; and whan that Gawein hadde
take the suerte of his felowes and of the xl knyghtes, of whiche
ye haue herde.  Thei renged hem, and a-raide hem, and girde
a-gein theire horse, and Gawein sette hem in a-ray as he that
was a wise knyght, and with-oute pride, and the moste curteise
that was in the bloy Breteyne, and the beste taught in alle
thinges, and euer trewe to god and to his lorde; and whan
that Gawein hadde ordeyned his felowes in aray, thei rode two
and two to-geder eche after other, and tweyne the firste was
sir Gawein and sir Ewein le   <MILESTONE N="161b" UNIT="folio"/>graunt, the sone of kynge Vrien,
that Gawein loved beste of alle other, for he was the beste after
Gaheries; and the next tweyne were Seigramour and Galashyn,
and than Gefflet and lucas the boteller, for to assemble theire
sheldes a-boute her nekkes, and her speres streight in theire
handes, and the kynge Arthur, and the kynge Ban, and the
kynge Bohors, and Merlin, and Bretell, and Vlfin, and Antor
were lefte with the kynge leodogan in the paleise, and were
comen vp on high for to se and be-holde the bourdeyse, and
with hem weren ladyes and maydenys grete plente, and saugh
that thei were redy araide for to mete.</P>
<P>  On that other side were the knyghtes of the rounde table
redy araied, and weren an hundred and fifty, and sir
Gawein sente hem xl Iusteres, of the whiche Seigramour was
the firste; and on that other side com Nascien, and thei lete
theire horse renne that oon agein that other; and sir Gawein
smote be-twene hem two and hem departed, and cleped the
knyghtes of the rounde table, and seyde, "Ffeire lordes, ye
be right worthi men and goode knyghtes, the beste that eny
knoweth.  But doth wele, and lete vs be as many for as many
oon a-geins another, by soche forwarde that yef we take eny


<PB REF="" N="456" ID="pb.456"/>

of yours, that thei shall be with vs a-geins yow, and yef ye
take eny of owres, thei shull helpe yow to oure noysaunce,
and be it don in soche manere that as soone as ye take eny man
of oures that we shull sette a-nother in his place, and ye also
as soone as we take eny man of yowres to do the same,"
Thanne a-noon thei graunted <CHOICE><CORR>to holde</CORR><SIC>to holde to holde</SIC></CHOICE>   the couenauntes, and
than thei sente after theire armes in the town; and as soone
as thei were brought thei hem armed spedily in alle haste, and
the tidinges therof com in to the barouns in what maner that
sir Gawein hadde take the turnement a-gein the knyghtes of the
rounde table; and thei preised hym gretely, bothe oon and
other.  But a-bove alle other hym preised the kynge Bohors, and seide
ther was neuer seyn soche a knyght of his age, and yef he
lyve longe he shall be the beste knyght that euer was, "and that
I hadde levest to resemble."  Thus spake the kynge Bohors of
sir Gawein, and thei hem armed hastely and soone, and lepe
to horse, and hem renged and a-ray, and eche roode a-gein
other.  The firste that renged hym of the rounde table was
Adragein le noir, his shelde a-boute his nekke, the spere in honde,
and vpon a blakke stede; and on that other side com hym
a-gein Dodinell le sauage, as faste as horse myght renne, and
smote vpon the sheldes with sharpe grounde speres so rudely
that thei perced the sheldes thourgh the myght of theire armes,
and theire horse that swyftly hem bare, that he heedes stynted
at the hauberkes; but thei were so stronge   <MILESTONE N="162a" UNIT="folio"/>that thei faused
no mayle that the speres moste nede breke at the passinge
thourgh of the horse, for bothe were thei goode knyghtes, and
the horse swyfte, and thei hurteled so to-geder with sheldes
and helmes, that bothe thei ffill to grounde, horse and man;
and as soone as thei were bothe ouerthrowen, thei ronne to
the rescowe on bothe parties, and mette to-geder with speres
vpon the sheldes that thei splendered on peces, and some ther
were that passed thourgh with-oute fallinge, and some lay
stille.


<PB REF="" N="457" ID="pb.457"/>
</P>
<P>  As soone as the speres were spente, thei drough oute theire
swerdes, and be-gonne the medle on foote and on
horsebak, and sir Gawein and Nascien mette to-geder with
speres vpon sheldes with all theire force so rudely, that thei
all to perced, and Nasciens spere brake in Gaweins shelde; and
Gawein smote hym a-gein so rudely, that he bar hym from his
horse and his legges vp-right; but a-noon he lepte on foote,
for he was full bolde and hardy, and drough his swerde and
couered hym with his shelde, and apparailed hym redy for to
diffende; and Gawein returned and drough his swerde and
com to Nascien, and a-light on foote; and whan Nascien saugh
hym come with swerde drawen, he ne douted hym but litill,
for he was a full noble knyght, and hardy, and right sure, and
smote Gawein vpon the penon of the shelde that he clef it to
the bocle, and Gawein paide hym vpon the helme that he fill
vpon the palme of his handes, but soone was he risen vp a-gein
and smote Gawein so grete a stroke vpon the helme that the
sparkeles fly oute flamynge reade; and whan Gawein saugh
that it a-noyed hym sore, and than he hitte Nascien vpon the
helme that he made it cleve, and that Nascien fill vpon bothe
knees, but he was of high herte, and lepte vpon foote, and in
the a-risinge Gawein caught hym be the helme, and raced it
from his heede so harde, that his nose and his browes were
sore hurte, and caste it as fer as he myght in to the presse, and
than he cried, "sir knyght yelde the, for thow seest well how
it is," and he ansuerde that he was not yet come ther-to for to
yelde hym, for no man that he saugh.  Than he couered hym
with his shelde, and smote Gawein so harde on the shelde,
that a grete pece fill on the grene, and Gawein lepte to hym
and smote hym so with the pomell of his swerde on the temple,
that he fill to the erthe vp-right; and than he lepte to hym and
a-bated down the coif of maile of his heede and seide, "Yelde
the, or thow art but deed;" and he ansuerde that sle hym he
myght wele; but ther-fore wolde he not yelde hym recreaunt
while he myght lyve.  "What, sir knyght," quod Gawein,
"sey ye this for trouthe that ye hadde leuer be deed than ye

<PB REF="" N="458" ID="pb.458"/>

sholde yelde yow;" and he seide, "Ye, withoute
faile."  "Trewly," seide Gawein, "and I will not sle yow, for it were
  <MILESTONE N="162b" UNIT="folio"/>grete damage, for ye be full noble and worthi, but I shall
make yow to be so wele kept that this moneth ye shull not
come on horsbak."  "I wote neuer," quod he, "what ye
will do; but I will neuer graunte me for outreyed while that
I may lyve."  Whan Gawein herde this, he saugh that he was
of right high herte, and he be-thought hym on a fraunchise
that many oon wolde haue be full loth to haue do, and a-noon
he toke hym vp by the armes and seide, "Sir knyght, haue
here my swerde, and I yelde me to yow as he that is outrayed;"
and whan Nascien saugh the grete gentilnesse that was in hym,
he was right gladde and seide, "Ha, sir, I crye yow mercy,
ne sey not so, but holde here my swerde that I yow here yelde,
for alle peple se well I-nough how well it is; ffor this guerdon
ne may I yow quyte ne deserue, and than thei enbraced in
bothe armes, bothe bachelers, and eche to other made grete
curtesye, and than returned bothe to-geder in to the turnement
that tho was well be-gonne, and Nascien turned vpon Gaweins
side.</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein and Nascien com to the turnement thei
fonde that Dodinell was remounted, and hadde
withholde Adragain be fyn force, and the stour was right stronge
and merveilouse; and Seigramour hadde smyte down hervy de
rivell, and hilde hym by the helme so harde with bothe hondes
that his feith be-hoved hym to yelde; and Gaheries hadde
taken Mygoras; and whan Gawein com he be-gan to do so
well, that alle thei be-hoved to forsake place, and Gaweins
felowes dide so wele, that the xl knyghtes of the rounde table
hadde thei taken be strength, therefore were the tother full
sory.  Than com in other xl all fressh, and than recouered
to-geder alle the foure score felowes, and yaf hem a-newe
enuaye, and com full sory and wroth for theire felowes that
were thus taken, and these other com and receyved hem at
spere poyntes full boldly.  Ther was stronge stour and grete
strokes with swerdes vpon helmes and vpon sheldes, and longe


<PB REF="" N="459" ID="pb.459"/>

it endured that oon cowde not sey whiche party hadde the
werse; and so lasted the medle till that mydday was passed,
and than issed sir Gawein oute of the turnement to recouer
a-nother helme, for his was to rente that it was but litill worth
to hym or to eny other; and as soone as he was newe helmed
and hadde avented hym-self, he saugh how his felowes blenched
on alle partes, and than he rode in as faste as his horse myght
renne, and smote so the firste that he mette, that he fill from
his horse in to the feelde, and a-noon as he was comen his
felowes recouered that were in pointe to leve place, and he
be-gan to do so well that alle men merveiled that hym be-heilde,
and fill that he fonde sir Ewein on foote, and kay, and Gefflet,
and lucas, and Bliobleris, and Osenain cors hardy, and launall,
and Agrauain; vpon these viij was all the turnement stinted;
ffor hem to take   <MILESTONE N="163a" UNIT="folio"/>coveyted the knyghtes of the rounde table,
and whan Gawein saugh that, he dressed thiderward his horse
with a spere in honde, and smote in a-monge hem so that thei
fremyssh, and smote so the firste that he mette that he fill
vp-right, and ther-with brake the spere that myght no lenger
endure; and after that he overthrewe tweyne with the tronchon
so felenoyusly that thei wiste not whethir it was nyght or
day; and after that he drough his swerde and be-gan soche
maistries in armes that alle thei were a-baisshed, ffor he slitte
sheldes, and hauberkes, and helmes, so that noon durste a-bide
his strokes, but made hym wey the beste of hem alle, and thei
disparbeled here and there, and his felowes ther-while be
remounted, and haue goode will to ben a-venged; and than
be-gan sir Ewein to do so well that many were gladde <CHOICE><CORR>hym</CORR><SIC>hy</SIC></CHOICE>
to be-holden, and so diden alle the other companye that thei
were worthi to haue grete loos.  Thus endured the turnement
full longe, and wele thei diden in armes the newe knyghtes, and
merveilously hym preved ther sir Ewein, the sone of kynge
Vrien, and Galasshin, and Dodinell, and the viij felowes
a-fore-seide; these hielde hem vigerously be-fore alle the tother, and
hem preised moche the foure kynges that weren vpon the walles,
and seide thei sholde be noble men yef thei myght live to age:


<PB REF="" N="460" ID="pb.460"/>

but a-bove alle other was sir Gawein comended, ffor thourgh
his prowesse thei were putte bakke and chaced to the town,
and ther with-stode the knyghtes of the rounde table that were
wroth and angry, and seiden amonge hem-self that foule were
thei demened, and than thei returned a-gein hem that kepte hem
wonder shorte; and than be-gan the stour so merveilouse and
fierce more that it hadde ben of all the day at the enterynge
of the yates of Torayse, be-twene the knyghtes of the rounde
table and the knyghtes that were newe a-dubbed, and ther
be-gan Gawein soche a disray that longe was it spoken of after;
and yet hadde he don well all the day, ffor whan that he
saugh the knyghtes of the rounde table were stynted be-fore
the yate, and diffended so harde the entre he was sore chaffed
for anger.  Than he putte vp his swerde in the scawberk, but
it was not Calibourne, but it was a-nother turneyinge swerde;
and than he caught a sparre of Oke with bothe hondes, and
caste his shelde to the grounde for to be more light, and com
in to the presse ther as he saugh thikkeste, and in his comynge
he smote a knyght on the helme that he fill in swownynge,
and than he smote a-nother that he fill to grounde, and than
he leide on grete strokes on bothe sides that all that he raught
voided the sadeles that noon ne ascaped, and he hurte many
and maymed; and whan the knyghtes of the rounde table
saugh that thei coveited nothinge but hem for to greve, and
than thei ronne vpon Gawein and his felowes, and seide that
to-day more thei wolde not spare to do theire werste,   <MILESTONE N="163b" UNIT="folio"/>and that
of turneyinge hadde thei no more cure; and thei be-gonne ther
a stour grete and perilouse that grete myschef ther sholde haue
ben hastely, yef Merlin ne hadde cleped the kynge Ban, and the
kynge Bohors his brother, and badde hem departe the
turnement, for it was high tyme; and whan the barouns vndirstode
that Merlin seide, thei asked theire armes and theire horse
hastely, and the squyres lepte wightly and brought hem be-fore
the paleise, and thei ride a-noon thourgh the renges, and Merlin
 rode formeste that sore hym hasted; and these foughten full
harde, that sore were chauffed with wrath oon a-gein a-nother


<PB REF="" N="461" ID="pb.461"/>

But Gawein dide moche harme with the sparre that was so
harde, and thei hem diffended full vigerously, that in no wise
wolde not voide the grounde; and whan Gawein saugh that
thei mayntened hem so well he smote a-monge hem Irous as
a wilde boor, and perced hem thourgh-oute <CHOICE><CORR>maugre</CORR><SIC>mauge</SIC></CHOICE> hem alle;
and than be-gan to do the werste that he myght hem to harmen
at his power.  Than Merlin and the thre kynges com hem to
disseuer, and than fill that Gawein mette Meodalis that hadde
smyte hym with a spere in the breste, that ner he hadde smyte
down bothe hym and his horse on an hepe; and he was full
wroth for the buffet that he hadde resceyved, and lifte up the
barre to smyte hym on the helme; and he saugh the stroke
come and blenched to eschewe the barre, but the stroke fill
be-twene the sholdres and smote hym down to the erthe; and
the kynge Arthur, that wele hadde seyn the stroke, cried pees,
that wele was vndirstonde of may oon, and cried a-lowde, "Feire
nevew, ley down the barre, for ye haue don right I-nowgh;"
and Merlin caught hym be that oon hande, and in that other
hande toke the barre, and seide, smylinge, "Sir knyght, thow
art take yelde thow to me, for ye haue don I-nough."</P>
<P>  Than Gawein be-helde and saugh it was Merlin; than he
seide full debonerly, "I am take seth that it yow
pleseth, and ther-with he lete falle the barre, and than he
asked why he dide hym take."  With that worde com the
kynge Arthur, and seide, "Gawein, feire nevewe, lefe the
turnement, for ye haue don I-nowgh; ffor we se well that it is to be
lefte."  And he ansuerde a-gein that so be it seth that he dide
 comaunde, and than tho v wente forth, and a-noon as Gawein
was oute thei departed and wente to theire hosteles for to
vn-arme hem.  But full sory were the knyghtes of the rounde
table, for that thei hadde the werse by the chaunge that thei
hadde made; and seiden than whan thei turneyed eny more,
thei wolde so be a-venged that thei sholde not hem scorne ne
Iape, and that thei lete hem well wite the newe knyghtes and
her companye.  These wordes well vndirstode a yonge knyght
that rode after hem, and tolde it to sir Gawein that Arthur

<PB REF="" N="462" ID="pb.462"/>

and   <MILESTONE N="164a" UNIT="folio"/>Merlin hadde brought to the paleise, and sir Ewein with
hem, and Galasshin, and Seigramor; and whan this yonge
knyght com he tolde as the knyghtes of the rounde table hadde
seide, and Gawein vndirstode her manaces, and hir pride, and
he hadde ther-of grete dispite; but he made ther-of no semblance,
saf that he seide to his companye, that neuer he wolde hem
faile in no turnement ne in werre.  These wordes seide Gawein
to his felowes, and he hilde it wele, ffor it was well shewed
after who was the beste knyght that day that thei toke
turnement at logres in the medowes, as shall be reherseth whan
tyme cometh; as soone as the turnement was departed, and
the kynge and his nevew were in the paleise, the knyghtes of
the rounde table wente to vn-arme hem at her ostels, and the
mene peple of the town conveied I-nowgh sir Gawein, and seide
oon to a-nother, lo here the goode knyght, and thei gadered
a-boute hym on alle partes, and conveyed him to the paleise,
and in to the halle, and thei asked oon of a-nother what he was;
and Merlin hem ansuerde, and seide his name was Gawein,
the nevew of kynge Arthur, and the sone of kynge loot of
Orcanye; and whan thei herden what he was, thei seiden as
gladde peple that he shewed well fro whens he was comen,
thus the peple of the town seiden her volunte, and than thei
returned; and whan the knyghtes of the rounde table were
vn-armed, thei clothed hem and a-raide hem in her beste robes,
and com to court; and where thei saugh sir Gawein, thei
drough a-boute hym and compleyned to hym of hym-self, and
seide that he hadde hem euyll be seyn at that firste turnement,
and that fro thens-forth he ought wele to be lorde and maister,
and felowe of the rounde table; and Gawein hem herde wele,
but he ansuerde hem no worde, and fro thens-forth he was a
lorde and maister, and a felowe of the rounde table; and it was
goode reson, ffor he was a noble knyght, and a trewe and full
of alle vertues and goode tecches, and the moste curteise knyght
that eny man knewe.</P>
<P>  With that were the tables leide, and the knyghtes wash,
and ther were thre halles full of knyghtes, and thei


<PB REF="" N="463" ID="pb.463"/>

were well serued, and by leiser of alle thinges, and after soper
whan the clothes weren vp thei enuoysed the worthi knyghtes,
and eche reported of other honour as was right, and than thei
ronge to euesonge in the mynster of seynt Stephene, and thider
thei wente to here the seruise, and after was the bedde of
Arthur blessed as was right, and than departed the knyghtes,
and wente to theire hostelles for to slepe and resten; and
Gonnore be-lefte in the Chamber, she and hir maistresse alone,
and that day was purchesed the   <MILESTONE N="164b" UNIT="folio"/>treson wherby she sholde
be taken and traied of the parentes of Gonnore, the stepdoughter
of Cleodales the stiwarde, ffor thei hadde youen so moche to
the olde maistresse of Arthurs wife, that she graunted to do
theire volunte, and tolde hir thei wolde a-bide in the gardin
vnder the paleise, and thei sholde haue the tother Gonnore in
her companye; and all thus thei were a-corded and wente in-to
the gardin, and hidde hem vnder the trees x of hem; but thei
were not armed saf thei hadde eche of hem a suerde, and with
hem was the false Gonnore, and ther thei a-bide so longe that
the barouns were departed to her hostels, and thei made dispoile
the quene to go to hir bedde; and than the old maistresse hir
toke and ledde hir in to the gardin for to pisse, and whan the
x traitoris that were quatte in the gardin vnder an ympe saugh
her come, thei were stille and coy, and drough towarde the
wall litill and litill, and Bretell and Vlfin hadde not foryete
the wordes that Merlin hadde seide.  But were well armed
vnder her robes, and weren quat vnder the steyres ther as the
queene sholde come down, and hilde hem so stille that thei
were not a-perceyued of man ne woman, and herkened in this
manere long while, and than thei saugh the queene that the
maistresse brought by the hande and wente that wey, where-as
the traitours hadde sette theire waicch, and whan thei saugh
that thei weren oute of the chambre, thei lepe vp and sette
hande on hir, and toke to the old maistresse the tother false
Gonnore, and a-noon as the queene hem saugh she wiste well
she was be-traied, and wolde crye as she that was sore affraied,
and thei seide that yef she spake eny worde she sholde a-non


<PB REF="" N="464" ID="pb.464"/>

be slain, and ther-with thei drough theire swerdes oute and
wente toward the river that ran vnder the gardin, where thei
hadde a barge I-teyed where-in thei were come in to the gardin,
and the gardin was right high a-bove the river, and noon myght
come ther-to but by a lane or by a barge, and the lane was
full thikke and comberouse to come vp or down for the rokkes,
wherof was grete plente; and yef thei myght haue brought hir
in to the barge the queene hadde ben loste with-oute recouer.</P>
<P>  Whan Vlfin and Bretell saugh that thei hadde so longe
a-wayted, thei lepte oute of theire enbusshement and
hem a-scryed and cleped hem traitours, and seide thei sholde
dye; and whan that the traitours saugh thei were but tweyne,
and dide hem a-scrye, and preised hem at nought, than v of
hem toke the queene, and v a-bode for to fight with the tweyne
that com with swerdes drawen; and whan the queene saugh
hir ledde in soche manere, she hadde grete drede, and fill to
grounde vpon the grene, and thei lifte hir vp and bare hir a-wey
maugre hire; and whan she saugh tweyne come   <MILESTONE N="165a" UNIT="folio"/>hir to socour,
she braied rudely oute of theire handes and down the gardin
till she com to an ympe, and clippe it in hir armes full harde
and thise com for to take hir a-wey; but they myght not hir
remeve, and yet thei pulde and drough, but more dide thei
nought; and thei were nygh woode for sorowe and angre, that
for a litill thei wolde hir haue slayn, and Vlfin and Bretell
be come to these v that hem a-bide with swerdes drawen, and
Bretell smote so the firste that he mette that he slytte hym
to the teth, and Vlfin smote a-nother that the heede fill to
grounde, and the other thre smyte at hem sore, but nought thei
myght hem apeire, for thei were well armed; and thei wolde
haue fledde, but thei kepte hem so shorte that alle thre there
were deed, and thei com to the tother fyve that peyned to lede
a-wey the quene by force, but thei myght not haue hir a-wey
from the ympe, and thei plukked at hir so sore that nygh thei
rente bothe armes from the body, and whan that Vlfin and
Bretell saugh the queene in soche turnement, thei ronne thider,
and hem a-scried, and a-noon thei com hem a-geins, and yaf


<PB REF="" N="465" ID="pb.465"/>

to-geder grete strokes with swerdes ther as thei myght atteyne,
that thei slowgh tweyne of the v; and thei saugh thei were
but thre, and thei turned to flight down the lane towarde the
barge; and whan Vlfin and Bretell saugh hem fleen thei sette
no force hem to enchace, but com to the olde deuell, the
maistresse, and caught hir by the sholderes, and caste hir down
the roche, and rolled fro roche to roche till she com to the
river, and than thei caste in the bodyes of alle hem that thei
hadde slayn, and than thei toke the queene and ledde hir to
hir chambre sore affraied, and thei badde hir be nothinge be
dismayed.  Than thei toke the false Gonnore and ledde hir to
theire hostell, for thei wolde that noon aparceyved her covyne.</P>
<P>  Thus as ye haue herde were the traitours demened by the
counseile of Merlin, and the Queene was socoured by
these two worthi men; and as soone as thei were gon, a-noon
Merlin it knewe well, and than he badde the kynge sende two
maydenes in to the chamber to the queene for to bringe hir to
bedde, and the kynge asked wherefore is ther not I-nowgh of
the maistresse, and Merlin tolde hym the trouthe all as it was
be-fallen; and whan the kynge it herde he merveiled moche
of this thinge, and seide he sholde not be in ese till he hadde
spoken with his doughter; and than departed the kynge leodogan
and com in to the chamber where-as Gonnore his doughter
was, and brought with hym two maydenes to helpe hir to
bedde; and whan she saugh hir fader she be-gan tenderly to
wepe, and the kynge toke hir by the hande, and spake with
hir sooll by hir-self, and he badde hir not to be dismayed, for
she sholde no more haue no drede, and she tolde hym all the
auenture that was be-fallen; and than the kynge comaunded
the maydenes to make hir redy, and bringe hir to bedde, and
thei a-noon dide his comaundement,   <MILESTONE N="165b" UNIT="folio"/>and the kynge leodogan
wolde neuer departe oute of the chambre till that he saugh
the signe of the crowne vpon hire reynes; and than wiste he
verily that it was his doughter vpon his wif, and than he
couered hir a-gein, a wente oute of the chambre and spake no
worde; and the dameseiles merveiled sore whi that he dide


<PB REF="" N="466" ID="pb.466"/>

so, and than com the kynge Arthur and his companye from
theire disporte, and whan he com in to the halle, the kynge
Leodogan and Merlin com hym a-geins, and badde hym go to
his wif to bedde, ffor it was reson and high tyme, and he
seide he wolde with good will, and com in to the chambre
where the two maidenes weren that hadde brought the queene
to bedde, and as soone as he was in his bedde thei departed
oute of the chambre, and lefte no moo but hem two, and ther
thei ledde myri lif togeder as thei that well loued.</P>
<P>  Thus sholde the queene haue be disceyued be these traitours,
and thourgh hem after-ward hadde she grete annoye that
longe tyme endured, as the storye shall declare how that the
kynge hir lefte thre yer, that she com neuer in his companye;
but was with Galehaut, a riche prince in the reame of Sorloys,
for the love of launcelot; and the kynge Arthur hilde in
a-voutrye the false Gonnore till that a maladie hir toke, and
Bertelak, a traitour, that made he wolde hir not forsake for
no man, till that she stanke and rotened a-bove erthe, and the
reame was therfore nygh thre yere enderdited, and stode a-cursed
that neuer manes body ne womans was byried in noon halowed
place, but a-cursed be the centense of holy cherche, and all
this trouble suffred oure lorde hem for to haue for his synnes
that were right grete, and all this com thourgh a knyght that
died after vpon myschevouse deth, as ye shull here declared
in the seconde book of this storie, and it is reson to telle what
was the cause that it fill.</P>
<P>  This was the trouthe that the kynge leodogan was a noble
knyght, and kepte well Iustice and right, and he
hadde with hym a wise knyght that hadde don hym goode
servise; and he was come of high lynage, and hadde be a
goode knyght in his tyme, and was cleped Bertelak, and he
hated a knyght dedly, for that he hadde slayn his cosin germain
for his wif, that he loved, and whan Bertelak wiste that he
hadde his cosin slain, and his wif diffouled, he ne deyned not
to make no playnt to the kynge leodogan, but com to hym and
hym diffied, and a-waited hym after many a day and many

<PB REF="" N="467" ID="pb.467"/>

a nyght; and it fill that same even that arthur hadde wedded
his wif that the knyghtes departeden for the court, and wente
to theire hostels, and happed that Bertelak mette that knyght
and with hym two squyers, and a-noon Bertelak ran vpon hym
and hym slowgh; and whan he hadde don he wente to his
hostell, and the two squyers that were with the knyght made
a grete crie, that   <MILESTONE N="166a" UNIT="folio"/>the peple ronne oute on alle parties with
lanternes, and brondes of fire, and torches brennynge, and fonde
the knyght slayn, and thei aske the two squyers that made so
grete doell who hadde hym slain; and thei seide that Bertelak
the rede hadde it don, and whan the squyers hadde cried and
braied for theire lord longe while, thei toke hym vp and bar
hym to theire hostell, and dide hym birie as oon sholde do
a deed knyght, and dide the seruise at cherche as ther-to
belonged; and on the morowe Vlfin and Bretell sente after
Cleodalis, the stiward, for to come speke with hem in her hostell,
and he com a-noon with goode chere as fre and debonair, and
a-noon as he was comen, thei toke hym in counseile, and tolde
hym all the a-uenture as it was be-fallen how his doughter
hadde wrought; and whan he hadde herde the vntrouthe of
hire he seide his doughter was she not, ffor yef she hadde be
my doughter she hadde not don this for no-thinge that is in
the erthe; and as thei spake to-geder a-monge hem thre.  The
kynge leodogan was a-risen erly, ffor sore was he affraied of
the merveiles that were be-falle that nyght of his doughter,
and Merlin was also a-risen, and seide, "Sir, god yeve yow
goode morowe;" and whan the kynge hym saugh he made
hym feire chere, and bad god hym blisse.  Than eche toke other
be the hande, and wente spekynge of many thinges till thei
com to the hostell of Vlfin and Bretell, and thei entred in so
stilliche that thei ther-of wiste no worde till thei were euen
comen vpon hem, and a-noon as thei were of hem war, thei
yede hem a-geins as thei that nothinge were a-baisshed to
worship eny worthi man.  Than thei entred in to a chambre alle
v, and Vlfin brought forth Gonnore, and tolde how she and
the traitours hadde wrought, not-with-stondinge thei knewe it


<PB REF="" N="468" ID="pb.468"/>

alle wele, for Merlin hadde it tolde the kynge all as it
was.  Than spake the kinge leodogan to his stiwarde, and seide,
"Sir, Senescall, I love yow well, and fayn I wolde purchace
youre worshippe for to encrece, and so I shall do yef I may lyve;
ffor full well ye haue me serued and trewly, and therfore
wolde I do nothinge that sholde yow turne to shame or reprof,
and witte ye wherfore I it sey.  Se here youre doughter that
wele hath deserued that ther sholde be don on hir
Iustice.  But ye haue be so trewe to me that I ought it wele to pardon
for the love of yow, or a gretter thinge than is this.  But for
that me be-hoveth for to take vengaunce in some manere, hit
be-houeth yow to bringe hir oute of this reame In soche wise
that neuer she be sein of man ne of woman that hir knowe;
ffor so I will that it be don;" and the stiwarde ansuerde and
seide that his doughter ne was she neuer.  But in as moche as
it was his wille and his <MILESTONE N="166b" UNIT="folio"/>comaundement he wolde hit don, "ffor
so god helpe me," quod he, "I hadde leuer she hadde be biried
all quyk than this hadde hir be-fallen.  Ne to me she ne
aperteyned nothinge neuer."  "Now," quod the kynge, "lete
be all this matier, and loke that it be don in soche maner that
I neuer here more speche of hir here-after, and that ye take
of myne what that is youre plesier."</P>
<P>  Thus was take the counseile of the Barouns, and Cleodalis
appareiled hym and his stepdoughter to go with-outen
lenger respite, and rode forth by theire iourneyes till thei com
oute of the reame of Carmelide in to an abbey that stode in a
full wilde place, and ther he hir lefte, as seith the storie, till
that Bertelak the reade hir fonde, whiche by his art and his
engyn by hir lay longe tyme after.  But of hir as now speketh
no more the tale saf that Cleodalis lefte hir there, and come
a-gein to Toraise in to the grete Court of the kynge leodogan
in Carmelide, wher-as was the kynge Arthur.




</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.26"><PB REF="" N="469" ID="pb.469"/>
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXVI.  
<LB/>BANISHMENT OF BERTELAK; FIGHT AND RECONCILIATION BETWEEN ARTHUR AND LOOT; ARTHUR'S COURT AT LOGRES; VOWS OF THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE AND THE QUEEN'S KNIGHTS; THE TOURNAMENT.</HEAD>
<P>Whan the kynge leodogan hadde comaunded his stiwarde to
bringe his stepdoughter oute of the reame, he and Merlin
departed from Vlfin and Bretell, and com in to the halle hande
to hande, where thei fonde the Barouns alle redy, and oon hadde
ronge to masse, and so thei wente to the mynster, and whan
masse was seide thei com a-gein in to the halle, and than com
the kyn of the deed knyght that Bertelak hadde slain, ffor to
make theire complainte to the kynge; and the kynge leodogan
sente for to seche hym at his hostell, and he com a-noon
with-oute daunger well armed vndir his robes, and brought with
hym grete plente of knyghtes, ffor he was full of feire courtesie
and a feire speker, and a-noon the kynge hym asked why he
hadde the knyght slain in treson, and he seide that of treson
he sholde hym wele diffende a-gein alle tho that wolde hym
apele, "and I sey no nay but that I slough the knyght, but
firste I dide hym deffie, and it was not with-oute grete cause,
ffor moche peple knowe wele that he slough my cosin germain
for his wif that he diffouled, and me semeth that in alle
maners that oon may oweth he to greve his mortall enmye
after that he hath hym diffied;" and the kynge seide that that
was not I-nough.  "But yef ye hadde yow complayneth to me,
and I wolde not haue it redressed than myght ye haue take
vengaunce, but ye ne spake ther-of to me neuer
worde."  "Sir," quod he, "ye sey your volunte.  But a-geins yow
mysdide I neuer, ne neuer ne shall yef god will."  Quod the
kynge, "I will that right be hadde."  "Sir," seide Bertelak
le Rous, "I se well that I moste be at youre volunte," and
than comaunded the kynge leodogan that Iugement sholde be
yoven be the rede of his barouns.

<PB REF="" N="470" ID="pb.470"/>
</P>
<P>  At this Iugement was the kynge Arthur, and the kynge
Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and sir Gawein, and sir
Ewein, and Galasshin, and Nascien, and Adragain, and hervy
de rivel,   <MILESTONE N="167a" UNIT="folio"/>and Guyomar.  These x were at the Iugement and
spake to-geder of oon thinge and other, and thei a-corded in the
ende that he sholde be disherited, and voyde the londe of the
kynge leodogan for euer more; and the kynge Ban that was
of feire eloquense tolde the tale as he was charged, and he
spake so high that he myght wele be herde, bothe of nygh and
fer.  "Sirs," quod he, "these barouns that beth here a-warded
that Bertelais le Rous shall be disherited of all his londe that
he holdeth in youre powere, and shall for-swhere the contre
for euer more; ffor that he toke the Iustice vpon hym-self of
the knyght that he slough, and namly by nyght, ffor the
Iustice longed not to hym, and on that other side ye holde
court open and myghty that oweth to condite alle saf goynge
and saf comynge to alle tho that come at this high feste," and
with that sat down the kynge Ban that no more seide at that
tyme; and whan Bertelays saugh he was for-Iuged, and that
he ne myght noon othirwise do he returned with-oute moo
wordes; ffor he durste not the Iugement with-sey, ffor the
highest lordes of the worlde, and the moste puyssaunt hadde
it don.  But yef eny other hadde it don a-noon he wolde the
Iugement haue falsed, and thus wente Bertelais le Rous, but
many a knyght hadde he hym to conueye to whom he hadde
yoven many feire yeftes, ffor he hadde be a noble knyght and
a vigerouse, and so he past forth on his iourneyes that he com
to the same abbey, wher-as was the false Gonnore, and ther
he a-bode and soiourned longe tyme, and was in grete thought
as he that cowde moche euell, how that he myght be a-venged
of the kynge leodogan and the kynge Arthur that hadde hym
thus for-juged, and for that fill to Arthur grete trouble and so
grete discorde be-twene hym and his wif, that he lefte her
longe tyme, as ye shull here in the secunde book of this processe
yef god will vouche-saf to graunte me so longe space to writen
it.  But now we moste cesse of this mater, and speke of the


<PB REF="" N="471" ID="pb.471"/>

goode kynge Arthur that is at Toraise, in Carmelide, with the
kynge leodogan, and with the grete companye.</P>
<P>  Full myry lif ledde the kynge Arthur with his wif viij
dayes, and the neynthe day after that he was spoused
he cleped his Barouns, and badde hem make hem redy to ride,
ffor he was in talent for to repeire in to the reame of logres,
and thei seide that thei were all redy for to ride; and than the
kynge toke Gawein in counseile, and seide, "Ffeire nevew,
take with yow as many of youre companye that ther leve here
but v hundred, ffor I will come ride after stilleche and esely,
and ye shall go to logres my chief Citee, and ordeyne redy alle
thinges that is necessarie, and of vitaile, and of deynteis, as ye
may so that nothinge ne faute, and sendith fer and nygh that
I will holde court this mydde August the richest that I
may."  "Sir," seide Gawein, "I haue drede lest ye be encombred be
the wey of some maner peple."  "Of that haue ye no drede,"
quod   <MILESTONE N="167b" UNIT="folio"/>the kynge, "but go ye in all haste."  Than departed
sir Gawein from his vncle and com to his felowes, and bad hem
to make hem redy for to ride, and thei wente to theire hostelles,
and hem armed; but firste thei toke leve of the kynge leodogan,
and of the Barouns of Carmelide, and thus departed Gawein
fro the courte, he and his companye; and the kynge Arthur
a-bode with v hundre men, whereof two hundre and fifty were
knyghtes of the rounde table; and Gawein and his companye
com to logres; but Gawein was euer pensif for his vncle that
he hadde lefte in Carmelide, that hym sholde eny thinge
myshappe vpon the wey, ffor he hadde fer contrey to ride that
marched to his enmyes er he com in to his londe in safte, and
he hym hasted to do the kynges comaundement, and sent to
alle hem that the kynge loved that thei sholde come to his
Court at the myddell of August, and eche made hym redy to
come to court as strongely as thei myght, and Gawein ordeyned
<CHOICE><CORR>that vitaile</CORR><SIC>that vitaile that vitaile</SIC></CHOICE>   com on alle parties with cartes and Chariettis that
he stuffed so well the Citee as longed to soche a feste, as he


<PB REF="" N="472" ID="pb.472"/>

that full well coude hym entermete that nothinge ne failed;
ffor as the storye seith he was oon of the beste knyghtes, and
wiseste of the worlde, and ther-to the leste mysspeker, and
noon a-vauntor, and the beste taught of alle thinges that
longeth to worshippe or curtesie; and whan he hadde made all
redy he toke his wey toward his vncle, ffor grete drede he
hadde of that he sholde be distrobeled on the wey of som
peple.  But now we shull a-while cesse of hym and his
companye, and speke of the kynge Arthur.</P>
<P>  The thridde day after that Gawein was departed from the
kynge Arthur his vncle, the kynge toke his wey towarde
the Castell of Bredigan, he and his wif, and in her companye
was the kynge Ban of Benoyk, and the kynge Bohors of Gannes
that was his brother, and the beste knyght that eny man neded
to seche, and so ther were CCL knyghtes of the rounde table that
alle were feed men with the kynge leodogan, and the queene
hadde so praied sir Amnistian that was chapelein with the kynge
leodogan hir fader, that he com with hir, and was sithen hir
chapelein longe tyme; and so ledde Gonnore hir cosin that was
feire, and debonaire, and amyable to alle peple, and Sadoyne
hir brother that was elther than she, and Castelein of
Daneblaise, the noble Citee; and as soone as the kynge Arthur
was departed oute of the reame of Carmelide, the kynge loot
hadde knowinge by his asspies, and he and his knyghtes rode
a-gein hym, and hem enbusshed in the foreste of sapernye, and
seide that ther sholde he a-bide the kynge Arthur, and take
from hym his wif, yef he myght.  But of hym we shull now
cesse, and speke of the kynge Arthur that was departed oute
of Carmelide, and the storie seith how the kynge leodogan
conveyed hem thre dayes hole, and the fourthe day he returned
in to his reame, and than com Merlin to the kynge Arthur
and toke leve, and seide that he sholde go to   <MILESTONE N="168a" UNIT="folio"/>his maister
Blaase, for longe hadde he hym not seyn, and the kynge hadde
well spedde of that he hadde for to done.  Than seide the
kynge, "Merlin, feire frende shull ye not be at my court at
logres?"  "Yesse," seide Merlin, "I shall be ther er it


<PB REF="" N="473" ID="pb.473"/>

departe," and ther-with eche of hem comaunded other to god,
but he was but litill wey thens whan no man wiste where
that he was be-comen; and Merlin wente to Blaase the same
nyght, and he hym resceyued with grete ioye, whan that he
hym saugh, and Merlin tolde hym alle the a-uentures that were
falle seth that he departed, and he tolde hym how the kynge
loot was enbusshed in the foreste of sapernye, and tolde hym
other thinges I-nowghe that after be-fill in the reame of logres;
and Blaase hem wrote as he tolde, and by his booke haue we
the knowinge; but now cesseth to speke of Merlin, and Blase,
and speke of Arthur.
  </P>
<P>Whan the kynge Arthur was departed from the kynge
leodogan, and Merlin also, as ye haue herde, he rode
with v hundre men of armes, and ledde with hym his wif
Gonnore the queene, and he rode smale iourneyes till he com
in to the foreste of sapernye, where-as the kynge loot was
enbusshed with vij hundre men of armes; and the gromes
that ledde the somers wiste neuer worde till that thei were
fallen euen a-monge hem; and as soone as thei saugh thei were
men of armes, thei wiste well thei were not well come.  Than
thei a-bode and wente no ferther, and sente to the kynge Arthur
that thei hadde founde men I-armed; whan the kynge saugh
that he was a-spied he a-light on foote, and made his peple
come a-boute hym and ordeyned for bataile, and comaunded
xl. knyghtes to kepe the queene, and bad hem lede hir to
garison yef thei saugh nede.  And than thei ride forth her
heedes bowed down vndir theire helmes redy hem to diffende,
yef thei founde eny peple to stoppe hem the wey, and so thei
ride till thei dide falle vpon the wacche, and the kynge Arthur
was be-fore in the firste frounte, and the kynge Ban, and the
kynge Bohors, and the knyghtes of the rounde table; and the
kynge looth spronge oute with vij hundre men of armes, and
com hem a-geins theire spers, a-gein the assels of the sadeles,
and the sheldes be-fore theire breste as faste as horse myght
renne, and hem a-scride so high that all the foreste resounded,
and these other com vpon hem boldely with sharpe trenchaunte

<PB REF="" N="474" ID="pb.474"/>

speres, and mette to-geder vpon sheldes that many of hem
perced and slitte, many were throwe to grounde on bothe sides,
and many ther were that brake theire speres and passed forth
with-oute fallinge; and whan the spers were spente thei drowgh
oute theire swerdes and be-gonne the bateile right grete, that
neuer of so fewe peple ne saugh no man so fierce bateile, ffor
thei were full noble knyghtes vpon bothe parties; and so longe
it lasted, that the kynge Arthur and the kynge looth mette
to-geder with speres in hande, and lett renne that oon a-gein
that other so harde   <MILESTONE N="168b" UNIT="folio"/>as horse myght renne, and mette so harde
to-geder with speres vpon sheldes, that the spere poyntes stynte
at the hauberkes, and thei ther-on shof with all theire force;
and the kynge loot brake his spere, and the kynge Arthur
smote hym so harde that he bar hym to grounde ouer his
horse croupe; but soone was he lepte vpon foote as he that
was of grete prowesse, and drowh his swerde and couered hym
with his shelde, and was so doelfull that nygh he yede oute
of witte, ffor that he was overthrowe be the myght of knyght
alone, ffor he was not a-customed for to falle often; and the
kynge Arthur hadde made his returne and com toward the
kynge loot gripinge his spere, for he coveited to take hym
quyk; and whan the kynge looth saugh hym come he glenched
a-side, and Arthur failed of hym and past forth, and in the
passinge the kynge loot smote Arthurs horse in the bely thourgh
the guttes, and Arthur fill to grounde, and his horse vpon
his body, that his thigh was be-twene the horse and the grounde,
so that he myght not a-rise; and the kynge loot sterte to and
caught hym by the helme, and drough and pulled all that he
myght, and sore hym peyned for to smyten of his heede, and
soone ther sholde haue be so grete damage that neuer myght it
haue be restored; but as the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors,
and the knyghtes of the rounde table com fiercely vpon the
peple of kynge loot, and be-gan sore bateile and harde, so that
ther was noon but that he hadde I-nough to done; and so thei
peyned hem on bothe parties that the two kynges be remounted,
and be-gonne the stour grete and merveillouse; but at grete


<PB REF="" N="475" ID="pb.475"/>

myschef were the peple of kynge Arthur, ffor the kynge loot
hadde two hundre knyghtes moo than hadde kynge Arthur;
with that com sir Gawein with foure score felowes well armed,
and kay the stiwarde bar the baner; and Arthur be-hielde and
saugh Gawein come and knewe hym well by his armes, and
also kay the stiwarde be the baner that he bar in his handes
that sore desired the assemble, as he that was hardy and
enterpendaunt, and right sure ne hadde ben oon tecche that he
hadde, ffor that he was copiouse of langage in his disporte for
the iolynesse that was in hym and the myrthe; for he was euer
bourdinge and iapinge in game, and was the beste felowe in
companye that eny man knewe, and for that euer he wolde of
custome borde of the sothe hym hated many a knyght for the
shame that thei hadde of his wordes, and therfore he myshapped
in many a place, ffor the knyghtes that he hadde scorned in
myrthe didde hym after grete annoye; but a trewe knyght was
he euer a-gein his lorde, and a-gein the queene, euer in to the
ende of his deth.  Ne neuer in all his live dide he treson saf
oon, and that was of lohoot the sone of kynge Arthur that he
slough for enuye in the foreste perilouse, and for that Percevale
ly Galoys was accused with grete wronge for the deth of the
same hoot, like as an Ermyte hit tolde after that   <MILESTONE N="169a" UNIT="folio"/>hadde seyn
all the dede.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Arthur saugh Gawein, his nevew come
so fiercely, his herte a-roos for grete ioye that he
hadde.  Than he com to the kynge Ban, and seide, "Sir, se
how riche socour to vs cometh, knowe ye not hym that rideth
be-fore vpon the blakke stede that gripeth the grete spere vnder
the shelde of goolde and azur ther-ynne, a lyon rampaunt;"
and the kynge Ban be-heilde, and seide, "Who is it?  telle
me; ffor I knowe hym not saf that me semeth it sholde be
Gawein youre nevew."  "Certes," quod Arthur, "he it is, and
now may I me a-vaunten that in euell tyme come these vs for
to assailen, ffor yef thei were yet as many moo thei myght not
a-gein vs endure, yef god hym diffende from euell, he and his
companye."  "Trewly," seide the kynge Ban, "thei be not


<PB REF="" N="476" ID="pb.476"/>

wise yef thei hym a-bide till that he be a-monge hem medled;"
and while thei spake thus to-geder com Gawein all be-fore
gripinge his grete spere, and whan he com nygh he knewe
well his vncle, and saugh that he hadde grete myster of socoure,
and than he spronge in a-monge hem rudely as tempest of
thunder, and fill that he mette with his fader the kynge loot
that newliche was sette on horse, and heilde a stronge spere,
and com a-gein hym as moche as the horse myght renne, and
mette to-geder vpon the sheldes with all theire forces, and the
kynge brake his spere vpon Gaweins shelde, and Gawein smote
hym a-gein so harde that he perced shelde and hauberke, and
wounded hym somwhat in the lifte side that the blode folowed
after, and the kynge fill so harde to grounde that he wiste not
wheder it was day or nyght; and Gawein paste forth rudely
with-oute a-restinge, and whan he was returned a-gein he
fonde his fader lyinge on the erthe vp-right, and he rode ouer
hym on horsebak thre or foure tymes, and broused hym sore
and foule that nygh he was ther-with slayn; and than Gawein
a-light and pight his spere in the grounde, and drough oute
Calibourne his goode swerde, that shone bright and clier, and
com to the kynge loot that yet lay vp-right and plukked hym
by the helme, and raced it of his heede so harde, that on his
nose and his browes it was well seene, for he was hurte right
sore; and than he a-valed the coyf of his hauberke be-nethe his
shuldres, and seide that he was but deed, but yef he wolde
yelde hym to prison, and he was so anguysshous that litill he
hym ansuerde, neuertheles he dide hym-self enforce, so that he
seide with grete sorowe at his herte, "Ha, sir, gentilman, ne
sle me nought, for neuer dide I forfet a-gein the, where-fore that
thow sholdest me sleen."  "Yesse," quod Gawein, "that haste
thow, and alle thi companye that haue assailed myn vncle for to
distrouble him his weye."  "How so," quod kynge loot, "who
be ye that calle hym youre vncle."  "What is that to the
what I am, me liste nothinge the to telle, but do a-noon that
as I the sey, or thow   <MILESTONE N="169b" UNIT="folio"/>art deed, and alle these other that ben
in thi companye shull dye, and shull curse the tyme that euer


<PB REF="" N="477" ID="pb.477"/>

thei were of moder born."  "Telle me," quod the kynge loot,
"who ye ben for the love of that ye love moste in this
worlde."  "But what art thow?" quod Gawein, "that this doste me
demaunde."  Quod he, "Myn name is looth a caitife kynge of
Orcanye, and of leonoys, to whom nothinge doth falle but
myschef ne not hath don longe tyme.  Now telle me youre
name, what ye be."  And whan Gawein vndirstode verily that
it was his fader a-noon he nempned his name, and seide his
name was Gawein, the nevew of kynge Arthur, and whan the
kynge loot herde that a-noon he lepte vp, and wolde haue clypt
hym in his armes, and seide, "Feire sone, ye be welcome, and
I am the sorowfull caitif youre fader that ye haue thus viliche
ouerthrowen," and Gawein bad hym drawe hym ferther a-rome,
ffor his fader sholde he not be ne his goode frende till that he
were a-corded with the kynge his vncle, and hadde cried hym
mercy for his forfet, and than do to hym homage seynge alle
his barouns; ffor othirwise loke neuer to truste in me, ffor elles
shull ye leve noon other wedde saf youre heed, and than the
kynge looth sowowned and fill down to the grounde, and whan
he a-woke of swownynge he cride him mercy, and seide, "Feire
sone, I will do all that yow may plese, and holde here my
swerde, for I yelde it to yow;" and sir Gawein that ther-of
hadde grete pite hit toke with gladde chere and myri, and wepte
right tendirly water with his iyen vndir his helme, ffor sore he
repente in his herte of that he hadde so hurte his fader, but as
moche as he myght he kepte hym so that he was not aperceyved.</P>
<P>  Than thei com bothe to theire horse, and lept vp and com
to theire peple, and hem departed.  But fowle were
the kynge loothis men ouerleide, ffor the knyghtes of the rounde
table and the felowes of sir Gawein hadde hem so euyll be seyn
at the firste metynge that moo than xl thei hadde felde to
grounde that thei hadde no power to remounte, and sir Gawein
com and hem departed, and than wente Gawein to Arthur his
vncle; and as soone as the kynge saugh hym come, he com
hym ageins, and seide, "Feire nevew, ye be welcome,
wherefore be ye come in to this parties, wiste ye eny thinge of this

<PB REF="" N="478" ID="pb.478"/>

a-wayte;" and Gawein seide that he douted hit sore, "ffor I
myght neuer be in hertes ese till I hadde yow seyn, and oure
lorde god," quod he, "now he thanked and honoured of this
assemble, ffor it is the kynge looth my fader with whom that
ye were in medle; and now hit is so be-fallen that he is come
to crye yow mercy, as to his liege lorde erthly for the trespasse
that he hath don a-gein yow, and therfore resceyveth his
homage like as ye owe for to do, ffor he is here all redy hit
to performe and do."  Whan the kynge Arthur that herde he
ioyned his handes toward heuene,   <MILESTONE N="170a" UNIT="folio"/>and thanked god of the
worshippe that he hadde hym shewed; and with that com the kynge
Loot and his knyghtes down the medowes alle on foote, and
hadde don of theire helmes from theire heedes and valed theire
coiffes of mayle vpon theire sholderes and com full symple;
and whan Gawein saugh his fader come be-fore, he seide to
his vncle, "Sir, lo here my fader cometh to yow for to do
homage;" and a-noon the kynge Arthur sette foot to the
grounde, and alle the other barouns after; and the kynge Loot
com be-fore Arthur and sette hym on his knee, and hielde his
swerde be the poynte as he that hadde forfeted, and seide, "Sir,
I yelde me here to youre mercy as he that hath often a-gein
yow forfeted, and dide yow neuer but grevaunce, and annoye,
now do yowre plesire of me and of my londe," and ther be-com
the kynge Loot liege man to the kynge Arthur be-fore alle his
barouns, and assured his feith to do hym seruyse whan that
he hym comaunded; than Arthur toke hym be the right hande
and made hym to a-rise on his feet, and seide, "Sir, stondeth
vp, for longe I-nough haue ye kneled, ffor I ought it yow to
pardon, for that ye be so worthi a man, and a gretter forfet
than this is, ffor thowgh that I haue hated yow neuer so dedly,
ye haue here soche children that haue do me soche servise that
I may haue no will to do yow noon euell, and therfore I offre
here to yow all thinge that is myn at youre volunte, ffor the
love of Gawein youre sone, that I love beste of eny knyght
that is in the worlde, and ther be here two knyghtes that I
owe to love as wele, and bothe ben thei kynges that moche


<PB REF="" N="479" ID="pb.479"/>

haue me socoured in grete nede."  And he stode vp and seide,
"Sire, gramercy."  Thus was made pees be-twene kynge Loot
and the kynge Arthur, and than thei lepe to theire horse gladde
and ioyfull of this a-venture, and riden so by here iourneyes
till thei com to logres where thei were resceyved with the
grettest ioye of the worlde, and euery day the peple dide
encrese; ffor the dwellers of the contrey com thider for drede
of the saisnes that hem distroyed, and the londe; and ther was
so grete prees of peple that many be-hoved to loigge in the
medowes, and whan the kynge Arthur saugh so grete plente
of peple, he was gladde and myry, and seide that he wolde
holde court open and enforced, and sente by his messangers
that alle sholde come to his court roiall; and on the morowe the
kynge Loot dide his homage to the kynge Arthur, and made
his oth on the chief mynster seinge alle the peple that was
right grete and huge, and the kynge Arthur refeffed hym
a-gein in his londe that he hadde be-fore, to hym and to hys
heires for euer more, and who that dide hym eny wronge he
sholde hym supporte to his power, and resceyved hym gladde
and iocounde as a noble man, and fro that day forth were thei
goode frendes all her lif;   <MILESTONE N="170b" UNIT="folio"/>and whan the masse was seide thei
com a-gein to the paleyse, and yede to mete, and thei were well
serued and richely, and after mete wente the knyghtes to se
the medowes, and the river, and the tentes, and the pavilouns
that were pight with-oute the town, ffor ther were many full
feire and riche, and in this disporte and solace were thei viij
dayes hool, and the peple dide sore encrece, ffor the kynge dide
hit comaunde for that he wolde holde court roiall and
plentevouse, and bere crowne he and his wif at the mydde of august,
and whan it com to the evene that the feeste sholde be-gynne
on the morowe, Arthur yaf his yeftes soche as to hym a-pertened
of horse, and palfreyes, and armour, and money, as golde and
siluer, for he hadde plente; and the queene yaf hem robes
fressh and newe as she that well hadde therfore ordeyned, and
moche cowde of honour and all curteysie, that alle peple hadde
hir in so grete love that hem thought thei hadde recouered the


<PB REF="" N="480" ID="pb.480"/>

lady of alle ladyes, and yef the knyghtes hadde riche presentes,
the ladyes and dameselles hadden also, and maydenes bothe
fer and nygh; and so spradde the renoun thourgh every contrey
of Arthur, that the princes that weren with hym wroth wisten
of the pees that the kynge Loot hadde made with the kynge
Arthur, and how he sholde holde his court roiall at the myddill
of August, and that alle peple were thider somowned, and some
of hem seiden secretly to theire counseile that thei wolde gladly
haue spedde in the same manere as the kynge Loot hadde don;
and some ther were of hem that thoughten in theire hertis and
praied to god that thei sholde neuer dye on no deth er thei
were acorded with the kynge Arthur, ffor all this trouble and
myschef that is fallen vn-to vs, is com thourgh the synne that
we have don agein god and forfet to hym.</P>
<P>  Thus seide oon to a-nother; and the kynge Arthur was in
his maister Citee in ioye and solace as ye haue I-herde,
and whan it com to the day of the myddill August, thider com
all the knyghtes to the courte clothed and a-raied in the richest
robes that thei hadden, and the Queene was appareiled, she and
hir ladyes, and maidenys, and dameseles richely as longeth to
soche an high feeste; and whan thei hadde ronge to high masse
thei wente alle to the mynster and herde the servise that the
archebisshoppe dide singe; and that day bar Arthur crowne, and
the queene Gonnore his wife, and the kynge Ban and the kynge
Bohors were crowned also for the love of hem; and after masse
thei com to the halle where the clothes were leyde, and the
lordes were sette thourgh the halle as thei owe for to be.  That
day serued Gawein at the high deyse ther as the foure kynges
seten, and kay the stiward, and lucas the boteller, and sir
Ewein le graunt the sone of kynge Vrien, and Gifflet, and
Ewein   <MILESTONE N="171a" UNIT="folio"/>a-voutres, and Segramor, and Dodinell le sauage, and
kay destranx, and kehedins ly bens, and kehedins le petit, and
Ayglyns des vaux that was his brother, and Galegantius the
walsh, and Blyoberis, and Galescowde, and Colegrenaunt, and
launal, and Aglonall, and Ewein Eselains, and Ewein de lionell,
and Ewein white hande, and Guyomar, and Synados, and


<PB REF="" N="481" ID="pb.481"/>

Gosenain hardy body, and Agrauain the prowde, and Gueheret,
and Gaheries, and Acon de bemonde, and alle these xxi served
at the high deyse, and xl other yonge bachelers serued at other
tables ther-ynne, and thei were so well served of alle maner
thinges that neuer peple were better, and whan alle the meesee
were served in, than spake the kynge Arthur so lowde that
alle that were in the halle myght it heren, and he seide, "Now
lordinges, all ye that ben com here in to my courte me for to
gladen and counforte, I yelde yow graces and thonkinge for the
honour and the ioye that ye haue me don, and that ye be come
for to do; and I do yow to wite that I will stablissh to my
courte alle the tymes that I shall bere crowne.  That neuer
from hens-forth shall I not sitte to mete in to the tyme that I
here some straunge tydinge, or elles some aventure.  Be soche
forwarde that yef it be myster I shall do it to be redressed by
the knyghtes of my court, whiche for prise and honour hider
to repeire and ben my frendes, and my felowes, and my
peres."  And whan the knyghtes of the rounde table herde this a-vow
that the kynge hadde I-made, thei spake to-geder and seiden,
"Seeth that the kynge hath made a-vow in his courte, hit
be-hoveth that we make oure a-vow," and thei a-corded alle to
oon thinge, and therwith thei charged Nascien to reherse it
be-fore the kynge.</P>
<P>  Than wente alle the knyghtes of the rounde table, and
Nascien be-gan to speke be-fore the kynge so high, that
thei alle myght here that were in the halle.  "Sir," seide
Nascien, "the knyghtes of the rounde table be come here to
god, and in youre audyence, and to alle the barouns that here
ben.  In-as-moche as ye haue made a-vow thei make here
a-nother that shall euer endure while her lif lasteth.  That yef
eny maiden haue eny nede or come to youre courte for to seche
helpe or socour by so that it may be a-cheved by the body of
oon knight a-gein a-nother, thei will with goode will go in to
what contrey she will hem leden hir for to delyuer, and make
alle the wronges to be redressed that to hir hath be don;" and
whan the kynge this vndirstode, he asked of the knyghtes of

<PB REF="" N="482" ID="pb.482"/>

the rounde table yef thei dide graunte to that as Nascien hadde
seide; and thei seiden, "Ye;" and to this thei wolde be sworn
hit for to mayntene, and not to spare for lif ne for deth, and
than be-gan the ioye gretter than it hadde be byfore; and
whan Gawein vndirstode the ioye that thei maden for the
a-vowes that were ther I-stablisshed, he seide to his felowes
as he that cowde all   <MILESTONE N="171b" UNIT="folio"/>norture and curtesie.  "Sirs," seide
Gawein, "yef eche of yow will a-corde to that I shall seyn, I
shall ofre soche a-vow wher-of shall come to yow and to me
grete honour alle the dayes of oure life;" and thei ansuerde
and seide that thei wolde graunte and assente to all that euer
he wolde speke with his mowthe.  "Than," quod he, "assureth
me youre feith to holde me companye;" and a-noon thei hym
assured, and were xxiiij be counte."</P>
<P>  Whan that sir Gawein hadde take the feith of his felowes
he come be-fore the Queene, and seide, "Madame, I
and my felowes be come to yow, and praye yow and requere
that ye will with-holde vs to be youre knyghtes and youre
meyne.  That whan thei come in eny strange contrey to seche
loss and pris, yef any man hem aske with whom thei be, and
of what londe.  Than thei may seyn of the reame of logres,
and be the knyghtes of Queene Gonnore, the wif of kynge
Arthur."  Whan the Queene vndirstode this, she dressed hir
vp-stondinge, and seide, "Feire nevew, gramercy to yow and
to hem alle; ffor I yow resceyve with gladde chere as lordes
and my frendes, and as ye offre yow to me, so I offre me to
yow with trewe herte; and I pray god lete me so long lyve
that I may yow guerdon of the worshippe and the curtesie that
ye promyse me for to do."  "Madame," seide Gawein, "we
be alle youre knyghtes, and ye haue us with-holde god it yow
quyte.  Now shull we make a-vow; That what man or woman
cometh to yow for to seche socour or helpe a-geyn the body of
oon knyght, he shall not faile to haue oon of vs to delyuer
hym body for body, and go with hem in to what contrey thei
will vs bringe; and whiche of vs so it be that take eny soche
iourney on hande, and hit happe that he come not a-gein


<PB REF="" N="483" ID="pb.483"/>

with-ynne a moneth, eche oon of vs shall go for to seche hym
sool by hym-self, a yere and a day with-oute repeire to courte;
but yef with-ynne that terme he can bringe trewe tydinges of
his felowe, and whan thei be come to court eueryche shall telle
his a-ventures that hym be-falleth in the tyme what-so-euer thei
be, gode or euell, and thei shull be sworn to sey the trouthe of
all bothe in the goynge and in the comynge."</P>
<P>  Whan the queene vndirstode the a-vow that Gawein hadde
made, she was the gladdest woman in the worlde, and
the kynge was glader than eny other that was in the courte,
and for the kynge wolde comforte the queene, he seide, "Dame,
seth god hath ordeyned yow this honour to haue so feire a
companye, some curtesie moste I do for the love of hem, and
also for the love of youre-self, and wite ye wher-of I putte in
youre gouernaunce my tresour in soch maner that ye be lady
and partyner of all youre plesier;" and whan the queene
this herde, she kneled be-fore the kynge and seide, "Sir,
gramercy."  And than the queene called sir Gawein, and seide,
"Feire   <MILESTONE N="172a" UNIT="folio"/>nevew, I will that foure clerkes be stablisshed
hereynne that shull do nothinge elles but write the a-ventures that
falle to yow and youre felowes, so that after youre deth it
may be remembred the high prowesse of the worthi men
hereynne."  "Madame," seide Gawein, "I graunte;" and than
were ther chosen foure clerkes to write the a-ventures as thei
fill in the courte fro thens-forth; and than seide Gawein that
he sholde not here speke of noon a-venture, but he sholde go to
seche it; and he and his felowes sholde do so moche that thei
sholde bringe ther-of trewe tidinges to courte, and so seiden the
knyghtes of the rounde table in the same manere; and all-wey
fro thens-fourth was sir Gawein and his felowes called the
queenes knyghtes.  With that were the clothes taken vp, and
than be-gan the ioye right grete of oon and other ther-ynne,
But ouer alle other that were ther-ynne was I-herde Dagenet
of Clarion; ffor he made gret myrthe amonge hem, so that alle
thei be-hielde hym for merveile.  But a fooll he was of nature,
and the moste coward pece of flessh that was in the worlde;


<PB REF="" N="484" ID="pb.484"/>

this Dagenet be-gan to trippe and daunce, and cried so lowde
with high voyse, and seide, "to-morow shall I go seche these
a-ventures," and seide to Gawein, "will ye come? and ye, sir
Ewein and Segramor will ye come thider that be so feire
and moche, and ye lordinges of the rounde table.  Certes, I
trowe not that ye haue the herte ne the hardynesse me for to
sewen, ther I shall go to-morowe."  Thus seide Dagenet the
coward, and the knyghtes ther-at lowen, and hadde grete game;
and with-oute faile he hym armed many tymes, and wente in
to the forestes, and henge his shelde on an Oke, and smote it so
that alle the colours were faded, and the shelde to hakked in
many places, and than wolde he seyn that he hadde slayn a
knyght or tweyne; and whan he mette eny knyght armed he
turned to flight as fer as he myght here hym speke at the leeste;
and many tymes fill yef he mette eny knyght erraunt that
were pensif that spake no worde he wolde take hym by the
bridell, and lede hym forth as he hadde hym taken; of soche
maners was Dagenet, and yet he was right a feire knyght and
of high lynage, and yet it semed not by his countenaunce that
he was soche a fooll.</P>
<P>  Grete was the ioye and the feeste the day of myddill of
August, at logres, whan these a-vowes were made, and
whan thei that hadden serued hadde eten, com kay the stiwarde,
and seide, "Sirs, what thenke ye to do; shull we not tourney
to be-gynne some myrthe at soche high feeste as this is?"  Whan
Segramor herde this he lepte vp, and seide that recreaunt and
shamed be he that will not turneyn; and Mynoras ansuerde
that thei wolde turney a-gein the queenes knyghtes, "and lete
vs take so many knyghtes what oon and what other that we
be euen like many,"   <MILESTONE N="172b" UNIT="folio"/>and sir Gawein asked a-gein how many
knyghtes thei wolde turney, and Adragain seide thei wolde
haue V<HI REND="sup">c</HI> in her companye, and Gawein seide that he wolde
take other V<HI REND="sup">c</HI> in his companye.  "Than lete it no lenger be
taried," quod Pynados, "for the day passeth."  Than thei wente
to theire hostels and armed hem with grete spede, and yede
in to the medowes with-oute the town, and ther thei assembled


<PB REF="" N="485" ID="pb.485"/>

what oon what other that thei were x<HI REND="sup">c</HI>.  Than was the ban
cried that eche man sholde go on whiche part that he wolde,
and thei disseuered and wente eche to his baner; and than com
Gawein to hervy de rivell, and departed theire meyne, so that
in eche partye ther was v hundred, and than the heraudes
be-gan for to crye, <SEG TYPE="foreign">Cy est lonours darmes Ore y parra qui checun
le ferra</SEG>; and whan it com to the assemble, a knyght cam to
sir Gawein, and seide, "The kynge yowre vncle sente yow
worde that ye sholde come speke with hym at the wyndowe
ther-as he yow a-bideth;" and sir Gawein wente thider and
ledde with hym sir Ewein his cosyn, and Segramour, and
Gyfflet, and the curroyes were tho redy assembled for to mete.</P>
<P>  The first that was renged was Pynodas, a knyght of the
rounde table, and on that othir side com a knyght of
the queenes that was brother to Gawein, and his name was
Agravain the prowde, and he was wondir well horsed, and thei
smote to-geder with speres vpon the sheldes so harde that thei
perced that the steill heedes stynted at the hauberkes, and thei
were bothe stronge and hardy, and the hauberkes of towgh
mayle that the speres splyndred in peces, and in the passinge
forth thei hurteled to-geder so harde with sheldes and helmes,
and with theire horse, that bothe two fill to grounde, horse
and man to-geder; and thei pressed to the rescew on bothe
partyes and mette to-geder with sharpe speres; and sir Gawein
hath so riden till he com on the diche brynke a-gein the
wyndowe ther-as kynge Arthur dide lene, and the Queene
Gonnore, and the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and ladyes
and maydenes, a grete companye for to be-holde the bourdeys;
and than the kynge seide, "Feire nevew, I praye yow for the
feith that ye owe vnto me that ye rule so this turnement that
ther a-rise no debate, ne wrath amonge hem, ne
<CHOICE><CORR>maltelente</CORR><SIC>matelente</SIC></CHOICE>."  "Sir," seide he, "as for me shall ther nothinge be mys-don,
but I may not kepe hem alle from theire folyes.  But yef ye
se it turne to folye, ordeyne ye that it be departed, ffor I
may not suffre that the companye of the rounde table diffoule,
and ouer-lede my felowes be-fore me, but that I moste helpe

<PB REF="" N="486" ID="pb.486"/>

hem at my power."  "Sir," seide the kynge Ban, "sir Gawein
seith wisely; ffor it is goode reson that ye take a party of youre
peple, and do hem to be armed as many as nedeth that yef
myster be, thei to be redy to lepe on horsebak to do youre
comaundement."  "In godis name," seide the kynge, "so shall
it be as ye haue seide."  Than the kynge comaunded to arme
thre thousande what of Sergauntes and squyers, and hym-self
was armed, and the thre other kynges that were in his
  <MILESTONE N="173a" UNIT="folio"/>companye; and Gawein was come to the turney, that tho was well
be-gonne vpon the two knyghtes that were throwe to grounde,
and so hadde bothe parties spedde that thei haue hem bothe
remounted and sette on horse; and than the turnement be-gan
sore to enforce, and the knyghtes of the rounde table that were
CCL peyned hem sore to discounfite the foure score felowes of
sir Gawein that were at grete myschief, and hadde sore the
werse, but moche thei suffred as thei that full well eche dide
other helpe feithfully.  But their well doynge ne gayned hem
but litill, ne hadde be the knyghtes of kynge Looth that hem
socoured full vigerously.  Ther was made many feire Iustinges
and many a knyght vn-horsed that fill to the grounde, and the
horses fledde thourgh the feeldes.  Ther were the knyghtes
of the rounde table euell I-ledde, but as vij score knyghtes that
com hem for to socoure, and than hadde the knyghtes of the
rounde table the better, ffor thei were more peple than the
tother, and thei made hem to voyde the place wheder thei
wolde or noon; and than a-roos the cry and the shoute vpon
hem that fledden.</P>
<P>  And whan Gawein vndirstode the shoute and the crye
that was vpon his felowes, he be-helde and saugh hem
at grete myscheif, and that for thought hym right sore, and
seide to sir Ewein, "A-voy, cosin, we haue taried to
longe."  "Ewein" now quod Segramor, "neuer be he holde for a
knyght that faileth to helpe at this nede."  "I preise not at
a boton," quod Gifflet, "the speche, but the dede be
shewed.  Now lete se who shall do beste;" and Gawein lowgh whan he
herde this, and seide, "Sueth me;" with that he smote his


<PB REF="" N="487" ID="pb.487"/>

hors with the spores, and spronge forth as sperhauke after
partriches or quayles, and bar to the erthe foure the firste that
thei mette.  Than these foure be-gan to do soche maistries
that the chace stynte, and in a while were thei knowen of hem
that neuer hadde hem seyn; and whan the Queenes knyghtes
hadde founde sir Gawein thei drough a-boute hym, and so dide
the knyghtes of kynge looth that were full notable knyghtes
and goode; and Segramor be-gan to do soche merveiles that
thei that weren at the wyndowes marked hym with the fynger,
and seide, "Lo yonder, Sir Segramor, ffor yef he be feire of
body and membres, yet is he better knyght at devise, and well
may she that shall hym haue, a-vaunt hir that she hath oon of
the beste knyghtes of the courte; and on that other side Gifflet
dide right wele, and Galashin that gretly thei were be-holden
of oon and of other, and to hem com the thre bretheren of Sir
Gawein that were full noble and hardy.  These dide
merveilously wele, and so dide Sir Ewein, that a better knyght than
he neded no man to be-holde; and whan the knyghtes of the
rounde table saugh how the chase was a-rested, thei be-gan to
traueile sore for to drive these other oute of the place, and ther
they dide wondres in armes.  But who that dide well, or who
nought, a-bove alle other   <MILESTONE N="173b" UNIT="folio"/>dide sir Gawein merveiles, ffor he
fonde no presse were it neuer so thikke ne cloos, but he it
perced through be fin force, ffor he smote down knyghtes and
horse, and raced of helmes from heedes and sheldes from nekkes,
ne noon myght in-dure a-gein his strokes, and yef the companye
of the rounde table hadde the better, now haue thei the werse;
ffor sir Gawein and his felowes haue holde hem so shorte, that
thei drof hem discounfited to the water side, and ther thei
withstode stifly; and the storye seith that so moche thei suffred that
x of the beste of hem were throwen to the erthe, wherof that
oon was mynoras, and the secunde Natalis, and the thirde
Pynados, and the fourth Bloaris, and the v<HI REND="sup">e</HI> Karismanx, and
the vj<HI REND="sup">e</HI> Partreux, and the vij<HI REND="sup">e</HI> Grandoynes, and the viij<HI REND="sup">e</HI> ladynell,
and the ix<HI REND="sup">e</HI> ladymus, and the x<HI REND="sup">e</HI> Traelus.  These x were take
with force, and hem hilde sir Ewein, and Segramor, and


<PB REF="" N="488" ID="pb.488"/>

Agravain, and Gueheret, and Gaheries, and kay the stiward, and
sente hem to the Queene on sir Gaweins be-halue, that thei
dide holde for her lorde and maister, and thei hadde reson, for
he was a worthi man and wele hem helped and socoured in
euery nede, and these x knyghtes that were taken com to the
queene and yelde hem to hir on sir Gaweins be-halue, and she
hem resceyved with grete ioye, and yaf eche of hem a riche
Iuwell, and than thei wente and lened oute at the wyndowes of
the paleise to se the turnement.</P>
<P>  Whan the knyghtes of the rounde table saugh thei hadde
loste x of hir felowes, thei were doelfull, for thei
hadde neuer be-fore be made to voide the place.  Than com
theire grete bateile from the bregge that hem socoured
vigerously, that thei putte hem a-gein in to the playn feelde, and
the partie that was with Gawein com a-gein hem that were
all fressh and newe, and that oo part smote thourgh that other
and be-gonne a grete stour and traueiled so that thei gonne
waxen wery, and Gawein and his felowes dide so well that thei
drof hem a-gein to the river.</P>
<P>  And whan the knyghtes of the rounde table saugh thei
turned to discounfiture, thei seiden that to-day more
wolde thei do theire werste seth it is so fer forth
be-fallen.  Than thei toke speres, grete and rude, and putte hem in fewtre,
and that is the grettest crewelte that oon may do, ffor turnement
oweth to be with-oute felonye, and thei meved to smyte hem as
in mortall werre; and as soone as thei hadden speres thei smyten
in a-monge the queenes knyghtes that thei sore hated, and at
the firste shof thei smote down soche xx that were full worthi
men, but soone were thei lept on foote and drough theire
swerdes, and these rested vpon hem for to take hem prisoners,
and ther be-gan the medle grete and fierce, and so thei myght
a-noon haue loste   <MILESTONE N="174a" UNIT="folio"/>all; but as sir Ewein toke ther-of hede, and
shewed it to Gawein and Segramor; and whan thei saugh the
felonye that thei hadde be-gonne on her felowes; than seide
sir Ewein, "Lorde, se the feire playe that these yonder haue
be-gonne vpon vs;" and than seide Gawein that thei dide


<PB REF="" N="489" ID="pb.489"/>

nothinge curteisely as worthi men ne that wolde he not
suffre.  Than he cleped Griret de lamball and Guyomar, and seide, "Go
to the knyghtes of the rounde table, and sey that I and my
felowes sende hem worde that thei haue mys-taken hem at this
this tyme a-gein vs, and bidde hem cesse of that folye that thei
haue be-gonne, and for that thei haue don we playne vs gretly,
and shull hem a-pele be-fore the kynge, and yef ther be eny of
oure felowes on this side that haue agein hem mysdon, we shall
make hem a-mendes at hir volunte;" and whan these herde the
comaundement of sir Gawein, thei turned with-oute moo wordes,
and com to the knyghtes of the rounde table and dide theire
message, and thei ansuerde that thei sette no force of all that
he seide, ffor thei wolde noon other wise do, and who that
ther-with wrathed lete hym chese, for yet we will do more than
we haue don be-fore, and so may ye sey to Gawein and to his
felowes that soone may men se the moste hardy, and who shall
beste furnyssh a stour; and whan these herde the bobance
and the outrage thei returned and com to sir Gawein that in
that tyme hadde his felowes remounted, and thei tolde hym
the ansuere <CHOICE><CORR>that</CORR><SIC>that that</SIC></CHOICE>   thei hadden, and whan Gawein it herde,
he was right wroth.  "What," quod he, "is that trewe, will
thei nothinge do for us?  Now I do hem well to witen that
seth we be comen to ernest, soone shull we be at the assay
whiche is the moste hardy."  Than departed Gawein oute of the
turnement, and his thre brethern, and Segramor, and Ewein,
and Galasshin, and Dodinell, and kay the stiward, and Gifflet,
and lucas the botiller, and than he seide, "Sirs, the knyghtes
of the rounde table haue take a-gein vs a fell strif, ffor that thei
be greved with oure partye, and therfore thei trowe all to haue
wonne for shewinge of theire crewelte and felonye, and ther-fore
I will that eche of vs go fecche his hauberk, and the beste armes
that he hath, and arme hym so that nothinge faile, and thei
a-noon sente for her beste armours, and drough hem oute of
the turnement and hem armed hastely, for longe hem semed er


<PB REF="" N="490" ID="pb.490"/>

thei were returned a-gein in to the turnement that was right
grete, ffor the x hundred were assembled to-geder in bateile,
and whan sir Gawein and his felowes were well araide, thei
were well foure score only, and thei lepte to horse and ride
a softe paas, and cloos a-gein the other felowes that well
mayntened the turnement, and thei sought her felowes vp and down,
and ben so sory for theire felowes that thei haue hem not founde,
that nygh thei wax wode for angir, ffor thei of the rounde table
hem ledde felonously in the werse maner.</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="174b" UNIT="folio"/>Than com Gawein and his felowes so harde that moo
than xl thei ouerthrowe in theire comynge, and whan
Nascien and Adragein saugh them thei stynten, and seide to
theire felowes, "Feire lordes, we haue euell and folily spedde
of the atynes that we haue vndirtake a-gein the Queenes knyghtes
for envye and for nought."  "I rede," quod Adragain, "that
the turnement cesse er it be werse, ffor the nevewes of the kynge
shull do vs damage fro hens-forth, and that may ye wete
verily.  Ne it may not endure with-oute grete losse, and also
parauenture some to be slayn, and therfore it were good that
it were cessed thus, ffor knowe it verily that ther be soche xx
in the fore fronte of her companye that right soone thei shull
xl of oure companye make to voyde place, and also thei be of
high lynage, and the moste puyssaunt of the reame of grete
breteigne," and the other ansuerde that it was spoken to late,
"Now kepe hym that kepe may, for othir-wise now may it not
be," and than thei smyte in to the medle, and the foure score
felowes com hem a-geins, and eche hurte other with speres foule
at theire metynge, and thei drowgh the swerdes and be-gonne
the medle on horsbak and on foote full crewell and fell; and
whan the vij score knyghtes of the kynge Looth knewe the foly
and the disray that the knyghtes of the rounde table hadde
be-gonne, thei drough a-side and armed hem right wele, and
than com a-gein to sir Gawein, and seide, "Sir, now may ye
ride suerly a-gein the envyouse, for we shull not this day forsake
yow ne youre companye for no distresse, ffor we se well the
erneste that is be-twene yow and the knyghtes of the rounde


<PB REF="" N="491" ID="pb.491"/>

table.  But thei haue to fewe peple to do that thei haue
purposed, and we se well that thei be CCL., and ye be but foure
score, and therfore is it no merveile yef thei haue the
better.  But thei may hem a-vaunte that thei haue geten CC enmyes
this day that well shull lete hem parceyve whethir thei be
foles or wise," and sir Gawein thanked hem hertely; and than
thei renged hem a-bowte hym as he that full well cowde it
demenen.</P>
<P>  Than sir Gawein cleped an high gentilman that was cleped
by his right name Galescowde, and seide, "Go a-noon
to my lorde, myn vncle, and sey to hym that he not displese
though we vs diffende from them of the rounde table that haue
be-gonne the foly a-gein vs, and tell hym how the caas stant
all as it is," and whan that Galiscowde vndirstode the
comaundement of Gawein, he turned and dide his message; and while
that Gawein entended a-boute these thinges the queenes knyghtes
hadde moche the worse, and the knyghtes of the rounde table
rescowed hir felowes, and sette hem on horse and chaced the
queenes knyghtes be fin force out of the felde, whan Gawein
saugh that he com hem a-geins with alle the knyghtes of his
fadres, and smote in a-monge hem so harde that alle the renges
gonne fremyssh; and sir Gawein cried, "Vpon hem, gentill
  <MILESTONE N="175a" UNIT="folio"/>knyghtes, for in euell tyme haue thei be-gonne this folye."</P>
<P>  Whan the queenes knyghtes herde sir Gawein thus speke,
and saugh the feire companye of knyghtes that hym
sewed, thei returned as thei that were gladde and ioyfull of the
socour, for tho knewe thei well that the werse sholde no be
hers, and than thei recovered alle to-geders theire sheldes
before theire brestes; and sir Gawein was in the fore frount with
swerde drawen, for he hadde broken his spere, and smote so
Dorilas vpon the helme that he smote thourgh, and the coyf of
mayle, that he made hym a grete wounde in the heede, and
a-stoned hym so sore that he fill flatte to the grounde, and his
felowes cried, "He is ded; he is ded;" and thei ronne vpon
hym on alle partyes, and he smote so the firste that he mette
thourgh the helme that he yaf hym a grete wounde and fill to


<PB REF="" N="492" ID="pb.492"/>

grounde all blody; and than he smote a-nother right harde,
and he saugh the stroke come and plukked his bridill to hym,
and the stroke descended on the horse shuldres be-fore and
smote the horse a-sonder, so that to grounde fill bothe horse and
man, and whan Nascien saugh hym-self so fallen, he lepte on
foote full delyuerly as he that was a full noble knyght and
a sure, and drough his swerde, and couered hym with his
shelde, for sore he douted a-nother stroke er he were redy hym
to diffende; and whan that Gawein saugh that he was so redy
appareiled, he returned with suerde in honde, and a-noon
Nascien knewe the swerde, and seide, "A-voy, my lorde, sir
Gawein, ye ne be not so wise a man ne so curteise as men of
yow doth recorde; ffor ye be thus garnysshed of youre armes
as ye were in werre mortall, and ye haue also brought youre
goode swerde, and I do yow to wete that it shall be to yow
reprof in many other places than here."  Quod Gawein, "I
knowe no knyght that me will a-peche of vntrouthe, but I
shall me well deffende a-gein hym that dar it sey or a-gein
tweyne yef nede bee oon after a-nother.  But ye and youre
felowes haue don vntrouthe, and haue be-gonne the folye; ffor
we sente yow oure messages, but ye wolde hem not heren ne
vndirstonde, but ye dide youre werste."  "Sir," seide Nascien,
"hit is go folyly hiderto, and hit were tyme that it were left
yef it yow plesed, ffor soche haue it spoken and be-gonne that
nothinge ther-on haue wonne, ffor I trowe he be wounded to
the deth.  But I praye yow at the reuerence of god that ye
hem now departe, and than do ye well and curteisely er that
eny more harme ther-of be-falle."</P>
<P>  "I knowe not," quod Gawein, "what harme ther-of shall
falle, but neuer for me shull thei not be
departed.  Ne neuer shall the companye of the rounde table be-gynne
malice a-gein vs; but I with as goode will shall by-gynne the
first a-gein hem   <MILESTONE N="175b" UNIT="folio"/>with spere a-reised, and for that I will that ye
it hem telle, and haue ye no drede of me at this tyme, and telle
hem wele that neither kynge ne queene ther-of entermete, for
we be soche companye that shall fynde hem hote I-nough, kepe


<PB REF="" N="493" ID="pb.493"/>

thei hem neuer so wele owther fer or nygh."  "Sir," seide
Nascien, "other tyme than now haue ye do to me honour so
moche that I may not yow guerdon, ne ye ther-to haue no
myster.  But as to this that ye sey we shull haue I-nough
medle a-gein yow ne sey it nought, for ye be alle of high
lynage, and men of grete puyssaunce, and thei be more alle of
baas lynage than ye and youre companye, and therfore thei haue
no power a-gein yow whan it com ther-to, that ye will hem
greve or anoye," and with that departed Gawein, and lefte
Nascien on foote, and he and his felowes smyten in to the
bateile, and brake the presse, and smote down knyghtes, bothe
horse and man, and ledde hem so euell that thei drof hem oute
of the place all discounfited euen to the river that was right
depe, and brode, and many fill in to the water a-gein theire will,
ffor ther sholde ye haue sein speres and sheldes flote down the
river, and the horse all quyk with-oute maister her reynes
trailinge with the strem.</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein saugh thei were goinge, and that thei myght
not recouer that saugh he well, he put vp his goode
swerde for doute leste he slough eny man vn-war, and as he
put it in to the scauberk, he saugh knyghtes of the rounde
table that were enbusshed on the chauchie, and he caught a
plante of an appell tre, and caste his shelde to grounde, and
toke the barre in bothe handes, and seide he wolde make hem
to remeve.  Than he smote a-monge hem so fiersely the firste
that he mette be-twene the sholdres that he rolled to grounde
vp-right, and after the secunde, and than the thirde, and the
fourthe, and he ne smote no man were he neuer so stronge, but
he fill to grounde; and whan thei saugh that he ferde with hem
so euell thei were full wroth, and ran vpon hym with swerdes
drawen for sore thei hym hated, and thei smyte at hym on alle
sides ther thei myght a-reche so that thei slough his horse
be-twene his legges, and he lepte vp on foote full delyuerly, for
he was full of prowesse and of hardynesse, and he made a
shelde of his staf and drough his swerde Calibourne, and seide,
"Euell happe haue thei that holde yow the beste knyghtes of

<PB REF="" N="494" ID="pb.494"/>

the worlde; ffor here, " quod he, "haue thei it nothinge shewe,
whan thei haue myn horse slayn," and ran vpon hem vigerously,
and slitte sheldes, and helmes, and hew on hauberkes, and
sholdres, and armes; and kutte of legges, and heedes that it
blussht to grounde all that he raught, and in short tyme he
hath xx so a-raied that thei   <MILESTONE N="176a" UNIT="folio"/>lay at grounde that hem nedeth to
haue goode leches yef thei sholde ascape with the lif; with that
com to the medle the foure score felowes and ten, and the vij
score knyghtes of kynge looth that all day hadde hem sewed,
and thei smote in a-monge hem with so grete randon that thei
fonde sir Gawein on foote, and his suerde in his honde all
blody of horse that he hadde slayn mo than xl.  Ther was sir
Gawein remounted and sette on horse, and he putte vp his
goode swerde and toke the staf with bothe hondes, and ran vpon
hem crewelly, and smote he rought not where, and discounfited
hem alle in short tyme, and put hem to flight thourgh the yates
of the town, and the tother V<HI REND="sup">C</HI> that were left vpon the river
fought with hem that were of the same partye; and as soone as
the knyghtes of kynge looth hadde hem lefte, and the foure
score of the queenes knyghtes ther be-gan the stour grete and
crewell, and ther were many feire Iustinges that were gladly
be-holden of ladyes and maydenes that were on the walles of
the town, and so endured the turnement longe tyme, ffor thei
were goode knyghtes on bothe sides.  But at the end myght not
the knyghtes endure that were on Gaweins side, for thei were
not so many as the tother, and so thei be-gonne to ruse oon hour
vp and another down, till that tidinge come to sir Ewein that
was stinte with-oute the yates of the town, and xxiiij felowes
with hym, and whan he vndirstode that his fellowes hadde the
werse, he rode thider hem to socour, and as soone as thei were
come thider thei be-gonne to do so well that in all the day ne
hadde thei do better, and so thourgh hir prowesses thei perced
hem thourgh thre or foure tymes, and hem discounfited and
made hem voide the place, and drof hem in at the yates of the
town thourgh the stretes where thei dide hem ouerthrowe,
and fowled hem vndir hir horse feet, for noon wolde thei take


<PB REF="" N="495" ID="pb.495"/>

ne with-holde thei were so wroth, for the outerage that the
knyghtes of the rounde table hadde be-gonne vpon hem
vncurteisly thourgh her pride.</P>
<P>  On that other side was Gawein and the knyghtes of Orcanye,
that hadde chaced so the <CHOICE><CORR>knyghtes</CORR><SIC>knythes</SIC></CHOICE>   of the rounde table
till thei com be-fore the chirche of seint Stephene, and thei
with-stode and kepte the paas while thei myght.  But in short
tyme ther sholde haue ben do harme.  But as the kynge
Arthur com, and the kynge Ban and the Kynge Bohors com
thider as sone as Galescowde hadde tolde his message; and the
squyers that were thre thousande armed, and the thre kynges
turned toward seint Stephene, and a party of the squyers
a-boute a thre hundred turned down the high strete where-as
thei mette the knyghtes of Orcanye that sewed sir Gawein that
full euell ferde with the knyghtes of the rounde table, as ye
haue herde; and as soone   <MILESTONE N="176b" UNIT="folio"/>as thei saugh the squyers thei
wende it hadde ben a-wayte that hadde be leide for hem;
and a-noon thei be-gonne to medle and be-gonne a newe trouble
right huge and crewell, but at grete myschef were the felowes
of sir Gawein, ffor oo part of hem foughten with the squyers at
the straite entre of the strete, where-as many were ouerthrowen
and diffouled right euell.  Than com tidinges to Gawein that
his frendes were in soche pereill; "ffor I wote neuer," quod he
that brought the message, "what peple it ben that hem assaile
be-hynde, and don hem grete damage;" and as soone as Gawein
herde that his felowes were assaile be-hynde, he lefte the fight
with the knyghtes of the rounde table to his felowes, and com
thider ther as thise weren.  But first he sette goode wardes to
kepe the stretes ende, that thei of the rounde table ne turned not
a-gein bakke, and than he com to the strete ther these were
fightinge; and as soone as he hem saugh, he swor in euell tyme
come thei thider, and whan thei saugh hym come thei cried to
hym and badde hym cesse, or he was but deed; and whan
Gawein herde hem manace hym of deth, he wax right wroth,


<PB REF="" N="496" ID="pb.496"/>

and cleped hem "fitz a-putayn traitours cowardes haue ye leyn
in wayte.  I do yow to wite er ye me ascape, the moste hardy
wolde not haue come hider for this reame."  Than he hilde
Calibourne his goode swerde all blody, and these ronne vpon
hym with axes, and billes, and swerdes right vigerously; and
he spronge in a-monge hem, and smote the firste that he mette
that the heed fill on the pament, and than he smote a-nother,
and than the thridde and the fourthe, and smote of handes and
armes that in a litill while noon durste a-bide his strokes, but
turned to flight wroth and angry, and cried, "Fle, fle, lo here
a devell that is broken oute of helle chaynes;" and whan
Gawein hadde his felowes thus delyuered, he turned a-gein and
toke xl. knyghtes at sette hem at the stretes ende that noon ne
falle vpon hem, and seide, "Yef eny come and yow ouer-lede
come fecche me."  Than he wente to the tother ende of the
strete <CHOICE><CORR>ther</CORR><SIC>ther ther</SIC></CHOICE>   the knyghtes of Orcanye faught with the knyghtes
of the rounde table, and a-noon he spronge in a-monge hem,
and cried a-lowde, "Traytours;" for well he wende that thei
hadde leide that a-wayte, and whan thei herde hym so seyn
thei wiste not what to ansuere, ffor thei wende well that he
hadde it seide for that thei be-gan firste the ernest whan thei
iusted with speres in fewtre, and sore thei repented yef thei
myght, ffor so hadde the shame be doubled, and therefore seith
the wise man in reprof of soche.  "Many oon weneth his shame
to a-venge, and he it encreseth," and therefore were thei
shame-fast and mate; and Gawein smote in a-monge hem crewell as a
lyon, and smote Adragain des vaux de gailore thourgh the
helme that he kutte the quoyf of maile to the bare flessh that he
fill to the erthe all a-stonyed that he wiste not whether it was
nyght or day, and than he smote Pindolus on the sholdre that
he kutte the gige that the shelde henge by and the haurberke
and the flessh right depe that ner he was   <MILESTONE N="177a" UNIT="folio"/>maymed, and so fill
the shelde on that oon side, and the knyght on that other; and
after he smote Idonas on the iowe that he fill to grounde in


<PB REF="" N="497" ID="pb.497"/>

swowne, and whan thei of the rounde table saugh how he dide
hem so grete damage, that noon armour myght endure a-gein his
strokes, thei turned alle toward the cherche, and Gawein and
his felowes hem enchaced, and fill that Gawein overtoke hervy
de rivell, and wolde haue smyte hym on the helme, and he
couered hym with his shelde, and all thei turned to-geder
toward the mynster, and hervy seide to Gawein, "Cesse, sir
knyght, ye haue done I-nowgh, and therfore ye may well stynte
at this tyme, and trewly ye be right moche to blame for the
crewelte that is in yow, ffor men were wonte to sey of yow all
honour and curtesie, and now may men sey the contrarie, ffor
ye ought to helpe and to socoure these a-gein all the worlde that
hem wolde greve or annoye, and ye hem sle and diffoule at
youre power; and thei haue yow nought offended."  "Hervy,"
quod Gawein, "haue thei me not offended whan thei haue
be-gonne the foly and the treson vpon my felowes to whom
I moste bere feith, and ther-by wolde thei not cesse, but leide
other peple for vs in a-wayte, and the turnement was not taken
in that manere."  "Sir," seide hervy, "yef thei haue hem
mystaken a-gein yow at this tyme, thei shull a-mende it to yow
at youre plesir, ffor the love of yow that from hens-forth thei
will holde yow for theire frende and felowe."  "To me," quod
Gawein, "shull thei make noon a-mendes, for I shall hem neuer
love, ffor I do hem well to wite where thei haue envye or werre
a-gein eny of my felowes thei haue the same a-gein me.  Ne
neuer shull thei take turnoy ne Aatine, but we foure score shull
turneyen a-geins vij score of the beste of hem, and thei will it
vndertake, and lete hem well knowe that I shall neuer come in
place in this contrey ne in noon other where ther is eny
turnement or Aatine, yef eny of hem be there, but I shall greve
hem at my power."  "Sir," seide hervy, "ye sey euell and
synfulliche, but soche is now youre talente; but here-after it
shall not be so; ffor it were to grete damage yef so many worthi
men sholde turne to euell for this folye, ffor rather thei shull
clene forsake the court of youre vncle."  "I can not sey," quod
Gawein, "what thei will do, but for me shull thei it not

<PB REF="" N="498" ID="pb.498"/>

forsaken, and yef that thei do, thei ne shull not go in to no
londe, but thei shall be ouertake, ffor we shull neuer here speke
of place ther thei be conversaunt, but we shull go
thider."  "Sir," seide hervy, "a-slake youre mode and pese youre
matalent a litill, ffor so god me helpe thei that haue be-gonne
the foly thei haue it dere I-bought, ffor many ther be hurt and
wounded full dolerously, ffor ther ben xxx that neuer shull bere
shelde, where-of is right grete doell and pyte, ffor thei ben full
noble knyghtes and worthi men;" and as thei spake thus com
the kynge Arthur that hadde I-herde a partie of her wordes that
thei hadde spoken, and seide,   <MILESTONE N="177b" UNIT="folio"/>"Gawein, feire nevew, is this
the prayer that I praied yow to-day?  Certes now it sheweth
well that ye love me right litill whan a-gein my diffence, and in
dispite of me as me semeth ye sle thus my peple, wite it well
that it is a thinge that hevieth me right sore."  "Sir," seide
Gawein, "he that be-gan the foly it is reson that he repent.  Ne
in dispite of yow haue I nothinge do, and who ther-of will me
accuse he is not vnder heuene, but I shall me well a-gein hym
diffende; ffor as soone as the foly be-gan to a-rise I sente yow
witinge by Galescoude oon of oure felowes, ffor er that tyme
hadde thei vs sore diffouled, er that we wolde eny thinge do;"
and the kynge looth his fader com to hym and toke hym by the
bridill, and seide, "Gawein, sone, cesse of this foly, for ye haue
don I-nowgh, and suffre the kynge to sey his wille, for it shall
well be a-mended by leiser the wrath be-twene hym and yow,
ffor well we haue sein a partye of the deede;" and the kynge
Ban and the kynge Bohors com to hym, and seide so to hym
of o thinge and other that thei hym apesed.</P>
<P>  Thus were disseuered the meyne of sir Gawein from the
meyne of the rounde table, and the thre kynges hym
dide bringe a-wey, and Galescowde com to the gret turnement
that was with-ynne the yates that was grete and
merveilouse.  But to foule were thei be-seyn be-twene segramor and sir Ewein,
and her other felowes; but Galescowde made hem be departed,
and that was with moche peyne and sore annoye; ffor thei were
sore chauffed that oon vpon that other, and than eche wente


<PB REF="" N="499" ID="pb.499"/>

to his hostell and hem vn-armed, and waissh her nekkes and
theire visages with warm water, and clothed hem in her
fresshest robes, and wente to court alle tho that myghten, and
thei that were hurt and wounded a-bode at theire hostelles for
to hele theire woundes, and on that other parte wente Gawein
and his felowes hem for to vn-arme in oon of the Queenes
chambres that was assigned for hem to repeire; and whan thei
were vn-armed and waissh, thei clothed hem richely, and yef thei
were well serued it nedeth not to aske, ffor ther were ladyes
and maydenes hem for to serue grete foyson.  Ther was
Segramor moche be-holden of oon and of other, ffor he was
a feire knyght and semly, and so was also Dodinell le sauage;
these tweyne were sore preised of all that hem be-helden.</P>
<P>  As soone as thei were a-raied, thei com in to the halle two
and two to-geder, holdinge be the handes oon after
a-nother, and thus com the foure score and x felowes, and sir
Gawein and Ewein albefore in to the halle be-fore the kynge
that to hem made gret ioye; and whan he saugh hem come he
a-roos on his feet a-gein hem, and toke sir Gawein be the
right hande, and the queene toke hym by the tother hande
and wente to sitte alle to-geder, and the other knyghtes satte
thourgh the halle, and pleied and disported oon with a-nother of
dyuerse thinges, and were gladde and myry.  But a-bove alle
other was the quene ioyfull   <MILESTONE N="178a" UNIT="folio"/>of her knyghtes that hadde the
victorye of the turnement.  But the knyghtes of the rounde
table be nother gladde ne iocunde, but were shamefast and
mate for her felowes, that many were hurt and wounded, and
so thei spake of many thinges till thei acorded to send hervy de
rivell, that was a goode knyght and wise of counseile, and
Nascien, for tweyne better myght thei not take to performe the
message, and mynados that was a wise knyght and a feire speker;
whan these thre knyghtes saugh thei most do the message, thei
toke eche other by the hande and com be-fore the kynge; and whan
the kynge saugh hem comynge he a-roos a-gein hem as he that
beste cowde eny worthi man honouren and worshipen, and seide
thei were well-come, and also a-roos sir Gawein.  Than spake


<PB REF="" N="500" ID="pb.500"/>

Hervy to the kynge, and seide, "Sir, plese it yow to sitte,
ye and youre companye, and we shull telle yow wherfore we
beth come."  Than sat down the kynge and his companye, and
hervy be-gan his reson, "Sir, the companye of the rounde table
have sente vs to speke to sir Gawein, and to my lady the
quene, to whom he holdeth a partie, and first of all to yow that
be oure souereigne lorde; and thei pray and be-seche yef thei
haue ought mys-taken a-gein my lorde sir Gawein, or a-gein
eny of his companye in what maner that it be, thei ben redy
it for to amende as ye and my lady will a-warde.  Be soche
a maner that alle matalent be pardoned on bothe partyes;" and
the kynge loked on the quene, and seide that sholde not be
refuced; and the quene ansuerde and seide that it plesed hir
wele, yef that sir Gawein ther-to a-corded, but he kept scilence,
and spake no worde.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge saugh he stodied, he seide, "Gawein,
feire nevew, what <CHOICE><CORR>think</CORR><SIC>thin</SIC></CHOICE> ye of this thinge that ye be
so wrorth and angry; ffor in this haue ye but honour, whan the
beste knyghtes of the worlde obbey hem to yow and offre to
a-mende all that is mysdon."  "Worthi men!" quod
Gawein.  "Ye feire nevew worthy men, and noble ben thei
trewly."  "Thei ought well to be so," quod Gawein, and with that he
hilde his pees; and the kynge that saugh well he was a-gein
hem Irous and angry, he loked on the quene, and seide, "Dame,
praye ye hym at this tyme;" and the quene seide, "Sir, with
gode will."  Than she toke hym be the hande, and seide,
"Nevew, be not so wroth, refroide youre maltalente, ffor
wrath hath many a worthi man and wise made to be holde for
foles, while the rage endureth.  Now yeve credence to my
wordes, and do that I praye yow at this tyme, and as my lorde
doth yow pray also; ffor it is youre honour and youre profite,
and ye knowe well that this londe is in sorowe and turment of
the saisnes, and ye here be but a small peple, and I shall telle
yow what ye shull thinke and do, ye shull love eche other and
helpe a-gein alle peple; and yef youre enmyes come a-gein yow
to hem ye sholde be fierce, and not to hem that to-morowe shull

<PB REF="" N="501" ID="pb.501"/>

put her bodyes in a-uenture of deth for my lorde that is here
and for me,   <MILESTONE N="178b" UNIT="folio"/>and for there foly that thei haue do now lightly
shull ye not hem failen.  But, feire nevew, pardon hem for I
pray yow, and so doth the kynge youre vncle, that is right
wroth;" and sir Gawein loked on the quene and be-gan to
smyle for the wordes that she hadde seide, and seide, "Madame,
who that will lerne lete hym come to yow, and blissed be that
lorde that so yow hath ordeyned, and that the companye of so
goode a lady, and so wise hath vs graunted, and well may the
kynge hym a-vaunt that yef ye lyve to age ye shull be the
wisest lady of the worlde, and so be ye now as I beleve; and
wite ye what ye haue wonne, ye may do with my body and
myn herte all youre volunte, say myn honour and myn vncle the
kynges."  "Now trewly," seide she, "that lady were nothinge
wise that ther-of yow requered.  Ne, I ne shall neuer, yef god
will."  Thus a-peesed the quene sir Gawein, and so was the
pees grauntid, and than wente Nascien and Hervy de rivell for
to fecche theire felowes of the rounde table, and com be-fore the
kynge; and the quene dide clepe sir Ewein, and Segramor,
and the thre brethern of Gawein, and a party of other, and
tolde hem how the pees was made, and how it was required by
the companye of the rounde table; and sir Ewein seide it was
well don, and better it were to haue the love of hem than the
hate.</P>
<P>  With that were the knyghtes of the rounde table come
be-fore the kynge, and as soone as thei were come
thei kneled to sir Gawein, and folded the panes of her mantels;
and than spake hervy de rivell, "Sir, we shull a-mende to yow
for vs, and for oure felowes alle these thinges with-oute more
seyinge, wher-of we haue a-gein yow mystaken, wher-fore we
be-seche yow of pardon;" and sir Gawein lept vp on foote and
seide he pardoned hem alle forfetes, and reised hem by the
armes, and so dide Ewein, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE> Segramor, and the thre brethren
of Gawein, eche of hem reised a knyght, and made alle the
reuenaunt to stonde vp and a-coled eche other in armes, and
foryaf all wrath and maltalent, and fro thens-forth was sir Gawein


<PB REF="" N="502" ID="pb.502"/>

a lorde and a maister and felowe of the rounde table; and the
quene quyte cleymed the x knyghtes that were prisoners that
hir knyghtes hadde her sent, and yaf eche of hem newe robes
and fressh.  This assaied the knyghtes of the rounde table, the
quenes knyghtes be soche forward that neuer after noon of hem
sholde turney a-gein other; but yef it were oon that wolde assay
hym-self in eny straunge turnement by stelthe vnknowen whan
thei were disgised that thei wolde not be knowe till thei hadde
renomee of grete prowesse; and whan the knyghtes of the
rounde table hem toke in her companye for the prowesse that
in hem was shewed; and the story seith that the companye of
the quenes knyghtes was but foure score and x.  But after thei
encresed as the storie shall declare, till thei were foure hundred
er the quest of the sent graal was a-cheved; wherfore thei
suffred after many grete peyne and traveile, for to a-cheve the
 <MILESTONE N="179a" UNIT="folio"/> quest that long endured, and in other questes thei traueyled
many dayes, and I shall telle to yow the cause and whi.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.27">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXVII. 
<LB/>THE MISSION OF KING LOOTH AND HIS FOUR SONS TO MAKE TRUCE WITH THE REBEL KINGS; AND THEIR BATTLES WITH THE SAXONS.

</HEAD>
<P>  This was the trouthe that tidinges spredde thourgh the reame
of grete Breteigne of the seint Graal, In the whiche
Ioseph ab Aramathie hadde geten the holy blode that dropped
oute of the side of oure blissed lorde Ieshu crist whan he henge
on the gloriouse crosse, he and Nichodemus, and the holy vessell
that com from heuene a-bove in the Citee of Sarras.  In the
whiche he sacrefied first his blissid body and his flessh by his
Bisshoppe Iosephe that he sacred with his owene hande, and
the holy spere, the whiche Ieshu the sone of marie his side
was with opened, was left in the Cite of Logres that Ioseph
thider hadde brought.  But noon cowde wite in what place, ne


<PB REF="" N="503" ID="pb.503"/>

neuer ne shall, neuer be founde but by prophesie ne the
merveiles of the seint graal, ne of the spere that thourgh the poynte
of Iren dide blede.  Till that the beste knyght of the worlde
com, and by hym sholde be discouered the merveiles of the
seint Graal, and herde and seyn.  These tidinges were spredde
all a-boute in euery contrey, and so no man cowde neuer wite
who sholde it bringe first forth, and whan the companye of the
rounde table herde sey that thourgh the beste knyght of the
worlde these thinges sholde be brought to fin.  Thei entred
in to many questes for to knowe whiche was the beste knyght,
and serched many a londe and many a contrey, and eche man
hym peyned for to be the beste knyght; and whan thei herde
speke that ther was eny goode knyght thourgh the contrey,
thei entred in to a quest hym to seche a yere and a day
with-oute soiour in a town more than oon nyght, and whan thei
hadde hym founde, thei sholde bringe hym to court; and whan
he was well preved of goode recorde that he was of high
prowesse thei toke hym in to her companye, and than was his
name writen a-monge the other knyghtes that were felowes of
the rounde table; and as eche of hem com from his quest at the
yeres ende, thei sholde telle the auentures that were hem
be-fallen in theire traueile, and the clerkes that were therfore
I-ordeyned it wrote worde for worde, euen as thei tolde.  Now
haue ye herde why the questes were stablisshed in the reame of
the grete Breteigne.  But now repeireth the tale to his mater
that he hath lefte for to telle this thinge, that I wolde that it
were not for-getyn.</P>
<P>  Full gladde and iocounde were the companye of the rounde
table for that thei were a-corded with sir Gawein, and
full moche thei hym preised and comended for the grete
prowesse that thei saugh hym do at this turnement, and seide
a-monge hem in counseile that the beste knyghtes ther-ynne
sholde not a-gein hym endure body for body.  Thus the
knyghtes ther-ynne seide theire volunte.  But moche more
  <MILESTONE N="179b" UNIT="folio"/>spake the ladyes and the maydenes in the chambers.  Than
was water asked, and whan thei hadde waisshen than sat euery


<PB REF="" N="504" ID="pb.504"/>

knyght as hym ought for to do, and the quenes knyghtes were
sette by the knyghtes of the rounde table, and the kynge
Arthur, and the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and the
kynge looth sat at the high deyse as thei ought for to do, and
mo sat ther not but thei foure, and that day serued Gawein
and kay the stiward, and lucas the botiller, and Gifflet, and
other a-boute a xl., and were so well served that noon cowde
better devise, as of mees that thei hadde it nedeth not to reherse,
ne of the wynes and drinkes that thei hadde in maners, and
after the bordes were vp the knyghtes yede to disporte hem in
the medowes vpon the river, ffor it was feire weder and
clier.  But the foure kynges a-bode and wente in to a chambre by
hem-self, and lened out at the wyndowes ther-as thei myght se
the medowes and the river ther-as was holsom aire, and a softe
<CHOICE><CORR>colde</CORR><SIC>cole</SIC></CHOICE> wynde brought in the swete sauours of the erbes, that
thei were at more ese than thei that were with-oute, for it was
right hoot, and ther the foure kynges spake to-geder of many
thinges as it com to theire pleiser.</P>
<P>  Whan thei hadde be ther a-while, than seide the kynge
Ban to the kynge Arthur, "Sir," seide the kynge
Ban, "yef ye wolde do o thinge after my counseile that I haue
thought in my herte me semeth it sholde yow moche a-vaile,
and the more sholde ye be dred of straunge peple and of prive,
and the more love ye sholde haue of the knyghtes of youre
courte."  "Sey on," seide the kynge, "ffor yef it be soche
thinge that I may do with-oute shame or dishonour, I will it
gladly do."  "Sir," seide the kynge Ban, "in this shull ye
neuer haue shame, yef god will, ne no reprof shall it be vnto
yow, loke that neuer while ye will holde youre londe in pees
and in reste that ye suffre not youre knyghtes to take no
turnement oon a-gein a-nother; ffor soche wrath myght falle by
envye for that thei be so goode knyghtes that neuer sholde
be love a-monge hem.  But at alle tymes when thei will
turneyen lete hem go in to the marches of youre londe to
high barouns wher-of ther be I-nowe that be riche and
puyssaunt;" and the kynge seide that he seide well, and that so

<PB REF="" N="505" ID="pb.505"/>

wolde he do with-oute faile; and ther-with com the quene
that these worde hadde well vndirstonde, and seide how it
was well seide and blessed be he of god that hath yove this
counsoile.</P>
<P>  After that spake the kynge looth and seide, "Sir, hit were
nedefull for the cristin peple that we toke soche
counseile, that these false saisnes that beth in this reame and haue
be-seged two Citees to-geder be theire pride, how that thei myght
be driven oute.  But thei be so grete multitude that thei ar not
like to be dryven oute, but yef oure lorde helpe, and ye knowe
well that ye haue not peple   <MILESTONE N="180a" UNIT="folio"/>I-now with-ynne youre power for
to enchace hem oute, ne holde bateile a-gein hem in felde.  But
yef that oon myght do so moche to purchace a trewis be-twene
yow and youre princes that now be with yow at werre, In
soche manere that we myght alle go to-geder vpon the saisnes,
and oche to helpe other that thei were chaced oute of the
londe.  Me someth this were the moste almesse and profite that myght
be do in this contrey, and the trewis myght endure a yere, and
than yef ther myght be made pees be-twene yow and hem, and
yef it may not than eche man do his beste."  "Ffor-sothe,"
seide the kynge, "that wolde I fayn, yef I knewe who to
sende, soche a man that the barouns wolde yeve to credence, ffor
thei be full fierce and full of pride."  "Sir," seide the kynge
loot, "the saisnes haue hem so greved that I trowe whan thei
here speke of the trewis, and that thei shull haue youre helpe
hit shall not nede gretly hem to prayen."  "I can not sey,"
quod Arthur, "what I sholde ther-of to yow sey, ffor as well
knowe ye the neethe of the londe as do I, and I am but a man
as oon of yow be, and therfore loke and cheseth soche a man
that may beste this message performe."  "Sir," seide the
kynge Ban, "yef I wiste the kynge looth wolde conne me no
magre, I wolde sey that he sholde go, ffor he sholde do better
the nodes than eny that ye sholde sende, and better he cowde
enforme hem of youre volunte, for he is with hem a-queynted
and theire welwellinge."  "Ye," seide the kynge Arthur,
"and better he knoweth the passages than eny other that


<PB REF="" N="506" ID="pb.506"/>

I myght thider sende;" and the quene seide "that noon other
man sholde so well do the needes as the kynge looth, but yef
it be for the saisnes that all day gon robbinge thourgh the
contrey.  But ther were noon so grete losse of oon knyght in
this reame as it were of hym yef hym mys-happe, as god
diffende."  "Dame," seide the kynge, "I knowe the princes so
full of pride that ther is no knyght that sholde a-monge hem be
herde that I myght sende."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge looth saugh how thei acorded that he
sholde go vpon this nede, he knewe well how thei hadde
reson.  Than he seide he wolde go and haue with hym his
foure sones.  "Trewly," seide the kynge Bohors, "yef thei
ben with yow than haue ye no drede of no man of moder
born."  Whan <SUPPLIED>King Arthur</SUPPLIED> saugh that thei were to this a-corded that the
kynge looth sholde lede with hym his foure sones, he yaf a grete
sigh, for he douted of sir Gawein, in whom he hadde so tentefly
sette his love, so that ther was nothinge in the worlde that he
loved so moche, and the quene knewe a partie of his thought, and
seide to the kynge, "Sir, graunte the kynge looth to lede with
hym his children hardely, for their shull haue no drede, yef god
will, ffor the more thei be youre frendes the better, and withe
the more tendir herte   <MILESTONE N="180b" UNIT="folio"/>shull thei do youre message as is nede,
more than sholde a-nother that ther-of sette no charge and lever
I hadde that my frende counseiled with myn enmyes than
a-nother that were straunge."  "Dame," seide the kynge
Arthur, "I me a-corde, seth the barouns haue it ordeyned;" and
than he seide to the kynge looth, and praide hym to appareile
hym to go secretly that no man knewe whider he wolde go,
with that was Gawein cleped and his brethren that were
pleyinge in the halle; and whan thei come to the quene she
a-roos and wente hem a-geins, and seide thei were welcome,
and thei dide yelde hir a-gein hir salew debonerly.  Than
Arthur tolde hem all as was devised, how thei moste go on
the message, and why thei hadde it a-monge hem purveyed;
and than thei ansuerde and seide that it was goode for to be
done.


<PB REF="" N="507" ID="pb.507"/>
</P>
<P>  After that seide the kynge Looth to sir Gawein, "ffeire
sone, goth forth and appareile yow and youre brethern
that ye faile nought whan we shull go."  "Sir," seide Gawein,
"what a-rayment sholde we haue eny more, but oure armours,
and oure horse; we shull neither haue somer ne male trussed,
netther grete ne small, but goode stedes and swyft, on the
whiche we shull ride that may bere vs to garison yef myster
be.  Ne here be-hoveth noon a-bidinge, for yef ye do my
counseile we shull meve yet this nyght at the first somme, and ride as
grete iourneyes as we may for soche a nede as this is sholde
not be put in no delay."  "Trewly, nevew," seide Arthur, "ye
sey soth.  Now, go reste yow a-while and slepe."  Than
Gawein turned hym to the quene, and seide, "Madame, I prey
that ye thinke on my felowes that leven here with yow, for
the knyghtes of the rounde table ne love not hem wele in
herte.  But haue to hem envye as ye knowe well youre self, and
parauenture whan I and my brethern be gon, thei will make
som bourde or som turnement a-gein hem, wherefore I praye
yow as my goode ladye that ye suffre hem to make no
party."  "And I yow graunte," seide the quene, "that ther ne shall
noon be; yef my lorde will leve my counseile ther shall neuer
be turnement as longe as the saisnes be in this londe;" and
than the kynge seide, "Be the feith that I owe vn-to yow no
more ther sholde."</P>
<P>  With that thei departed, and wente to theire chambres
for to slepe and to reste; and thei that were in the
halle went to theire hostelles, and departeden.  But who that
departed, Gyomar ne departed neuer but a-bode spekynge with
Morgain, the sustur of kynge Arthur, in a wardrope vnder
the paleys, where she wrought with silke and golde; ffor she
wolde make a coyf for his suster, the wif of kynge looth.  This
Morgain was a yonge damesell fressh and Iolye.  But she was
som-what brown of visage and sangwein colour, and nother to
fatte ne to lene, but was full a-pert   <MILESTONE N="181a" UNIT="folio"/>auenaunt and comely,
streight and right plesaunt, and well syngynge.  But she was
the moste hotest woman of all Breteigne, and moste luxuriouse,


<PB REF="" N="508" ID="pb.508"/>

and she was a noble clergesse, and of Astronomye cowde she
I-nough, for Merlin hadde hir taught; and after he lerned hir
I-nough as ye shull heren afterward, and so moche she sette
ther-on hir entent, and lerned so moche of egramauncye, that
the peple cleped hir afterward Morgain le fee, the suster of
kynge Arthur; ffor the merveiles that she dide after in the
contrey, and the beste workewoman she was with hir handes,
that eny man knewe in eny londe, and ther-to she hadde oon
of the ffeirest heed, and the feirest handes vnder hevene, and
sholdres well shapen at devise; and she hadde feire eloquense,
and tretable, and full debonair she was as longe as she was
in hir right witte, and whan she were wroth with eny man,
she was euell for to acorde; and that was well shewed
afterward, ffor hir that she sholde most haue loved of all the
worlde dide she after the moste shame, wherof it was after
alle the dayes of hir lif, and that was the quene Gonnore, as
that ye shull it heren here-after and wher-fore it was.</P>
<P>  Whan Guyomar entred in to the chambre ther as was
Morgain the ffee, he hir salued full swetly, and she
hym salued a-gein curteisly, and he sette hym down by hir
and helped to wynde the threde of golde, and asked hir what
she sholde ther-with make, and he was a feire knyght and
comly, well shapen, and his visage well coloured, and his heer
crull and yelowe, and was feire and plesaunt of body and of
chere laughinge, and he a-resoned hir of many thinges; and
she be-hielde hym gladly, and was well plesed with all that
he seide and dide; and so longe thei spake to-geder that he
praied hir of love, and the more that she hym be-hilde, the
better she was with hym plesed, and that she gan love hym so
well that she refused nothinge that he wolde hir require; and
whan he aperceyued that she wolde suffre gladly his requeste,
he be-gan hir to enbrace, and she hym suffred, and he be-gan
to kysse hir tendirly that bothe thei be-gonne to chauffe as
nature wolde, and fellen down on a grete bedde, and pleyde
the comen pley, as thei that gretly it desired; ffor yef he were
desirouse she was yet moche more, so that thei loved hertely

<PB REF="" N="509" ID="pb.509"/>

to-geder longe tyme that noon it wiste; but after it knewe the
quene Gonnore as ye shull here telle, wherfore thei were
departed, and ther-fore she hated the quene, and dide hir after
gret annoye, and of blames that she areised that euer endured
while hir lif lasted.  But now retourne we to kynge looth and
his sones that be go to slepe.</P>
<P>  A noon as it was past mydnyght a-roos the kynge Looth
and his foure sones, and appareiled hem of hir armours;
and thei hadde chosen v of the beste horse   <MILESTONE N="181b" UNIT="folio"/>that thei cowde
fynde in all the court, and hem thei made to be ledde with
hem with v gromes on foote, and thei hadde v palfreyes right
goode that thei dide ride on hir iourney; and whan thei were
all redy thei lept on theire palfreyes, and ride oute at the yat
of Bertone and the v gromes wente be-fore and ledde the v
horse couered with steill, and wente oute as softly as thei
myght, for thei wolde not be a-parceyved of no peple; and whan
thei hadde riden half a walsh myle, Gawein asked whiche wey
thei sholde go; and the kynge looth seide he wiste not, for the
contrey was full of werre.  "Than shall I telle yow," quod
Gawein, "what we shull do; we shull go to Arestuell in
Scotlonde that is now the next londe, and moste full of wode of
all this contrey, and it is better to drawe that wey than to eny
other place;" and the kynge looth seide, "Feire sone, seth
that it pleseth yow I will wele, for youre counseile is goode,
and so shull we go be the castell of Sapine and be the playn
of Reostok, and by the foreste of lespinoye vnder Carenges,
and we shull go by the river of Savarne, and thourgh the
playnes of Cambenyk, and fro thens we shull costinge to the
Cite of North walis that longeth to the kynge Tradilyuaunt,
and fro thens to Arestuell, iiij myle from the Saisnes;" and
the children herto dide graunte.</P>
<P>  Thus ride thise messagiers, spekynge of o thinge and other,
till it was day, and on the morowe thei rode be the
moste vncouthe weyes that thei cowde knowe, and lay in the
forestes, and in hermytages, and thus thei ride viij dayes that
neuer hadde thei disturbier till thei com in to the playns of


<PB REF="" N="510" ID="pb.510"/>

Roestok, and than it be-fill hem a-boute the hour of mydday
that thei mette vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> Saisnes that brought grete prayes and
as vii<HI REND="sup">C</HI> prisoners, that the feet were bounde vnder the horse
belies, and thei dide hem beete full lothly with staves and
other wepnes, and hem dide condite Sorbares, and Monaclyns,
and Salebruns, and Ysores, and Clarion.  This Clarion rode on
Gringalet, an horse that was cleped so far the grete bounte that
he hadde; ffor as the storye seith for x myle rennynge abated
he neuer his corage, ne hym neded no spore ne no skyn of hym
ther-fore ne sholde not swete; and whan the saisnes hem saugh
ridinge on her weye, thei knewe well by theire armes and hir
conysshaunce that thei were noon of her companye, and thei
hoved and a-bode; and whan Gawein saugh that, he hoved stille
and bad his fader and his brethren to lepe vpon theire horses,
and so thei dide a-noon delyuerly; and the gromes toke the
palfreys and lepte vp and rode in to the foreste that wey
streight as theire wey turned, and thei com toward the saisnes
as the wey hem ledde, for thei deyned not to glenche; and
mydday was than passed, and drough towarde noone, and so
rode the kynge looth formest, and Gawein after, and his brethern
hym be-side, a softe   <MILESTONE N="182a" UNIT="folio"/>paas; and whan thei hadde so riden that
thei be-gan to come nygh, than seide Gawein to his fader that
he ne sholde entende to noon other thinge ne coveite but to
perce hem thourgh-out, and to his brethern he seide the same
till thei were come on that other side.  Than the saisnes hem
ascride, and seide, "Ye knyghtes that come ther, yelde yow
and telle vs what ye be and what ye go sechinge;" and the
kynge looth ansuerde, "We ben fyve messagiers of the kynge
Arthur that go on his erunde ther he hath vs sente, and more
will we not sey;" and thei seide, "Cesse and go no ferther;
ffor we kepe the weyes in the name of the kynge hardogabran,
and Orienx the sone of Brangue of Saxoyne, and in the name
of Margrat, to whom we lede this pray and these prisoners,
and of yow also shull we make present."  "Ye," quod the
kynge looth, "whan ye may;" and thei seide in to that tyme was
but litill space.  "But yelde yow, and than do ye wisely er it


<PB REF="" N="511" ID="pb.511"/>

falle yow eny werse;" and thei ansuerde that sholde neuer
be.  Than thei lete theire horse renne with as grete randon as thei
myght go, and these a-gein to hem that nothinge hem ne douted,
but smote in a-monge hem, and eche of hem bar oon deed to
the erthe, and after smote other v that thei were deed vp-right;
and at foure cours thei haue hem perced thourgh with-oute
eny other discombraunce, and than thei ride a walop with theire
speres in theire handes all blody; and whan the saisnes saugh
hem goinge, than a-roos the shoute and the noyse after hem
right grete, and be-gonne hem to chace that the duste a-roos so
thikke that harde it was oon to knowe a-nother; with that
com the vj kynges prikinge after, that hadde herde the tidinges
and cried vpon her men, "Now upon hem and lete hem yow not
ascape;" and thei hem-self priken after, for thei were well horsed,
and so thei chaced hem fiercely, and thei wente forth a grete
walop till thei be come to a Mille, where ther was a passage
at a forde full of cley, and ther moste thei stinte and ride
a softe paas; and ther ouer-toke hem the v kynges that dred
nothinge the euell passage, and of saisnes after hem mo than
v<HI REND="sup">C</HI>, and ther thei brake theire speres vpon hem in her comynge,
and Ysors that com be-fore smote the horse of kynge looth that
he fill deed be-twene his legges.
  </P>
<P>Whan the kynge looth saugh his horse slain he lept vp
lightly on his feet, and drough his swerde, and drough
hym to a banke for the clay that was grete; and thei ronne vpon
hym and assailed hym full harde, and he hym diffended so
fiercely that thei hadde no power hym to take; and whan
Gawein saugh his fader on foote, he was full of sorowe, and
smote the horse with the spores that the blode ran oute on
bothe sides, and smote Monaclyn thourgh the shelde and thourgh
the hauberke that he fill deed to the erthe, and in the fallinge
his spere brake.  Than he drough his swerde that was cleped
Calibourne, and loked on his fader that hym diffended a-gein
mo than xl saisnes, and he ran vpon hem with his swerde,
and smote soche strokes on bothe   <MILESTONE N="182b" UNIT="folio"/>his sides, that he kutte heedes
and legges, and armes, and dide soche merveiles that thei fledde


<PB REF="" N="512" ID="pb.512"/>

from hym and made wey; and Gawein smote a saisne that
peyned sore to take his fader, that he slyt hym to the breste
bon, and than hente the horse and ledde it to his fader, and
the crye and the noyse a-roos for hym that was deed, and
ther-while is the kynge looth remounted magre alle his enmyes.  Than
com the thre brethern of Sir Gawein that hadde made soche
slaughter of the saisnes, the alle her armours were be-steyne
with blode and brayn; and whan thei were to-geder thei
be-gonne a stronge medle, and slough so many that it was gret
merveile to se, and the saisnes com on euermore, for thei wende
ther hadde be moche peple for the grete slaughter that thei
hadde made.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge looth saugh so moche peple come on
alle partyes, he cleped his sones, and seide it was
tyme to go, ffor it were no wisdome to a-bide lenger for to
resceve xl strokes for the yevinge of oon.  "But go we hens,"
quod he, "and yef thei vs enchace let vs turne vpon hem
be-tymes when we se oure leiseir; with that thei wente theire
wey and passed the forde delyuerly, and whan thei were ouer
thei ride forth on her wey; and whan the thre kynges saugh
hem departe, thei cried vpon her men, "Now after hem, and
lete not the traitours ascape."  Than thei passed the forde, and
chaced hem harde, and the kynge Clarion that satte vpon the
Gringalet chaced hem formest the lengthe of an arblast, and
Sir Gawein was be-hynde alle his felowes his swerde in his
hande all blody; and the sarazin that sore peynes hym to
ouer-take a-scried hym, "Wy yelde the or thow art but deed;"
and Gawein loked and saugh the horse so swyftly renne that
he gate grounde sore after hym, and gretly he hym coveited
in hir herte, and seide yef he myght gete soche an horse, he
wolde not yeve it for the beste Citee that kynge Arthur hadde,
and than he gan to ride a softer paas, and rode walopinge, and
Clarion hym enchaced faste after; and whan Gawein saugh
he was come so nygh, he turned his shelde and Clarion smote
so harde hym vpon the shelde that the spere fly on peces;
and Gawein hym hitte vpon the helme that he slytte thourgh

<PB REF="" N="513" ID="pb.513"/>

the coyf of mayle and the flessh to the harde boon, that he
was so astoned that he fill in swowne to the grounde out of his
sadill, and Gawein caught Gringalet be the bridell, and ledde
hym to a grove ther faste by of half a myle, and his fader rode
alwey forth be-fore and his thre sones, and entended to nought
elles but to go theire wey, and wende thei hadde alle foure
be by hym, and the duste and the powder was so thikke that
oon myght not se fer from hym, and so thei hadde lefte Gawein
be-hynde the space of half a myle; and whan Gawein was
come in to the grove, he saugh the v gromes come oute of the
foreste that rode on the v palfreyes, and than was he gladde
and preised hem moche for that thei hadde peyned hem sore
hem for to sewe.  Than he a-light of his horse and lepte on
the Gringalet, and toke his horse to oon of the gromes for to
lede,   <MILESTONE N="183a" UNIT="folio"/>and comaunded hem to go after his fader and his brethern
that were gon be-fore, and bidde hem spede hem faste on hir
iourney, and I shall folowe a-noon after, but I will se where
these peple will be come.  But he a-bode for nought, for thei
chaced no ferther, after thei fonde the kynge Clarion lyinge,
but stode a-bowte hym, and wende well he hadde ben deed, and
made gret doell that sir Gawein myght here the crye ther he
was.</P>
<P>  Thus a-bode Gawein longe in the busshes to loke yef eny
wolde come after, and the kynge looth and his thre sones
rode forth till thei come to a litill grove, and as thei sholde
entre thei loked bak and <SUPPLIED>saugh</SUPPLIED> not Gawein; and at the firste
worde he seid, "Ha! I haue loste all;" and thei hym
behelden, and seide, "What eyleth yow, sire;" and he ansuerde,
"My sone, youre brother, my sone; ha! certes yef he be deed
I shall sle my-self, ffor after hym recche I not to lyve oo
day."  "Sir," seide Agravain, "ne weymente ye not so, ffor yef god
will he ne hath noon harme;" and while the kynge loot made
this waymentacion com the v gromes that brought the palfreies,
and that oon ledde Gaweins horse on his right honde; and
whan the kynge hem saugh he knewe hem wele, and whan
thei approched nygh Gaheries hem ascried, "Where lefte ye


<PB REF="" N="514" ID="pb.514"/>

my brother?"  "Sir," seide the gromes, "amonge the yonde
busshes where he is lepte vpon the beste horse of the worlde,
wher-from he hath smyte down a kynge, and thei that weepe
and crye, sey that his name is kynge Clarion, and the name
of the stede is Gringalet, and he toke vs this horse, and sente
yow worde that ye sholde ride forth, for soone shall he yow
ouer-take, whan he will; whan thei herde he was hool and
sounde thei were gladde, and be-hielde toward the busshes, and
whan Gawein saugh thei rode no ferther he seide he wolde
shewe hem <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>the the</SIC></CHOICE>   gode horse er he paste eny ferther.  Than he
spronge out of the busshes, and thider as he saugh grettest
plente of peple that entended yet to make doell and sorowe,
and saugh a saisne that hilde a merveilous short spere, and
the shaft was grete and short, and the heed was a foote and
a half of lengthe that was clier and trenchaunt.  Than he put
Calibourne his swerde in the scauberke and launched toward
the saisne with grete raundon, and raced it oute of his handes
so felly that he pulled hym to grounde, and with the same
cours he smote a-nother that he fill stark deed, and plonged in
depe a-monge hem, and after returned thourgh hem as tempest
of thunder; but er he past oute his shelde felte it well, for
it was all to slitte and hewen, but er he departed he hath mo
than xiiij so araied that neuer sholde thei ride on horse in
hele; and than he wente and a-bode no lenger, and the crye
and the shoute a-roos so grete, and the chace that merveile
was to se, but for hem myght he ne be ouertake; and whan he
hadde lefte hem be-hynde he returned with his swerde in his
honde, and smote so the firste that he mette that deed he fill
on the grene, and thus taried sir Gawein longe while; and
he wente and com in   <MILESTONE N="183b" UNIT="folio"/>soche maner till thei be come nygh
the wode with-ynne a bowe draught where the kynge and his
thre bretheren were.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Looth saugh the saisnes come soche foyson
after his sone Gawein that he desired to se a-bove


<PB REF="" N="515" ID="pb.515"/>

all thinge, he cried, "My sones, what do ye? is not that
Gawein youre brother that here cometh that these glotouns
chace; lete it be to hem dere solde."  With that the kynge loot
laced his helme hastely and smote the horse with spores, and
his thre sones also, and com a-gein the saisnes; and the kynge
Loot mette with Gawein, and seide, "Feire sone, grete wronge
haue ye do that thus leve me and youre brethern, and where
haue ye thus longe taried.  Coveyte ye alle these saisnes to
discounfite, though ye slough at eche stroke x, ye sholde not
haue do in a moneth."  "Sir," seide he, "I haue wonne soche
an horse that I wolde not yeve for the castell of Glocedon, and
therfore I wolde hym preve, and I haue founde hym soche that
me nedeth to seche noon better in no londe, now go we for I shall
not leve yow no more to-day fer nothinge that may
be-falle."  "Blame haue he," quod Agrauain, "that thus shall go seth
we be thus be-fore er we haue slain moo of these
saisnes."  "Ye is that soth," seide Gawein, and thei ne hadde no speres,
and thei drough oute theire swerdes, and these com prikinge
and wende hem to take and to holde, and brake theire speres
vpon theire sheldes and thei smote hem vpon the sheldes and
helmes or ther thei myght hem a-reche, and fyghted fiercely
that thei slough mo than xl er thei wente.</P>
<P>  And whan the kynge Looth saugh it was tyme to go he
seide, "Gawein, goode sone, bringe a-wey youre
brethern, for ye se well it is nyght, and therfore take we oure
iourney, ffor to batailes we shull come I-nowe that we shull
haue bothe handes full;" and Gawein com to his brethern,
and seide that now is tyme to go, and than thei departed, but
first thei toke v speres of the saisnes and put vp theire swerdes;
and as thei departed vij saisnes haue theire speres leide in
fewtre, and com overtakinge Gueheret, and tweyne smote hym
be-twene the two sholderes, and the other tweyne on the side,
and other two vpon the sleues of the hauberk, and the vij<HI REND="sup">e</HI>
smote the horse thourgh the body and bar to the erthe, bothe
the toon and the other.  Than returned the kynge Looth and
wende well he hadde be deed, and seide, "Ha-las now be

<PB REF="" N="516" ID="pb.516"/>

disparbled the foure frendes; ha! goode sone Gawein, this
harme haue I thourgh yow, ffor yef ye hadde come with vs
Gueheret ne hadde I had noon harme;" and while the kynge
spake these wordes lepe Gueheret vpon his feet, ffor he was a
noble knyght and an hardy, and he enbrace his shelde, and
drough oute his swerde and made hym redy to diffende
hymself; and the vij saisnes were returned, and ronne vpon hym;
and he smote so the firste that he toke that he kutte his thigh
a-sonder; and he smote another on the helme, but he myght not
well come by hym, and the stroke descended   <MILESTONE N="184a" UNIT="folio"/>be-twene the
body and the sholder, and kutte the gige with all the arme;
and Gawein smote so hym that he mette that deed he fill to
grounde, and than he caught the horse that was goode and
ledde to his brother, and he lept vp lightly and hente his spere,
for that wolde he not for-yete; and the kynge Looth, and
Agrauain, and Gaheries haue felde other thre, and the vije
turned to flight; and whan Gaheries saugh hym go, he priked
after, and ouer-toke hym doun in a valei, smote hym with the
spere a-gein the herte so harde that the heed passed
thourghoute, and than returned a walop that wey ther his brethern be,
and rode forth her wey, and it was nygh nyght; and the
saisnes be-taught hem to the deuell all quyk, ffor for them
sholde thei no lenger be chaced, and seide yef ther were x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of
soche men in the contrey, the kynge hardogabran and all his
puyssaunce myght neuer a-gein hem endure; with that the
saisnes returned ther the kynge Clarion lay, and founde his
wounde stanched; and whan he saugh hem come a-gein, he
asked yef thei hadde the glotouns take, and they seide, "Nay,"
and tolde hym the harme thei hadde don after, and that thei
myght not be take by no man of theires; and than was Clarion
sorowfull and dolent, and returned toward the sege that was
be-fore Clarence; and the kynge loot and his sones saugh it
drough to nyght and rode forth theire wey, but who hadde
sein theire armours he myght haue seide thei hadde not ben at
soiourne, ffor theire sheldes were slitte and theire helmes to
hewen, and theire armours all to rente, and theire horse all


<PB REF="" N="517" ID="pb.517"/>

blode and brayn, and it semed that out of stronge stour thei
were departed, with that thei be come to the grove ther the
gromes hem a-biden, and thei a-light of theire horse, and lepe
on the palfreyes, and the gromes ledde theire horse and bare
theire speres, and theire sheldes, and theire helmes, and rode
thourgh the wode that was grete till it was fer in the nyght,
and the mone shone right clier till that thei come to a forester
that was a goode man, and hadde foure sones that were feire
yonge bachelers, and hadde a wif that was a goode lady.</P>
<P>  This foresters place was stronge and well closed with depe
diches full of water, aud was environed with grete
okes, and ther-to to it was so thikke of busshes and of thornes
and breres that noon wolde haue wende that ther hadde be
eny habitacion.  Thider com the kynge Loot and his foure
sones at the firste cok crowinge, and happed that her wey hem
ledde to a posterne wher-by men entred in to the place, and
made oon of theire gromes to crie and knokke till the gate
was opened; and oon of the foresteres sones hem asked what
thei were, and thei seide thei were V erraunt knyghtes that
wente vpon theire grete nede.  "Sirs," seide the yonge man,
"ye be welcome, and ledde hem in to the middill of the Court,
and thei a-light of theire horse, and ther were I-nowe that
ledde hem to stable, and yaf hem hey and otes, ffor the place
was well stuffed; and a squyer   <MILESTONE N="184b" UNIT="folio"/>hem ledde in to a feire halle
be the grounde hem for to vn-arme, and the Vavasour and his
wif, and his foure sones that he hadde, and his tweyne doughtres
dide a-rise, and light vp torches and other lightes ther-ynne,
and sette water to the fier, and waisshed theire visages and
theire handes, and after hem dried on feire toweiles and white,
and than brought eche of hem a mantell, and the Vauasour
made cover the tables, and sette on brede and wyne grete foyson
and venyson, and salt flessh grete plente; and the knyghtes
sat down and ete and dranke as thei that ther-to haue grete
nede, and the Vauasours two doughtres be-hilde sir Gawein
tenderly, and his brethern, and sore thei merveiled what thei
myght be; and the fforesters foure sones serued be-fore the


<PB REF="" N="518" ID="pb.518"/>

knyghtes and the maidenes serued of wyn, and the lady satte
be-fore sir Gawein, and the hoste be-fore Agravain, and Gueheret,
and Gaheries to-geder; and the kynge loot satte euen be-side
his hoste a litill a-bove, and thei were well serued as a-boute
soche hour, for it was full nygh mydnyght, and whan the
clothes were vp the forester seide to the kynge looth, "Sir
hoste, yef it sholde yow not displese, ne to these worthi men
that be here, I wolde gladly knowe what ye were, and what
is the cause that ye traueile yef it be not shame to
aske."  "Trewly," seide the kynge loot, "we shull neuer ther-of haue
shame yef god will, but telle vs be-fore to whom longeth this
forest and this contrey a-boute."  "Certes, sir," seide he, "it
is the kynges Clarion of Northumberlonde, and I it kepe vnder
hym, and am forester and his liegeman, and these squyers that
beth here be my sones, and these maidenes be my
doughters."  "For-sothe, sir," seide the kynge, "I knowe not a better man
of his age than is the kynge Clarion, ne he myght no better
haue be-sette the baille than vpon yow as me semeth, ffor ye
haue a feire meyne a well lerned."  "Sir," quod he, "yef
thei will be goode men, thei haue worthi knyghtes of theire
lynage that ben now in the Court of kynge Arthur of the moste
preised and beste be-loved, and as it is tolde me thei beth newly
be-come the quenes knyghtes, and by my lorde sir Gawein, the
sone of kynge loot is this company made, and it is seide
how the kynge Looth is a-corded with the kynge
Arthur."  "And who be thei," seide the kynge Loot, "that aperteyneth
to youre sones?"  "Trewly, sir," seide the forester, "this lady
that is here is suster to Meranges de Porlesgues, I can not sey
yef ye knowe hym, and is cosin germain to Ayglin des vaux and
to kehedin le petitz, and to Ewein lionell <SUPPLIED>that</SUPPLIED> is my nevew, for
he is my brother sone Grandilus, the Castelein doucrenefar, and I
my-self hadde I-nough of londe ne were these saisnes that haue
all wasted."  "And what is youre name?" quod the kynge
to the forester.  "Trewly, sir," seide the forester, "my name
is mynoras, and am lorde of the new castell in
Northumbirlond."  Than seide the kynge loot, "Alle these that ye

<PB REF="" N="519" ID="pb.519"/>

haue named knowe I well, and ye sey soth thei be goode
knyghtes at devise these that ye haue nempned, and wolde
god that   <MILESTONE N="185a" UNIT="folio"/>the kynge Clarion satte by me as nygh as ye
do."  "How so?" seide Mynoras, "ar ye a-queynted with hym?"
"Ye," seide he, "I shall neuer cesse of traueile till I haue
spoke with hym." "Sir," seide mynoras, "so moche desire
I the more to knowe what ye be, more now than I dide
beforn."  "And I shall telle yow than," quod the kynge loot;
"ye may sey to alle hem that yow aske who was loged with
yow, that it was the kynge looth and his foure sones."  "Ha!
sir," quod the forester, "we ar worthi to be deed, for we haue
yow no better serued," and than thei aros from hym.  "Sitte
ye stille," quod the kynge, "and meve yow not, for so moche
haue ye doon that ye haue wonne oure love for euermore, and
youre meyne shull haue profite."  "A sire," seide Mynoras,
"what seche ye in this contrey?"  Quod the kynge, "We
seche that we myght speke with the Barouns of this contrey
that we myght haue a Parliament to-geder on the kynge
Arthurs be-halve to se how that we myght put oute these
saisnes of this londe, and eche of vs to helpe other as
brethern."  "And where trowe ye for to assemble hem," quod
Mynoras.  "In Arestuell in Scotlonde," quod the kynge looth, "that is the
nexte marche, and ther we shull assemble yef we may."  "Sir,"
quod Mynoras, "yef it plese yow I shall wele lete my lorde haue
witinge, and so moche shull ye haue the lesse to do, and tell
me whan he shall fynde yow ther."  "Trewly," seide the
kynge, "I can yow thanke, and ye sey full well, and
therfore now telle hym that he shall fynde me ther on seinte
Berthelmewes day, and bidde hym loke that he be ther, for
ther shull be alle the other princes."  And Mynoras seide
that it sholde be don, and badde hym thinke on the
remenaunt, for of that was he quyte, after thei spake of o thinge
and other till the beddes were redy, and than thei wente to
reste, for thei were wery of traueile, and it was fer in the
nyght, and thei slepte till it was day.  But now a litill cesseth
of hem, and speketh of kynge Pelles of lytenoys, the brother


<PB REF="" N="520" ID="pb.520"/>

of kynge Pellynor, and of kynge Aleon that were brethern
germain.</P>
<P>  This kynge hadde a feire sone that yet was no knyght,
and he was of xv yere of age, but he was right semely
and well barnysshed of body and bones, and ther-to was of
grete bewte, and his fader hym asked whan he wolde be
knyght, and he ansuerde that he wolde neuer be knyght
before that the beste knyght of the worlde that eny man knewe
hadde yove hym armes and the a-coole.  "In feith, sone,"
than seide the kynge, "than may ye longe I-nough a-bide."  "I
can not seyn," seide the squyer, "but firste shall I serue hym
thre yere er he make me knyght till that I haue lerned I-nough
of armes a-boute hym, and wite ye whi.  I will knowe and se
of what prowesse he is and soche may he be, that I will teche
hym the wey in to this contrey, for to a-cheve the a-uentures
that hastely shull be-gynne, as it is seide, and to youre-self
hath it be   <MILESTONE N="185b" UNIT="folio"/>seide often tymes, and I wolde be right sory, yef
I myght not se myn Vncle made hooll of his woundes that he
hath thourgh his thighes."  "Ffeire sone, seide the kynge,
"neuer therfore shall he not spede, though ye teche hym the
wey, ffor hym be-hoveth to be of soche chiualrie, and so
a-uenturouse, that he come by hym-self and enquere after the seint
Graal that my feire doughter kepeth, that is yet but vij yere
of age, and so hit be-houeth on hir to be engendred that childe
by the best knyght that eny man knoweth, ffor to a-chieve the
a-uentures ther be-houeth to be thre, wherof tweyne shull be
virgins, and the thirde shall be caste."  "Sir," seide the
squyer, "my volunte is soche that I will go to the Court of
kynge Arthur, ffor I here sey that ther ben the beste knyghtes
of the worlde, and ther is oon that is his nevew that is cleped
Gawein, whiche is the beste knyght of the worlde, hym will I go
serue, and be his squyer yef hym plese to haue my seruise, and
yef he be soche as men recorde, I shall take of hym myn armes,
and the a-coole."  "Ffeire sone," that seide the kynge Pelles,
"ther be so many passages be-twene this and that.  That it is
no light thinge to go thider, ffor the saisnes be spradde thourgh


<PB REF="" N="521" ID="pb.521"/>

the contrey that all do distroye and waste, and on that other
side ther is so grete discorde be-twene Arthur and the barouns
of the londe, that I shall neuer be in ese till I se yow a-gein
hool and sounde," "Ffader," seide squyer, "we be alle in
auenture, ne we may not deye but on soche deth as god hath
vs ordeyned, and knoweth it well that I shall neuer cesse of
labour till I be there, and I will meve to morowe
erly."  "Ffeire sone," seide the kynge, "I se well thow wilt go
and that nothinge shall the lette, and me liketh it well for that
thow coveytest prowesse and valour, and of gret corage it
cometh, and on that other side me heveith, for that I trowe the
neuer to seen.  Nowe telle me whom thow wilt haue with
the."  "Sir," seide he, "I shall go sooll be my self, and haue with
me but oon squyer to bere me companye.  But aray me horse
and armes soche as ye knowe be to me mystier."  And the
kynge seide as for that sholde haue no dowte, for all his thinges
were ordeyned redy.</P>
<P>  Thus ended the parlement be-twene the fader and the sone;
and on the morowe his fader hadde appareiled hym
horse and armes, and all thinge that was nedefull hym to
diffende, and delyuered hym a squyer bolde, hardy, and wise,
and well servinge; and this squyer trussed on a somer his armes,
and his robes, and money I-nough, and whan he hadde all made
redy, the childe lepte vpon an ambeler, and departed fro thens
with-oute lenger a-bidinge, and comaunded his fader and his
frendes to god, and thei hym also that god sholde diffende hym
from euell and all aduersite, and than departed he and   <MILESTONE N="186a" UNIT="folio"/>his
squyer, and traueiled many dayes that neuer thei fonde no man
ne woman that seide nought to hem but goode; and so thei
traueiled be theire iourneyes till on a day as thei com thourgh
the playns of Roestok in to a depe valey, and ther-ynne was a
feire river that com rennynge from a welle springe oute of a
thorn, where-as Pignarus and Monagins two kynges of the
saisnes that were restinge with v<HI REND="sup">c</HI> men of armes that were come
from the roche of saisnes, and wente to Clarence to the grete
seige that xxx kynges dide holde, and ledde with hem xl


<PB REF="" N="522" ID="pb.522"/>

somers trussed with vitaile, and thei where sette vnder the
hawethorn in the shadowe by the broke, and let theire horse
pasture down the medowes while the heete was so grete, for it
was a-boute mydday.</P>
<P>  In to this valey that was so grete and depe entred this
kynges sone and his squyer, and rode forth till thei come
to an high hille, and fro thens myght thei well se the saisnes
that ete vnder the hawthorne, and whan he hem saugh he was
sore affraied, and asked his armes, and a-raied hym a-noon, and
henge his swerde at the arson of his sadell, and than lepte on
his horse, and comaunded his squyer to go be-fore that was
cleped lydonas, and he dide his comaundement, and rode forth
the streight wey till thei were euen falle a-monge the saisnes,
and whan Pygnoras hem saugh, he made aske what thei were,
and he ansuerde that he was of the other contrey, and wente
on her iourney ther as thei hadde for to do; and Pignoras hit
herde and comaunded his peple to arme and to lepe to horse,
and comaunded hem to bringe hym a-gein other be force, or be
otherwise, and this yonge squyer that rode forth the streight
wey after his squyer hilde a grete spere, but he hadde no
shelde, and rode softly.  But er he hadde litill wey riden thei
that folowe hym ascried hym with high voise, and seide, "Wy!
yelde the, and thyn armes, and thyn horse to oure lorde that
a-bideth under the hawthorne;" and he herde hem well and
vndirstode, but he ansuerde hem no worde, but rode forth after
his squyer and encresed his paas somwhat, and after that he
rode a walop; and whan the saisnes saugh that he rode so faste,
thei priked after, and manaced hym sore, and whan he saugh
hem com he turned his horse hede, and a saisne com be-fore
alle the other gripinge a grete spere, and hasted hym so faste
in his comynge that he failed to smyte this yonge lorde, and
he com so faste a-gein hym as his horse myght ronne and smote
the saisne thourgh shelde and hauberke, and bar hym to grounde
that he hadde no myster of no leche, and than he pulled oute
his spere, and rode forth his wey a grete paas after lydonas
his squyer that wente hym be-fore, for he desired not elles but

<PB REF="" N="523" ID="pb.523"/>

from the saisnes to passe; and the saisnes priked after faste, for
in no wyse thei wolde lete hym so ascape, and he rode euener <CHOICE><CORR>at</CORR><SIC>a</SIC></CHOICE>
a grete walop, his spere in his honde, that hadde chaunged his
colour fro white in to reade,   <MILESTONE N="186b" UNIT="folio"/>ffor it was all blody of hym that
he hadde slain, and thus he rode forth prayinge our lorde hym
to diffende from deth a from prison, and the saisnes hym chaced
with all the myght of theire horse, so that at laste thei hym
atteyned, and x smote hym on the sholderes and on the sides,
and he returned and smote so the firste that he mette, that the
heed and the shafte of his spere shewed thourgh be-hynde,
that he fill deed flat to the grounde, and a-nother he smote
thourgh the throte, and he fill down of his horse in myddell of
the wey; and the saisnes <SUPPLIED>com</SUPPLIED> hym a-gein with theire speres, that
thei made hym to bend ouer his horse croupe, but he fill not
from his sadell, for theire speres fly in peces; and he a-roos and
with his spere smote oon of hem thourgh the body, that he fill
deed to grounde a-monge his felowes, that were full wroth and
angry, and ther-with brake his spere, and a-noon he leide honde
to his swerde that henge at the pomell of his sadell, and drough
it oute of the scauberke, and the saisnes ronne vpon hym on
alie partyes, and he smote so the firste that he kute of his
right sholdre, so that all the side opened that the bowels apered
oute of the wounde, and he fill down deed, and than he smote
a-nother that the heed fill of with all the helme, and than he
smote the thridde that he slitte hym to the teth, and the
remenaunt smyten hym full harde strokes; and whan he saugh
he myght not longe endure a-gein so moche peple, but that he
moste be take or elles deed, he lefte hem and smote the horse
with the spores, and rode faste after lydonas his squyer; and
than a-roos the showte and noyse vpon hym right grete, and
whan he hadde over-take his squyer, he rode forth hym, and
seide he wolde not leve his harneys as longe as he myght it
diffende; he helde his swerde in his honde all naked, and a
saisne com with spere in fewtre, and smote hym a-bove the
sadell that the hauberke dide folde, and he hadde fallen down
ne hadde he holde hym by his horse nekke; and whan he was


<PB REF="" N="524" ID="pb.524"/>

vp redressed he loked on hym that hadde hym smyten, and
hitte hym so sore vpon the heed that he slitte hym to the teth,
and than thei come rounde a-boute hym on alle parties, and he
hym diffended as he that was of grete herte, and be-gan to
sle of hem bothe men and horse, and threwe to grounde all that
he dide a-reche.  But all his diffence a-vailed hym but litill
a-gein so many as were a-boute hym, and so it myght not be but
that he moste be deed or taken, ffor Pignoras and Monaquyns
were come after hym; and than he turned from hem and priked
his wey as faste as he myght after his squyer, and Monaquyns
and Pignoras that saugh noon of her men returne, thei lept to
theire horse a com ridinge the wey as the squyer wente and
saugh the deed bodyes that were lyinge in the high wey that
the squyer hadde slain, and thei asked who hadde this don; and
thei seide that he hadde don all this   <MILESTONE N="187a" UNIT="folio"/>that com ridinge by
hymself, and than thei asked whiche wey he was gon; and thei
seide, "Yonder down in a valey, where oure peple fighted with
hym, but thei may hym not take."  Than seide Pignoras, "Now
after hym, and lete hym not thus ascape, for he hath don me
grete harme;" and whan thei herde this thei lete renne after
the squyer.  Now god be his gide for his grete pite, for yef
thei may hym take, he may not ascape in no wise with-outen
deth.  But he that in euery nede helpeth hem that in hym
byleve, that is oure lorde Ihesu Crist, sente to hym a feire
a-uenture, and ther-fore is seide a proverbe, that god will haue
saued, no man may distroye, and here a litill stinteth the tale
of hym, and returneth to the kynge Looth of Orcanye, and to
his foure sones that be in his companye.</P>
<P>  That nyght that the kynge looth and his foure sones were
herberowed with Mynoras, the forester of kynge Clarion,
thei slepte all nyght after thei were brought to reste as thei
that all the day suffred grete traueyle, and erly on the morowe
thei a-rise and toke theire armes that was brought in theire
chamber, and thei armed hem smartly and soone, and lepe on
theire horse that were brought to the halle dore, and Mynoras
and his wife were at the takynge of theire horse; and the kynge


<PB REF="" N="525" ID="pb.525"/>

Looth and sir Gawein comaunded hem to god and thanked hem
hertely of the herberow and the goode chere that thei hadde
hem shewed, and than thei ride forth oute at the yate, and the
forester and his foure sones rode with hem, and conveyed hem
the wey; and the foure gromes rode be-fore and ledde the v
horse couered vnder stiell, and bar theire helmes, and sheldes,
and theire speres that the forester hadde hem yoven with
heedes cler and sharpe; and whan Mynoras hadde conveyed
hem a-while, the kynge hym returned and bad hym do his
massage to the kynge Clarion of Northumbirlonde as he hadde
promysed, and Mynoras seide that he wolde do it trewly
with-oute faile, and a-noon toke his leve and returned to his manoir;
and a-noon he made tweyne of his sones for to make hem redy
and sette hem on two swifte horse, for doute of the saisnes yef
thei mette eny on the wey that thei myght ride from theym yef
it were mystier; and whan these tweyne squyers were redy,
than seide Mynoras, "Ffeire sones, ye shull go to the kynge
Clarion that is oure lorde, and telle hym how the kynge Looth
of Orcanye sendith hym to wite that he sholde be with hym
at Arestuell in Scotlonde on oure lady day in Septembre;" and
thei ansuerde and seide this massage sholde thei do well, and
a-noon thei toke forth theire iournei and com to the kynge
Clarion, and fonde hym at a manoir of his with a prevy meyne
full pensif what he myght best do with the saisnes that so
wasted his londe and his contrey; and whan he saugh the two
squyers be-fore hym that the kynge Looth hym sente, he was
gladde and mery, and for theire goode tidinges he yaf eche of
hem a goode horse, ffor he loved the kynge looth right tendirly,
and seide he wolde be ther   <MILESTONE N="187b" UNIT="folio"/>with-oute faile, yef god hym
diffende from myschief, and a-noon as thei hadde theire ansuere
thei returned hem to theire fadres place myry and gladde, and
presented the horse that the kynge hadde hem yoven, for love
of kynge Looth that he hadde herberowed, and now we shull
returne and speke of the kynge looth and his foure sones.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge looth and his foure sones were departed
from the forester, thei rode thourgh the foreste that


<PB REF="" N="526" ID="pb.526"/>

was grete and high, and delitable in for to traueile, and it was
feire weder and stille, and that nyght hadde ben a grete dewe,
and the briddes songen for swetnesse of the myry seson, and
thei songe so myrily and so high in theire langage that all
the wode ronge; and the kynge hem herkened, and his foure
sones that were yonge and lusty, and remembred hem on theire
newe loves, and so thei ride a two myle thingkinge on the briddes
songe, and Gaheries that was amourouse be-gan for to singe a
newe made songe, and he songe right wele and merily, and well
entuned; and whan the sonne was vp and he saugh his brethern
were somwhat fer be-hynde hym he turned be-side the wey to
make his horse stale till thei were come to hym, ffor thei
herkened hym gladly; and Gaheries com to Agravain and to
Geheret, and seide, "Lete vs singe;" and than thei be-gonne
to singe alle thre, and than seide Gaheries to Agrauain and to
Gueheret, "Now telle me by the feith that ye owe to the kynge
looth my fader and yours, yef ye hadde the two doughtres of
oure hoste that was this nyght, and thei were now here, telle
me what wolde ye do."  "So god me helpe," seide Agrauain,
"I sholde haue my wille." "So helpe me god," seide
Gaheries, "so wolde not I do but I wolde bringe hem to
saftee."  "And ye, Gueheret, what wolde ye do?"  Quod Gueheret, "I
sholde make hir my love yef I myght therto hir entrete, but
be force wolde I nothinge do, for than were the game nought,
but yef it plesed hir as well as me."</P>
<P>  While thei seide these wordes ouertoke hem the kynge
looth and Gawein that wele hadde herde that thei
hadde seide, and thei lough alle to-geder, and than thei asked
whiche hadde seide beste.  "Of that," quod the kynge, "shall
Gawein youre brothere be Iuge."  "And I shall soone haue
seide," quod Gawein.  "Gaheries hath seide beste, and
Agravain werste, ffor Agravain sholde se that noon dide hem
noon harme, but sholde helpe to diffende hem at his power,
but me semeth ther were no werse enmy that he; and Geheret
hath yet seide better than he, for he seith he wolde nothinge
do be force, and that he seith so cometh hym of love and
<PB REF="" N="527" ID="pb.527"/>

curtesie, and Gaheries hath seide as a goode man, for so as he
seith wolde I do the same yef it were for me to do;" and than
thei lough and Iaped with Agravain, and the kynge hym-self
more than eny other, and rode to Agravain, and seide, "What
Agravain, hate ye the doughter of youre hoste for youre foule
delite, a feire rewarde yelde ye for the feire servise and the
goode chere that she hath yow don,   <MILESTONE N="188a" UNIT="folio"/>ffor trewly she hath it
evill be-sette."  "Sir," seide Agravain, "thei sholde not
therfore <CHOICE><CORR>haue</CORR><SIC>haue have</SIC></CHOICE>   no mayme of hande ne foote."  "No," quod the
kynge; "but thei shull lese all worshippe."  "I can-not sey,"
quod Agravain, "of eny man that wolde hem spare, yef he hadde
hem a-lone by hym-self, ffor after that he lete her passe she
sholde hym neuer love."  "But he sholde kepe and saue his
honour," seide the kynge.  "Certes," seide Agravain, "neuer
after he hadde lefte hir she wolde but skorne and preyse hym
the lesse."  Quod the kynge, "I wolde not sette at a boton
what oon seide, so that my worship were saued, so that I hadde
no vylonye ne reprof."  "Ya ther is no more of," quod
Agravain, "but we shull vs yelden in to soche place ther we
shull se no women."  "Ha Agravain," quod the kynge looth,
"yef ye yow thus demene as ye sey, wite ye well ye shull
myscheve, and that shull ye well se;" and euen as the kynge seide
so hym be-fill after that he langwissid longe a-boue the erthe
for the vilonye that he dide to a mayden, that rode with hir
frende with whom he faught till that he hadde hym
discounfited and maymed of oon of his armes, and after wolde haue
leyen by his love and fonde hir roynouse of oon of hir thighes,
and seide hir soche vilonye that she after hurte his oo thigh
and his arme, so that it sholde neuer be made hooll; but yef
it were be tweyne of the beste knyghtes of the worlde to
whom she sette terme of garison, as the booke shall yow devyse
here-after, how that it was warisshed by Gawein his brother,
and by launcelot de lak that was so noble a knyght; but of
this matter speketh no more at this tyme, but returneth how


<PB REF="" N="528" ID="pb.528"/>

the kynge looth speketh to his sone Agravain that was prowde
and fell, and thus thei rode in the foreste till it was paste
pryme.</P>
<P>  Than thei entred in to a feire launde that dured a-longe to
Roestok a-longe by the wode side; and whan thei hadde
a-while I-riden, thei mette lydonas comynge down the hille that
was sore affraied for his lorde that faught at grete myschef as ye
haue herde be-fore, and he drof the somer be-fore hym with
the robes, and ledde his lordes palfrey in his right hande, and
wepte and seide, "Lady seinte marie, vs helpe and socoure;"
and thus he cried often, and smote that oon hande a-gein the
tother; and whan the kynge looth and his foure sones hym
a-perceyved thei hadde grete pitee, and Agravain hasted hym
be-fore, and seide, "Why makest thow this doell and this
sorowe;" and the squyer loked vp and seide, wepinge, "Sir,
I haue cause I-nough wherefore, I wepe for a yonge lorde, the
feireste creature that euer was formed on erthe that the saisnes
haue asseilled in this valey be-nethe, and haue hym slayn,
but god be his helpe and socoure."  "And whider wente he,"
quod Agravain.  "Sir," seide lydonas, "he was goynge to the
Court of kynge Arthur for to seche sir Gawein and hym for
to serue that hath so grete valour as it is seide, ffor   <MILESTONE N="188b" UNIT="folio"/>so moche
he hath herde spoken of hym that he will neuer be made
knyght but of sir Gawein;" and than he seide at the tother
worde, "Ha! las caytef, now I haue hym loste, and neuer I
shall se hym more," and made so moche sorowe that for litill
he wolde hym-self haue slayn, and Agravain hym asked of
what contrey he was.  "Sir," seide lydonas, "of the reame of
lystenoys, and is the <SURPLUS>riche</SURPLUS> riche kynges sone Pelles;" and
Agravain loked on sir Gawein and seide, "Brother, here ye not what
a-uenture yow a-bideth;" and he seide, "Yesse, he hadde it
welle herde."  Than thei laced theire helmes, and toke theire
sheldes and lepte on theire horse, and Gaheries seide to
Agravain, "Now thenke vpon the maydenes that ye this morowe


<PB REF="" N="529" ID="pb.529"/>

haue be so goode a werkere, and loke that ye be as goode a
knyght at armes a-gein the saisnes that thei may conne yow
gree."  "Gaheries," quod Agravain, "I pray yow be as
curteyse to the saisnes as ye were to the maidenes that ye
durste not assaile ne se, and no more shull ye do to the saisnes
as I trowe."  "Sir," seide Gaheries, "ye be elther than I,
and therfore it shall be sene how ye will do better."  "So
god spede me," seide Agravain, "I were but litill to preise,
but I dide better than ye, and elles hadde I but little power,
ffor I will neuer lette for youre cowardise."  "Sir," quod
Gaheries, "at the leste it is no curteisie a man to a-vaunte of
hym-self, but whan ye come ther do the beste that ye can;"
and whan Agravain herde this, he swore and seide he sholde
go in to soche place where he durste hym not sewe, for the
iyen in his heed; and Gaheries be-gan to lawgh, and was
nothinge wroth, but seide all in game, "Go ye than be-fore,
and ye can go in to no place but I shall yow sewe;" and
Gawein lowgh of that thei hadde seide, for he wiste well that
Gaheries pleide and Iaped, and tolde to Gueheret and his fader
the wordes that thei hadde seide; and a-noon the kynge seide,
"Ffeire sones, go we after hem that thei do no folye, ffor I
wote well Agravain is wroth;" and whan lydonas saugh hem
go he asked what thei were, and thei seide thei were of the
meyne of kynge Arthur, "and he is here in our companye that
ye go sechinge."  "Ha! god mercy," quod lydonas, "than
will I go no ferther till I wite how it shall be."  "No," quod
the kynge looth, "but turne a litill oute of the weye till thow
knowe how it shall be-falle, and go in to the thikke of this
foreste;" and the squyer seide, "So shall I do."  And while
thei spake so to-geder thei saugh this other squyer come
prikynge faste with his swerde in hande all blody and CC
saisnes after hym as thei myght ride, and often he turned and
smote hym so that he dide a-reche that noon armoure ne waranted
hym, and whan he hadde don his power he rode forth his wey;
and whan he hadde a while fledde he returned and faught,
and thus he demened hym till he mette with hem that com

<PB REF="" N="530" ID="pb.530"/>

ridinge <CHOICE><CORR>hym</CORR><SIC>hy</SIC></CHOICE> a-geins; and whan he saugh hem v he cried
with   <MILESTONE N="189a" UNIT="folio"/>lowde voyce, "ffor goddes love cometh and helpe me
and haue pite of me, for ye se the grete nede that I haue;"
and Agravain seide, "A-bide and haue no drede."</P>
<P>  Than Agravain spored his horse and brandisshed his spere
that was sharpe and kene, and smote so the firste that
he mette, that shelde ne hauberke myght hym helpe that he sente
the spere heed thourgh the breste, and he fill deed to grounde;
and Gaheries that com after hym smote a-nother thourgh shelde
and hauberke that he fill deed vp-right, and than brake the
spere, and a-noon he drough oute his swerde, and seide with
high voise, "Agravain, brother, where be ye, now lete se what
ye do, ffor I peyne me for these ladyes sake for curtesie, and
ye peyne yow for theire vilonyes."  Of these wordes lough
Gawein and Geheret.  Whan the kynge looth saugh hem laugh
and Iape, he seide, "What do ye my children, se ye not youre
brethern a-monge youre enmyes."  Whan the squyer
vndirstode these foure knyghtes were his sones, and that he
monestede hem to do well, he asked what he was, and he hym tolde
that his name was kynge looth of Orcanye, "and these knyghtes
be my sones, and lo hym ther that thow sechest with the
shelde of synopre," and shewed hym sir Gawein; and whan
the squyer that vndirstode that the kynge hadde seide, he
hadde grete ioye of the tidinges that he tolde, and hilde vp his
handes toward heuene and thanked oure lorde that he hadde
hym so I-founden; and than seide he to kynge looth, "How
knowe ye whom I seche?"  "I wote well," quod he, "that
thow goiste to seche Gawein, and lo hym there;" and with
that he smote in a-monge the saisnes and the squyer with hem
that thre the firste that thei mette thei drof deed to the erthe,
and than thei rode forth and smote other thre down deed to
grounde, and ther-with brake the speres, and than thei drough
oute swerdes and smote on the right side and on the lifte, and
the squyer lefte the kynge looth and pursued Gawein in euery
place where he wente, and Gawein hadde drawen oute his
suerde Calibourne, and be-gan to slee so moche peple that alle


<PB REF="" N="531" ID="pb.531"/>

that saugh hym do soche maistries fledde be-fore hym whan thei
saugh hym come, and durste not a-bide his strokes, and he was
gon so fer be-fore that he wiste nothinge of his fader, ne his
brethern; and Agravain hadde so chaced and Gaheries xx saisnes
that thei surbated on Pignoras that com with an hundred
saisnes; and whan thei saugh how thei were chaced and were
but tweyne, he cried vpon his men and medled hym a-monge
hem, and thei smote tweyne so harde that deed thei fill on the
grene, and than renged hem x saisnes and smote hem on alle
partyes that thei bar Agravain to the erthe, and thei smyte
Gaheries so harde that he bente bakwarde in his sadill be-hynde,
and whan the speres were broken he smote in to the presse
and be-gan to do merveiles, and Agravain was   <MILESTONE N="189b" UNIT="folio"/>lepte on fote
and griped his swerde in hys right hande, and hente his shelde
hym be-forn, and thei hym assailed full harde, and he hym
well diffended as he that hadde I-nough of herte and force,
and Gaheries spored his horse that wey ther he saugh his
brother, and rode be-twene hym and the saisnes that sore hym
assailed, and he hym diffended vigorously, that noon durste
hym a-bide for the strokes that thei saugh hym yeve, and in
this manere thei fought longe while, ffor the saisnes coveited
hem for to take, and thei hem diffended to warante theire lyves;
and the kynge Looth and Gueheret fought right harde, and
wente thourgh the bataile sechinge her felowes, and so thei
fonde Agravain on foote a-monge the saisnes, his swerde in his
honde all naked, wherwith he yaf hem many grete strokes, and
Gaheries was by hym that dide grete peyne hym to helpe and
for to remounte.  Than the kynge looth smote in a-monge hem
and fought sore a-gein the sarazins thei foure and sloughen
many of hem, and sir Gawein hadde so gon that he was come
vpon the hill with his swerde all blody in his hande.  Than
he loked bak and saugh he hadde alle perced thourgh, and the
squyer was by hym at the spore and seide, "Sir, I wolde
sue yow full gladly yef my servise myght yow plese so that
it liked yow for to make me knyght, whiche tyme I wolde yow
requere;" and Gawein ansuerde that he was right welcome,


<PB REF="" N="532" ID="pb.532"/>

and with-hilde hym with-oute mo wordes, and than he badde
hym to kepe hym by him that the saisnes dide hym not hurte
ne diffoule, "ffor I moste seche my fader and my brethern that
I ne wote neuer where thei beth be-come;" and than seide the
squyer, "Lo hem yonder in that grete prees, for I se swerdes
lifte a-loufte that bright shyneth, and a-noon Gawein knewe
his fader by the helme, and than he seide, "It is my fader,
sue me."</P>
<P>  And than he smote his horse with the spores on bothe
sides that he spronge oute xviij foote, and drof in
fiercely a-monge the saisnes more than he hadde don all the day
be-fore he and the squyer that thei throwe down all that be-fore
hem stode, and the squyer cowde not so faste spore hys horse
that he myght hym ouertake, and fonde the wey strowed full
of hem that were ouerthrowen; and than seide the squyer,
"Lady seint marie, I am a-ferde to lese hym here a-monge
these mysbelevinge peple; ffull trewe seide thei that tolde me
ther was not soche a-nother knyght in the worlde, ffor he ne
gabbed no worde, for he hath in hym more goode than was
seide, and yef the knyght be goode, he hath a horse at his
device, and I trowe yef he will do all his power that he sholde
discounfite soche xx as be here.  Now wolde god that was
born of the virgine marie that my fader the kynge hadde hym
ones seyn, for I wote wele he wolde holde it a merveile."  Thus
devised the squyer what he wolde, and euer sued after Gawein
as moche as he myght; and sir Gawein hath so gon that he
fonde Agravain so wery for traveile that he lened on his shelde
and his swerde in his honde, and myght not helpe hym-self
but litill, and thei yaf hym ever   <MILESTONE N="190a" UNIT="folio"/>a-monge grete strokes with
speres and swerdes as thei myght come to; and on that other
side he saugh that Gueheret was smyte be-twene the sholdres
with two speres that he was born to the erthe vp-right, and
also he saugh xi saisnes that hilde his fader be the helme, and
smote hym with the pomeles of his swerdes; and Gaheries
hadde caste his shelde to the ground and hilde his swerde in
bothe handes, and yaf soche strokes that thei myght be herde


<PB REF="" N="533" ID="pb.533"/>

right cleer, ffor he smote of handes, and armes, and hedes, and
legges, and slitte hem to the teth, and shewde ther soche
prowesse that noon durste hym a-bide, but lefte the kynge
Looth magre hem alle; and the kynge loked and saugh it was
Gaheries his sone that hadde hym rescowed, he seide, "Ha!
feire sone, yef we hadde youre brother Gawein with vs we shull
nought lese this day for alle these false peple, and Agravain
and Gueheret where be thei."  "Thei be in theire enmyes handes
that nygh haue hem slayn."</P>
<P>  With these wordes com Gawein brekinge the presse, and
sleinge all that he myght a-reche, as quarell oute of
arblast for swyftnesse of his horse, and hilde his swerde in his
hande and smote on eche side so hevy strokes oute of mesure
that alle yede to grounde that stode in his weye; and the
squyer was euer <SUPPLIED>nigh</SUPPLIED> hym that for nothinge wolde hym leven,
and yaf many a grete stroke with his swerde, wherfore he was
be-loved after of alle the brethern; and <SUPPLIED>it befell</SUPPLIED> that mette
Gawein Monaquyn that was oon of the goode knyghtes of alle
the saisnes, and was a-rested vpon Gueheret for to take hym to
pryson.  But Gawein smote hym so harde with Calibourne that
he slitte hym from the sholdre to girdell; and whan the squyer
saugh that, he blissed hym for the merveile that he hadde, and
blessed the arme that soche a stroke yeve; than he caught the
horse be the reyne, and ledde to Agravain, and badde hym
skippe vp lightly, and he dide so a-noon right as he that ther-to
hadde grete nede, and the squyer helde hym the stirop, and
Agravain hym thanked hertely, and seide he sholde hym quyte
yef he myght.</P>
<P>  Whan Pignoras saugh his brother deed he was sory and
wroth, and gripid an ax with bothe handes, and com
towarde the kynge Looth, and smote hym so sore on the helme
that he fill flatte to the erthe, but he hadde no grete harme
but that he was sore astonyed, and than he smote Gaheries
that he fill to the erthe vp-right, and than was Gawein full
wo, and smote the Gringalet that wey with Calibourne in his
hande, and whan he saugh hym come he covered hym with

<PB REF="" N="534" ID="pb.534"/>

his shelde and with his axe.  But Gawein smote the axe helue
a-sondre, and the stroke descended on the shelde and the right
sholdre and slitte hym to the breste, and the squyer caught
the horse and ledde to Gaheries, and he lepte vp delyuerly; and
than he toke the horse that his fader was fallen fro, and brought
it to hym hastely by the bridell, and hilde the   <MILESTONE N="190b" UNIT="folio"/>stirop till he
was vp, and than he made a new assaute vpon hem that so
short hadde hem holden.  But the saisnes were so abaisshed
of theire two lordes that were ther deed that thei turned to
flight, and toke no more hede hem to diffende, and Maundalis
theire stiwarde hem ascried, "Ha, cowarde peple, what do ye
that a-venge yow not on hem that haue youre two lordes slayn
in this maner, and ye se well thei be but vj, and ye be yet
thre hundred, and ye may be a-shamed that thei haue so longe
endured;" and thei returned to the vj, and sir Gawein com
be-fore and mette with hem as he that well knewe their corage,
and hilde Calibourne, his goode swerde, and smote so the firste
that he mette that he fill deed on the grene, and than the
seconde, and the thridde, and than the fourth, and than he
smote Maundalis that the heed fill from the sholderes, and the
squyer caught the horse and ledde to Geheret; and whan the
saisnes saugh theire stiwarde deed, thei turned a-noon to flight,
who that myght sonest, so that noon a-bode other, and thei
hem enchaced that sore hem hated a-bove all thinge, and slough
and smote dowon all that thei myght a-take, and sir Gawein
satte vpon the Gringalet that swyftly hym bar, and he made
a-monge hem soche martire that it was wonder to wite, and
hilde hem so shorte that thei myght hym not ascape vp ne
down, ffor thei myght no side turne, but euer he was be-fore,
and whan thei saugh thei myght not ascape, thei rode in to
the depe of the forest for socour, and fledde oon here, a-nother
there, that thei a-bide nother frende ne brother, and cursed
the hour and the day thei with hem metten, "ffor thei be no
peple as other be, but it be fendes of helle, for ther be but vj,
and that fill neuer that so moche peple were discounfited with
so small peple as we be now be hem, and therfore may we sey


<PB REF="" N="535" ID="pb.535"/>

that thei were neuer of carnell men conceyved, ffor neuer
mortall man myght do that these haue vs don."</P>
<P>  Thus seide the saisnes theire volunte, and were discounfited
be the prowesse of sir Gawein, and the remenaunt that
ascaped lefte neuer till thei come to the siege be-fore Clarence,
and tolde theire grete damage to the kynge Hardogabran what
the vj knyghtes hadde hem do, ffor thei haue oure two kynges
slain, and oure stiward Maundalis; whan the kynge hardogabran
herde this, he was nygh woode for wrath, ffor the tweyne were
his cosins germain, and cursed the hour and the day that euer
thei entred in to the londe, "ffor," quod he, "we haue resceyved
grete damage."  But now cesseth the tale of the saisnes and
speketh of the kynge Looth.</P>
<P>  Whan the saisnes were discounfited in the valey of
Rorestok, the kynge looth was gladde for the squyer
that thei hadde rescowed, and than thei wente to the somers
that the saisnes sholde haue ledde to the siege before Clarence,
and gadered hem to-geder and be-helde hem gretly; and than
seide Gaheries a worde that was well herde.  "Lord god,"
  <MILESTONE N="191a" UNIT="folio"/>quod he, "why be ther so many pore bachelers in the contrey
whan thei myght thus wynne I-nough.  Certes thei lese
nothinge but for slouthe and cowardise, ffor thei ne sholde not
slepe in no bedde, but wayte a-boute on the marches."  "Ffeire
sone," seide the kynge, "so myght thei haue euell suerte, ffor
who that soche thinge will vndirtake yef oon tyme hym happe
wele, hit falleth hym foure tymes euell;" and than seide
Gaheries to his fader, "Sir, aske Agravain my brother yef he
haue eny talent now to rage within these maydenes yef he
hadde hem here on this playn;" and Agravain loked on hym
a trauerse full proudly, and seide to hym in reprof, "Gaheries,
it is not longe tyme past that ye hadde no talent to iape whan
the saisne smote yow down of youre horse with his axe, and
ne hadde be Gawein ye hadde mette with hym in euell
tyme."  "Though I fell," quod Gaheries, "I may no more do
ther-to.  But I was not at so grete myschef, but I me diffended so as it
myght be; and of that ye myght wele haue holde youre pees,


<PB REF="" N="536" ID="pb.536"/>

for I saugh yow to-day at soche pointe, that though the feirest
lady of the worlde hadde preide yow of love ye wolde not haue
ansuered hir a worde, for a maiden of v yere of age myght haue
take from yow youre breche;" and whan Agravain vndirstode
this, he was wroth and angry, and for that he cleped hym
recreaunt, wax he rody for shame, and loked on hym with
maltalent, and yef thei hadden be a-lone he wolde with hym
haue foughten; but the kynge turned the wordes in to other
maner, for he wolde not haue in no wise distrif be-twene hem
two, and than he asked what sholde be do with the
somers.  Sir," quod Gaheries, "asketh of Agravain;" and than be-gan
Agravain sore to wrathe, and seide he sholde it a-beyen, and
hilde a tronchon of a spere in his honde, and smote Gaheries on
the helme that it fly all to peces, and Gaheries remeved not
but suffred; and Agravain recouered and smote twys or thries,
so that nought of the tronchon lefte in his handes, and his
brother Gueheret ne hys fader cowde hem not so departe, but
euer he ran vpon hym as he myght from hem ascape.</P>
<P>  Than com Gawein from the chace, and asked what a-ray
that was, and the kynge tolde hym all worde for worde;
and Gawein com to Agravain and blamed hym sore for that
he hadde so I-don; and Agravain swor all that he myght swere
that neuer he wolde it hym for-yeve, and whan Gawein
vndirstode the grete felonye, he seide he sholde abye on his body,
but yef he wolde be ruled.  "Ffy," quod Agravain, "in dispite
of the deuell this were of the newe that I sholde lette for yow
to do ought."  "Now shall it be sene," quod Gawein, "what
thow wilt do."  Than Agravain smote the horse with the
spores and ran to Gaheries with swerde drawen, and smote
hym on the helme that the fire sparcled oute.  Ne Gaheries
ne remeved litill ne moche for nothinge that he dide, and whan
Gawein saugh this he drough oute Calibourne and swor by his
fader sowle that in euell tyme he hadde it be-gonne,   <MILESTONE N="191b" UNIT="folio"/>and
whan the fader be-hilde all this, he seide, "Now vpon hym
feire sone, and go sle this harlot, for he is fell and proude;"
and Gawein thought well what he wolde do, and com to Agravain, 


<PB REF="" N="537" ID="pb.537"/>

and smote hym with the pomell of his swerde vnder the
temple that he fill from his horse to the erthe so astoned that
he wiste not where he was; and Gaheries seide to Gawein,
"Sir, be not wroth for nothinge that he doth to me, for he is
fell and proude, and therfore taketh nothinge to herte that he
doth to me ne seith."  "Ffle from hens," quod Gawein,
"mysproude lurdeyn, neuer shall I love the whan thou wilt not
spare for my lorde my fader ne for noon of vs." "Sir," seide
Gaheries, "he is myn elther brother, and it sitteth me to do
hym honour and reuerence.  Ne for nothinge that I dide, ne
seide to him ne dide I but Iape."  "He is a fole and prowde,"
quod Gueheret, "but all that hast thow meved, and therfore
have thow euell happe;" and Gaheries hym ansuerde, "Full
euell sholde I pleye with a straunger whan I may not pley
nother with yow ne with hym, and wyte ye well," quod he,
"this is the firste tyme and the laste that euer I shall pleye
or Iape with hym or with yow, and yef it were not for be-cause
that we be comen oute to-geder, I wolde returne anoon right
that no more companye sholde I yow holde;" and Geheret
seide a-gein, "Euell happe haue Agravain, but he quyte yow
this dere for this a-colee that he hath hadde for yow."  "So
god me helpe," quod Gawein, "yef owther of yow do eny
thinge othir-wise than ye owe to do, I shall sette yow in
soche place where ye shull not se nother hande ne foote this
vij monethes, and therfore I diffende yow as dere as ye haue
youre owne bodyes that ye loke ye do hym noon
euell."  "Sir," seide Gueheret, "we shull kepe vs ther-fro right wele
seth ye it comaunde, ffor a-gein youre comaundement ne may
we not do, ne we will not.  But it hevyeth me whan ye will
medle yow agein vs for hym, and that ye haue Agravain thus
diffouled for nought."  "Ffor nought is it not," quod Gawein,
"whan a-gein my deffence he ran vpon hym in dispite of me
in my fader sight and myn.  Ne neuer Gaheries ne wrathed
for buffet that he hym yaf.  In dispite of the devell sholde
he be so proude, ffor his pride shall greve bothe the and
hym."  "So helpe me god," quod the kynge Looth, "for litill I shall take

<PB REF="" N="538" ID="pb.538"/>

a-wey all the armes that thow haste, and of Agravain also, and
leve yow in myddell of the felde like lurdeynes."  "Sir,"
seide Gueheret, "ye speke not this of youre owen mouthe but
of others; ffor of this that ye sey ye haue no talent for to do
ne power yef other ne were."  "Ha boyes," quod the kynge,
"thow art fell, and for-swollen.  Verile art thow his brother,
for ye bothe be contrariouse, and I comaunde my sone Gawein
that yef thow or Agravain do ought to my sone Gaheries that
he do vpon yow as grete reddure as vpon harlottes or ribaudes."</P>
<P>  Whan the squyer saugh that Gawein hadde smyte down
Agravain, that he bledde bothe at mouthe and nose,
he ran to take his horse and brought hym by the bridill, and
made   <MILESTONE N="192a" UNIT="folio"/>hym for to lepen vp, and Gawein com to hym and
seide, "Harlot fle from hens, for with the haue I nought to
do, and loke that I se the neuer more in my companye, and go
where thow wilt for with me shalt thow come no more, and go
ye alle forth with hym that love hym better than me and with
me that love my companye;" with that Gawein rode forth
his wey, and Gaheries and Gueheret and the kynge Looth asked
what sholde he do with the somers.  "Sir," seide Gawein,
"ye shall sende hem to Mynoras the forester, that so well dide
vs herberowe; ffor he serued vs well and feire in his place,
and therfore well it is on hym be-sette, and better it is that
the goodeman hit haue than it here be loste, ffor we it may
not condite ne lede, and we may wele come in soche place that
we myght all lese."  "Certes," seide the kynge, "ye sey full
well, but who shall it lede."  "Sir," seide Gawein, "the
squyer of this gentilman, and oon of youre gromes."  "On
godes name," seide the kynge; and a-noon was the squyer
sought till he was founden, and charged with the message and
the present that he sholde make, and after to turne after hem
the right wey to Roestok; and he seide that all this wolde he
well do, and toke a yoman with hym to conveye hym the wey,
and wente forth with alle the somers, and ledde x stedes
cowpled by the bridelis that oon to the tother, and hilde the
streight wey till thei come to the rescette of Mynoras that grete


<PB REF="" N="539" ID="pb.539"/>

ioye made of this present, and served hem so well and so
feire that no peple myght be better serued than thei were,
and on the morowe thei toke theire wey as soone as thei
myght se the day for to go after theire lordes as thei were
comaunded.</P>
<P>  As soone as the kynge looth hadde sente these somers by
lydonas, and by oon of his yomen to mynoras the
forester, thei rode forth her wey alle vi toward Roestok, and
lefte alle the wordes of reprof that thei hadde spoken, ffor that
thei saugh Gawein was ther-with greved; and than thei ride
to-geder, the kynge, and Gawein, and Gaheries, and asked of the
yonge squyer of whens he was, and what was his name, and
he seide how his name was Elizer, and was the sone of kynge
Pelles of listenoys, and nevew to the kynge Alain of the forain
londes, and to the kynge pellynor of the sauage fountain that
hadde xj sones that alle were of the age of xvij yere, and the
eldest was newliche come to the court of kynge Arthur for to
take armes, "these be my cosins germain, and I go toward the
court of kynge Arthur to my lorde sir Gawein for to serven
hym, and I thanke god I haue founde hym nerre, and he hath
me with-holde in soche manere that he shall make me knyght
whiche tyme that I hym requere."  "Even so I graunte yow
sir," quod sir Gawein, "for ye <SUPPLIED>be</SUPPLIED> right welcome."  Thus thei
rode till it was nyght, that thei fonde nether house ne herberowe,
and the foreste was high and full of shadowe; but the weder
was softe and stille; and than fill it that   <MILESTONE N="192b" UNIT="folio"/>after mydnyght thei
fonde an hermytage all closed with diches, and with rayles,
and <CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> cleped and called till it was opened to hem, and thei
a-light from theire horse, and dide of theire brideles and the
sadelis, and yaf hem grasse, for ther-ynne was nothinge elles,
and thei ete soche vitaile as the hermyte hem brought, and
that was breed and water, and after that thei lay down to slepe
vpon the grasse for other quyltes ne pilowes hadde thei noon,
and thei were wery for traveile, and were soone a-slepe, alle
saf Gawein and Elizer, thei wolde not slepe, but were euer in
susspecion of the saisnes that were so many in the londe, and


<PB REF="" N="540" ID="pb.540"/>

soone after mydnyght thei herde a grete complaint of a lady and
of a knyght that passed by, and Gawein ther-of hadde grete pite
and comaunded to sadill the Gringalet and bridill hym in all
haste, and Elizer lept vp a-noon and brought it hym redy dight;
and Gawein toke his armes and lept vp delyuerly, and rode
faste after hem that ledde the lady, and Elizer lept vpon his
horse also that in no maner wolde hym leve as longe as he
hadde where-on to ride; <CHOICE><CORR>and thei</CORR><SIC>and thei and thei</SIC></CHOICE>   rode so longe till thei
com in to a thikke queche in a depe valey, and than Gawein
hoved stille, and herkened and herde dolerouse cries, that seide,
"Ha, lorde god, what shall I do, where haue I deserued to
suffre this turment and annoye," and praied oure lorde that he
wolde sende hym hastely the deth ffor lever he hadde for to be
deed than langour in soche maner, and <CHOICE><CORR>this</CORR><SIC>his</SIC></CHOICE> was a knyght all
naked in his breche that v pantoners dide bete with scorges
that the blode ran down by his sides; and on that other side
vndirstode sir Gawein a full dolerouse cry of a woman, and well
it semed that she hadde grete nede of helpe, and she seide so
lowde that Gawein myght it well heren.  "Seint marie, blissed
lady, socoure this wery caytif.  Trewly," quod she, "sle me ye
may well, for I shall neuer to yow concent."</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein vndirstode the voyce, he wiste well she
hadde grete nede of helpe, and be-thought hym
whiche wey he sholde turne first, for he hadde grete pite of
that gentilman that he herde so waymenten, and on that other
side he hadde so grete pite of the woman that sholde be
diffouled, but she haue the soner helpe, and thought in his herte
that better it were to suffre the knyght to endure his peyne
than the woman to be diffouled while he were in helpinge of
the knyght; and than he smote the horse with spores down
the valey where the voice cried euer more and more, "seint
Marye, goode lady, helpe me and socour;" and as Gawein
behelde he saugh vij pantoners that hilde this lady vnder a tre
a-gein the grounde, and oon of hem smote hir grete buffetes


<PB REF="" N="541" ID="pb.541"/>

with his hande I-armed on the visage; and she turned and cried,
"Certes, sle me ye may well, but neuer other thinge shall I
not do;" and for that she seide so, he trailed hir by the tresses
that were so feire, that he griped in his handes, and a-noon as
Gawein it saugh, he cried to hym that hir hilde, "Sir knyght,
lete be that damesell;" and he be-hilde be the mone light,
and cried to hem   <MILESTONE N="193a" UNIT="folio"/>that were with hym to go a-gein hym, and
so thei dide all vj, and asked hym, "Sir knyght, haue we eny
drede of yow;" and Gawein seide he assured hem of nothinge,
"ffor I will helpe that damesell the whiche that pantoner trailed
so vileyusly, and therfore diffende yow fro me;" and than he
spored the Gringalet thourgh hem vj that he mette, and com
to hym that yet hilde the woman be the tresses, and smote
hym with his spere a-gein the breste that the shafte shewed
thourgh the bakke be-hynde, and he fill deed vp-right, and the
other vj com a-gein hym with <CHOICE><CORR>speres</CORR><SIC>spres</SIC></CHOICE>, and smote hym on the
shelde and sholdres, and on the sides, and he bowed on his
horse nekke, and the tymbir of the speres fly in peces, and than
Gawein dressed hym in his sadell and ficched hym in his
stiropes that the Iren folded, and drough his swerde and smote
so the firste that he mette, that deed he fill to the erthe, and
than he smote a-nother that the sholdre departed from the
body; and the thirde that the heed fly in to the feilde, and
than he a-raught so the fourthe that he slitte hym to the teth;
and whan the other saugh theire fellowes deed, and how at
eche stroke he hadde slayn oon, thei turned to flight and durste
not a-bide; and Gawein com to the maiden and sette hir vpon
his horse hym be-forn, and the two felowes that fledden be
comen to their felowes that were discended vnder an olyvere
hem for to resten, and were leide on the grasse for to slepe;
and as soone as thei com nygh, thei cried with high voise,
"Gentill knyghtes, what do ye here; ffor here is a knyght
that hath slayn Sortibran and foure of oure felowes, and
resceved the lady; now faste rideth after hym;" and whan thei
vnderstode this thei a-rise hastely angry and wroth, and lepe
to theire horse, and ride after Gawein as faste as thei may that


<PB REF="" N="542" ID="pb.542"/>

goth to lede the damesell to savete; and now a-while cesse of
hem, and speke of the squyer that is cleped Elizer.</P>
<P>  A noon as Gawein was turned to helpe he damesell, Elizer
that folowed after, rode thider; ther he herde the voice
of the knyght, and whan he cam there he saugh vj pantoners
holde hym, and hadde so beten hym that he myght not stonde
vp-right, but was falle to grounde, and hadde no power to
speke no worde; and whan Elizer saugh hym in this maner
hit hevyed hym sore, and than he ascried hem, and cleped
hem, "Fitz a-putein lechours why demene ye so that gentilman
so foule what hath he trespased that ye be a-boute to sle hym
in that manere."  Whan thei herde hym so speke thei loked
on hym, and seiden, "What is it to the, for thy wordes ne shull
we nothinge lette;" and than Elizer wax right angry, and
seide he sholde no more harme haue with-outen hym, and he
hilde a grete spere and com toward hem that hilde the knyght,
and alle thei lefte hym, and he smote so the firste that he
mette of the vj that he drof down deed on the playn, and he
drough oute his spere and ther-with he slough a-nother, and
drough it a-gein to hym, and priked his   <MILESTONE N="193b" UNIT="folio"/>horse a-gein, a-nother;
and whan thei saugh hym come, thei made hym wey and
disparbledde here and there, and he smote oon that he ouertoke
so rudely that the spere ran thourgh bothe sides; and whan
he loked after the tother he ne wiste thei were be-come,
ffor thei were fledde in to thikke of the foreste, and it was
but litill past mydnyght that oon myght not se fer; and whan
he saugh he hadde hem loste, he com to the knyght and badde
hym lepe vp be-hynde hym, and whan he vndirstode this, he
hadde for-yete all his peyne, and lepte vp be-hynde hym with
grete peyne, and than he rode the streight wey thider as he
wende to fynde Gawein.  But he hadde but litill gon that he
fonde hym fightinge with xx knyghtes that sore hem peyned
hym for to greve with all theire power, and he hadde sette the
damesell in a thikke busshe a-gein the wode side; and whan
Elizer hym saugh he comaunded the knyght to a-light down,
and he dide so a-noon; and Elizer hente his spere that yet was


<PB REF="" N="543" ID="pb.543"/>

hooll and spored his horse, and smote so the firste that he mette
that he a-boode no lenger in the sadell, but fill deed to the
erthe, and after he smote a-nother that the spere heed a-pered
thourgh his bakke be-hynde, and Gawein hadde so don with
calibourne his good swerde that he hath slain of hem vij, and
vj that he hadde slain be-fore at the rescew of the lady; and
Elizer hath broke his spere, and drough oute his swerde and
smote so a knyght that he slitte hym to the teth; and whan
Gawein saugh Elizer that so dide hym helpe, he smote the
horse with the spores, and blessed the hour that he com in to
the contrey, and blessed the body that he was of conceyved,
ffor he saugh well he myght not faile to be a noble knyght;
with that he com that wey as he saugh hym holde the medle,
and smote grete strokes, and slough and slitte all that he
ouertoke a full stroke, and so thei two haue don that thei haue
hem alle slain, saf thre that fledde in to the foreste for socour,
and the nyght was woxen so derke with clowdes that thei
wiste not whiche wey that they were fledde.</P>
<P>  Than toke Elizer two horse, as he that was wight and
hardy at euery nede, and brought hem to the knyght,
and to the damesell, and made hem to lepe vp ther-on; but
first he made the knyght to be clothed in oon of the deed
bodyes robes, for his owen were loste; than thei putte vp theire
swerdes, and ride forth to-geder toward the hermytage, and
than Gawein drough hym to the damesell, and asked hir of
whens she was, and she seide she was suster to the lady of
Roestok, and the knyght was hir cosin germain.  Than seide
sir Gawein, "How were ye thus I-taken?"  "Sir," seide the
damesell, "my cosin and I repeired thourgh the forest and
com toward Roestok, and hadden sente oure companye be-fore,
and we turned in to a lane oute of oure wey, for we toke so
grete hede of oure talkinge of many thinges that we turned
oute of oure wey,   <MILESTONE N="194a" UNIT="folio"/>and com in to a grete wode where these
traitours weren a-light for to ete; and thei lepe a-noon ageins vs,
and toke vs, for we myght not a-gein hem endure, ffor my
cosin was all vn-armed, and neuer-the-lese he smote oon so on


<PB REF="" N="544" ID="pb.544"/>

the heed that he hym slough, and therfore thei dide hym
dispoile so vilously, and dide hym so bete that nygh thei hadde
hym slain; and whan thei wolde haue for-leyn me by force
he me diffended, and neuer me lefte for no feer of deth, but
yaf hem grete strokes and merveilouse as he myght hem atteyne
with his handes, for he hadde noon other armure; and than
v of tho pantoners hym toke and ledde hym forth betinge
hym dolerousely, and I praye yow and requere that ye will
telle me what ye be, and for what cause ye be come?" and sir
Gawein seide he was a knyght of the reame of logres, "and we
go on soche a nede that we may not telle;" and as thei rode
thus talkynge thei be come to the hermytage, where thei fonde
yet her felowes slepinge, and thei a-light and dide of theire
brideles of the horse, and yaf hem grene grasse to ete and lay
down by hem and slepte till it was day, that the kynge looth
a-roos and cleped Gueheret and Gaheries that were by hym,
and hadde well slepte well all the nyght, and saugh Gawein
a-slepe and Elizer, and the maiden and the knyght that were
leide be the horse side, and Elizer hilde the Gringalet be the
halter, for he was somwhat raginge amonge the other horses;
and whan the brethern saugh the mayden lyinge by hem, thei
merveiled fro whens she was come; and the kynge cleped and
seide, "Now arise, Gawein, goode sone, ye haue slept I-nough
se how it is feire day;" and the knyght a-woke that was sore
hurte, for he slepte nothinge wele, ne the maiden neither, and
thei satte vp wakinge; and the kynge asked hem fro whens
thei were come; and the knyght ansuerde and seide, "Thei
wiste not fro whens these two worthi men hadde hem brought
thider, and praied god sholde hem diffende from perile, of the
whiche oon of hem is a knyght that hath rescewed this maiden,
and the squyer hath rescewed me, god make hym a good man,
and sende hym ioye and honour."  "Whiche ben thei," seide
the kynge, and he hym shewed sir Gawein and Elizer; and
whan Agravain vndirstode this, hym for-thought that he hadde
not be there, and seide that he myght holde hym a cowarde,
that he hilde hym no companye to go with hem; and Gaheries

<PB REF="" N="545" ID="pb.545"/>

ansuerde as he that was full noble and worthi, and he loved
wele to Iape in honest and myrthe, and seide he durste not
yow a-wake, for ye thenke so moche on youre love that ye
slepe but litill; and the kynge asked hir how she was taken,
and she tolde euery worde how it was hem be-fallen, so that
no-thinge was for-yeten; and than thei lepe to theire horse
and rode forth theire wey toward Roestok, and rode so fro
morowe to euen that no distrouble thei ne hadde till thei com
to Roestok, and thei be-hilde the town that was right feire,
and well sette in feire contrey and holsom air, ffor the town
was envyroned a-boute with the wode and the river, and the
  <MILESTONE N="194b" UNIT="folio"/>walles shone a-gein the sonne and the bourgh, and the castell
stode right feire; and the kynge and his foure sones preised
it moche whan thei it syen; and whan thei com to the yate
thei fonde it clos and faste shette, and the knyght that was
rescewed called the porter right lowde and the damesell
hir-self; and the lady hir-self was a-bove on the walles that knewe
hem wele a-noon as she hem saugh, and comaunded the yate
to be opened delyuerly, and a-noon the mayden counseiled with
hir suster, but thei wiste not where-of, and a-noon as thei hadde
spoke to-geder she com to the knyghtes and made hem grete
chere, and made hem a-light be-fore the paleys, and the
castelein hym-self com hem a-geins that was the lorde, and
made hem to be vn-armed and waish theire mouthes and theire
visages with warme water, and after thei were sette and spake
of many thinges while the soper was in makinge; and whan
it was all redy and the clothes leyde, thei waish and satte to
soper, and were well served, and richely of all maner thinge;
and after soper the lorde asked his suster fro whens she com,
and she hym tolde all hir aventure that was hir be-fallen,
and whan the lorde herde this he be-gan to make soche ioye
and gladnesse that ther myght be seyn noon gretter, and the
kynge looth asked of whom this castell was holden, and the
lorde seide that it was of the fee of kynge Arthur; and than
the Casteleyn hym asked what he was, and he seide his name
was the kynge looth of Orcanye, and these foure knyghtes be


<PB REF="" N="546" ID="pb.546"/>

my sones.  Than the lorde lepte vpon his feet, and made grete
ioye, and asked what thei wente sechinge; and he seide that
he yede to seche trewys of the princes and the barouns from
the kynge Arthur that the saisness myght be driven oute of the
londe; and than the Castelein thanked oure lorde.  "And
what wey shull ye go first?" quod he, "from hens;" and he
seide that he wolde be at Arestuell in scotlonde; and than he
seide that he wolde he sholde sende a massenger to the kynge
de Cent Chiualers, and telle hym in my name that he be on
oure lady day in Septembre at Arestuell in Scotlonde, and that
he faile not for nothinge, for I shall be ther, and alle the other
princes; and the Castelein seide he wolde sende thider on the
morowe with-oute more taryinge, ffor he trowed well he were
at the Cite of Molehaut.</P>
<P>  That nyght thc kynge looth and the Castelein spake of
many thinges till it was tyme to go to bedde, and sir
Gawein wolde not be knowen of no man, for he thought for to
serche the auentures in the contrey privele that no man sholde
hym knowe in no place ther he com; and whan it was tyme
thei yede to slepe all the nyght well at ese till it was day, that
thei toke leve of the Castelein of Roestok, and of the lady
and the maiden that was rescued, and of the knyght that hem
conveyed a-while on the wey, and than returned a-gein; and
whan the Castelein saugh thei were gon, he toke a massenger
and sente hym to the kynge de Cent chiualers from the kynge
looth of Orcanye, and tolde his massage as he was comaunded
to sey, and the kynge made grete ioye for love of the kynge
looth that he loved with all his herte,   <MILESTONE N="195a" UNIT="folio"/>and for the masseger
that was a noble knyght he yaf hym a good horse as be-fill
for soche a worthi man, and now shull we returne to the kynge
looth and his sones.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge looth was departed from the castell of
Roestok, he toke the streyght wey toward Cambenyk
be-fore the Castell of leuerop, where he was herberowed a nyght,
and on the morowe he rode till he com a two myle from
Cambenyk, and than he herde so grete shoute and cry that hym


<PB REF="" N="547" ID="pb.547"/>

semed all the contrey was sette on fire and flame; and it was
no merveile yef ther were grete noyse and cry, and that the
contrey were sore affraid, ffor ther were x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes that hadde
forreyed and gadered prayes, and distroyed all the contrey, and
robbed townes, and ledde so grete plente of prisoners that all
the contrey was covered, and the Duke Escam was comen oute
of the Cite with thre thousande men, and faught with hem
longe, but in the ende was he discounfited and driven oute of
the felde, and he was so wo therfore that nygh he yede oute
of his witte; and the crye and the noyse was so grete that
wonder it was to here, ffor eche man complayned of his losse
and harme that was right grete and outragiouse.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge looth and his sones approched that peple,
thei laced theire helmes and a-light from theire
palfreyes, and toke theire horses and theire sheldes and com
the streight wey to the place ther the bataile hadde I-be, but
now thei were with-drawen towarde the Cite; and the Duke
Escam was be-hynde that diffended his peple merveillously,
and hadde grete peyne and traueile as he that was in grete
doute to lese his Citee; and the kynge looth that was full sory
and wroth for that he saugh it so go, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>   sped hym so that
he passed the bregge, and com hym a-geins and his foure sones
theire hedes bowed down vnder theire helmes, and sore affiched
in theire stiropes, and com a grete walop as thei that thought
longe er thei were medled with the saisnes; and whan the
Duke hem saugh he a-bode stille, but he knewe hem not, and
seide a worde that well a-pertened to a man that was in grete
nede.  "Ha, lorde god, now helpe and socour thy seruaunt in
this grete myschef that we be now ynne, and on that other
side all that euer thy seruauntes sholde lyven by, these false
vntrewe saisnes lede a-wey, and all oure richesse that was lefte
in this contrey;" than he be-hilde the v knyghtes that he
saugh come, but he knewe noon of hem, for theyre sheldes were
all to-hewen with the strokes that thei hadde resceived, and


<PB REF="" N="548" ID="pb.548"/>

ne hadde not be that, he hadde knowe the kynge looth anoon;
and whan he saugh that thei drough nygh, he knewe well that
thei were not of that contrey, and neuertheles he com a-gein
hem as he that was well taught, and seide, "Feire lordes, ye
be welcome what wey purpose ye to go, ffor me semeth ye
be traueillinge knyghtes."  "Sir," seide the kynge looth, "we
wolde be at Arestuell in Scotlonde."  "Certes," seide the
Duke, "ye   <MILESTONE N="195b" UNIT="folio"/>haue right moche to done, ffor fro hens thider is
full felon passage, and yef ye will a-while a-bide in this contrey
we shull be gladde and myri, and it is the beste that ye may
do, ffor it is but fewe dayes past that the saisnes assembled
vpon vs."  "Sir," seide the kynge looth, "how moche is it
fro hens to Arestuell?"  "Sir," seide the Duke, "hit is well
thre grete iourneis."  "What be ye, sir," seide the kynge
looth, that vs preyen for to a-bide?"  "Sir, hit shall not from
yow be conceiled.  I am lorde of Cambenyk and of this contrey
as longe as god will vouche-saf.  But these vntrewe saisnes
come vpon me dayly, and now I was come oute a-gein hem,
and thei be crewell and so proude as ye may se all day."  As
the kynge and the Duke hilde theire Parliament the Duke
saugh his peple come fleinge and the saisnes after, that hem
pursued harde at the spore; and whan the kynge looth saugh
hem come in soche manere, he seide to the Duke, "Sir, seth
we be falle in to youre companye, and do pray vs to a-bide, we
shull helpe yow this day with all oure power."  "Gramercy
lordes," seide the Duke; and than seide Gaheries to sir Gawein,
"Go we a-geins hem lo where thei come."</P>
<P>  Than the Dukes men toke hem other helmes for theires
were all to-brosed, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>   thei hadde them sette on theire
hedes, and well knyt and laced, thei turned toward hem that
fledde, and whan thei saugh the Duke come that was theire
lorde, thei a-bode ffor thei hadde in hym grete truste, for he
was a noble knyght and a sure; and whan the saisnes saugh
thei dide stinte, thei ronne vpon hem, for thei wende hem alle


<PB REF="" N="549" ID="pb.549"/>

for to a-taken at her wille; and sir Gawein hym derenged first
of alle, and smote a saisne thourgh the body that he ouerthrewe
down deed; and whan Gaheries saugh his broder medled with
the saisnes than he spored his horse and smote so the first that
he mette thourgh shelde and haubrek that on that other side
shewed the shafte, and ther-with brake the spere that no lenger
myght endure, and he drough oute his swerde, and folowed
after sir Gawein in the trace as he wente, and made soche
martire that alle that hym be-hilde hadde wonder; ffor he ne
smote noon but he felled hym or his horse, and Gaheries dide
so well that Gawein hym preised and comended, and neuer in no
place hadde he seyn hym do so well, and ther-of he merveiled
sore, and was gladde that he myght so moche suffre in armes.</P>
<P>  On that other side was the kynge looth, and Gueheret in
the medle, and eche of hem hadde smyte down a saisne
that deed he moste nede be; and whan the speres were broken
thei drough swerdes and be-gonne a bataile, so that of v
knyghtes was neuer sein more fierce bateile; and than the
Duke sued after, and dide right well hem to rehete, and to
contene in that grete nede, and he saugh hem do so moche er
he departed fro hem that he wondred that euer mortall man
myght so moche suffre of armes.  But whan mydday was
passed, than dide Gawein alle the merveiles of the worlde, and
satte vpon   <MILESTONE N="196a" UNIT="folio"/>the Gringalet that was so good and feire; and he
that satte a-bove was wonder wight and deliuer, and hilde
Calibourne his swerde, <CHOICE><CORR>whiche</CORR><SIC>whe</SIC></CHOICE> slitte helmes, and sheldes, and
knyghtes, and horse, and all that he ouertoke, and com thourgh
the renges as it were a tempest and slough euere as he com, and
he was so chaufed whan it was a-boute the houre of noone that
nothinge myght agein hym endure, and euery stroke of his
swerde semed as it hadde be a dynte of thonder, so com it with
grete ravyn and grete force; and whan the saisnes it perceived
thei seide, "Lo ther a devell that is come oute of helle;" and
so yede the tidinges that boydas, and Maundalis, and Oriaunces,
and Dorilas, these foure hit herden that were maistris of the
hoste and conditoures.


<PB REF="" N="550" ID="pb.550"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan these foure kynges herde the merveile that these
v knyghtes dide, thei asked whiche wey thei were,
and thei that hadde hem sein taught hem to the brigge ende vpon
the river; with that com the foure kynges <CHOICE><CORR>thider</CORR><SIC>thide</SIC></CHOICE> as Gawein
dide merveiles the grettest of the worlde, that euer were don
by oon knyght a-lone; and the Duke escam was com in to her
companye with as moche peple as he myght haue of his foure Ml
men that he hadde at the begynnynge, he ne myght not
assemble, but two thousande and v<HI REND="sup">C</HI>, so were thei alle
discounfited; but as soone as the kynge looth and his sones weren
assembled to them, thei returned agein, and thei that hem
chaced were mo than x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and ydonas a proude saisne that
moche harme hadde hem do of her peple, and neuertheles the
cristin hem putte oute of the place, and made hem to rusen
vpon the foure kynges that com hem to socour; and as soone
as thei were medled with the cristen ther was grete stour and
right merveilouse; but the myschef was grete, ffor the cristin
were not foure<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the sarazins were xviij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and ther-fore
thei moste remeve whether thei wolde or noon, and were alle
discounfited ne hadde be the vj knyghtes, ffor thei wolde voide
no grounde, but gate londe vpon hem.  Ther dide Gawein soche
merveiles that alle thei hadde wonder that eny man myght soche
maistries endure, and Gaheries hym sued all the day, so that
Gawein hym-self hadde merveile that he myght so moche suffre
and endure, and therfore he loved hym euer all his lif more
than alle his other brethern that were so goode knyghtes that
ther were but fewe better in theire tyme.</P>
<P>  Grete was the bateile and the stour mortall in the plains
of Cambenyk, at the brigge foote of Saverne of the two
thousande and v<HI REND="sup">C</HI> cristin a-gein viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes, but the cristin ne
myght but litill space endure, ne hadde be the well doinge of
the v knyghtes of the reame of logres, and so dide well the
Duke Escam of Cambenyk, ffor he was a noble knyght and
a sure of his body, while thei entended to breke the presse, com
Dodalis, and Moydas, and Oriaunces, and Brandalis vpon swifte
stedis gripinge grete speres, and mette   <MILESTONE N="196b" UNIT="folio"/>the Duke Escam a-monge


<PB REF="" N="551" ID="pb.551"/>

the renges that full wele hadde don all the day, that he ought
well to be wery for traueile, and happed that Boydas and
Braundalis mette hym bothe attonys, and smote hym so on the
shelde that he reuersed on his horse croupe, and Oriances and
Dodalus smote his horse with theire speres thourgh the flankes
that he fill deed be-twene his legges and bare down to grounde
bothe that oon and the tother, and whan the Duke was fallen
thei a-bode vpon hym alle foure with swerdes drawen, and
soone ther he myght haue ben loste, but as his men com hym
for to socoure, and the saisnes com on that other side hym for
to encombre, and ther was grete slaughter of peple on bothe
parties; and ther was the Duke foule turmented with horse
feet, ffor the saisnes were so many that the Dukes men hadde
no power hym to remounte.  Ne his enemyes no power hym
to take, but the saisnes were so many that the cristin myght
hem not sustene, but most leve place wheder thei wolde or
noon; ffor thei haue take the Duke and ledde hym a-wey,
magre hem alle betinge hym foule.  Than the kynge loot and
his sones com drivinge with swerdes drawen and fonde grete
plente of peple hym for to lede.  Ther were buffetes I-nowe
yoven and resceyved, but ne hadde be the weldoinge of Gawein
thei hadde not endured litill ne moche; ffor he was euer in
the former fronte, and hilde Calibourne in his right honde and
smote on the right side and on the lifte, and slough so many
men and horse, that thei that saugh the merveiles turned to
flight, and thourgh his prowesse he brake presse magre hem
alle, and lefte not till he cam to the Duke Escam that the saisnes
ledde.  Ther was than fell stour and mortall, ffor ther was
Agravain smyten down and Gueheret, and the kynge peyned hym sore
hem to remounte, and the presse was so grete and the noyse that
it was merveile; and Gawein and Gaheries ne toke ther-of noon
heede, but entended to rescue the Duke so that thei haue hym
geten be fyn force, and sette hym on horse, and theym that hadde
hym taken thei haue driven oute of the place magre hem alle.</P>
<P>  And on that other side whan the kynge saugh his two
sones vnder the horse feet in a-uenture to lese theire

<PB REF="" N="552" ID="pb.552"/>

lives, and he hadde no power hem for to socour ne for to
remounte; than he cried with lowde voice, "Ffeire sone, what
do ye, or where be ye, for here is Agravain at the erthe that
hath grete nede, and the damage was mortall that vnethe may be
restored yef ye tarye lenger;" and whan Gawein herde the
voice he turned his horse a-noon and brake the presse that wey
with Calibourne his goode swerde a-gein, whiche noon armure
myght endure that he raught a full stroke, and er he hadde
paste litill wey he mette Gueheret and Agravain in meddill of
the presse on foote that full vigerously hem deffended, and the
kynge looth was euer be hem that sore hym peyned hem to
helpe and socoure; and whan Gawein saugh the grete nede he
caste to erthe the remenaunt that was lefte of his shelde, and
caught Calibourne with bothe handes and spronge in to the
presse so fiercely   <MILESTONE N="197a" UNIT="folio"/>that noon durst hym a-bide for the merveiles
that thei saugh hym do, and he smote so Mydonas that he
mette with first, that he slitte hym down to the sholdres, and
with a-nother stroke he smote a-wey the lifte arme of Brandalis
with all the shelde; and whan the sarazin felte hym-self so
diffouled, he fledde cryinge and brayinge as a bole, and Gaheries
hadde throwe his shilde to grounde and hilde his swerde in bothe
handes and smote so Oriaunce vpon the helme that he kutte a
quarter, and the swerde glent be-twene the body and the shelde,
and kutte the gige that it hanged on that it fley in to the felde,
and the stroke descended on the lift thigh so depe that he
kutte it thourgh, and he fill down to grounde, and Gaheries
toke the horse and ledde to Gueheret his brother, and made hym
skippe in to the sadell, and after he smote a-nother saisne that
was well horsed that he made the heed fle in to the felde, and
caught the horse and ledde to Agravain his brother, and he lepte
vp a-noon as he that hadde grete nede; and than thei smote in to
the bateile where the kynge was, and sir Gawein that foughten full
sharply, and Agravain that was full wroth with Dodalus, yaf hym
soche a buffet that the heed fill in to the felde a-noon right.</P>
<P>  And whan the saisnes saugh that alle the high lordes were
deed, a-noon thei fledden as thei that hadde theire lordes


<PB REF="" N="553" ID="pb.553"/>

loste, ne neuer thei stinte till thei com to the baner of ydonas,
and these hem chaced thider with-oute eny a-bidinge, be-fore
alle other was sir Gawein and with hym CC of the Dukes men
that sore hem peyned hym for to serve, and Elizer euer by and
be-fore hym and hilde in hande a cornered axe where-with he
delyuered his lorde whan he saugh nede.  In that chace was
the Duke throwe down of his horse, for a sarazin smote hym
so be-hinde that he fill to grounde and was hurt right sore in
the fallinge, that stroke saugh full wele the kynge looth that
chaced on bothe sides, he and his sone Gueheret, and it greved
hym sore for the Duke, and he spored his horse that wey and
griped a grete spere that he hadde take from a saisne, and
smote the saisne that hadde smyte down the Duke thourgh the
sides, and thourgh liver and longes, and than toke the horse and
presented to the Duke, and <CHOICE><CORR>anoon</CORR><SIC>noon</SIC></CHOICE> he lepte vp and thanked
hym hertely of that servise that he hadde hym don, and sir
Gawein and Elizer chaced the saisnes and hem sued till thei
com to the baner of ydonas.  Ther the saisnes with-stode and
foughten a-while, and Gawein that hem pursued drof in
a-monge hem, and smote so on eyther side that all that he
raught wente to groude; and whan ydonas that aperceived he
turned that wey, and Gawein hym smote vpon the helme that
he slitte hym down right so that men myght se his longes,
and a-noon as the sarazin was so smyten he fill to the grounde
and the baner; and whan the Duke saugh the baner reverse
he knewe well thei were discounfited, and than he cried his
signe with high voyce, and relyed his peple a-boute hym and
yaf hem assaute delyuerly.</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="197b" UNIT="folio"/>    Whan the saisnes saugh theire baner falle, and the cristin
come on hem so harde, thei durste no more a-bide, but
turned to flight and lefte the place, and all theire harnoys, and
eche of hem fledde from other thurgh the playnes mate and
discounfited, and ther a-ros soche a duste and soche a shoute
and noyse that wonder it was to here, but of hem that theym
chaced was sir Gawein the firste upon the Gringalet, for ther was
noon horse that myght renne so faste, and he slough of hem


<PB REF="" N="554" ID="pb.554"/>

so many in the chace that he and his horse were steyned with
blode as he hadde fallen in a blody river; and whan thei hadde
chaced hem to nyght, than returned the kynge, and his sones,
and alle the other saf Gawein, that thei wiste not where he was
be come ne Elizer his squyer, ffor thei had chaced the saisnes
that of fin force thei drof hem in to the river of Saverne, and
ther thei drof in so many that the water chaunged colour, and
whan thei saugh thei were ouer he returned a-gein a softe paas,
and the Duke Escam a-bode at the pray, and ledde it home with
his men, and sir Gawein past by and spake no worde; and
whan the kynge looth saugh him come he made merveilouse
ioye, and asked how he hadde don, and he seide right euell
whan eny of hem ascaped and returned as recreaunt whan thei
durste not passe the foorde ther thei passed; and the kynge
seide that was no light thinge to do a man a-lone for to passe.</P>
<P>  This worde that Gawein seide vndirstode the Duke, and
seide that he hadde don right wele, ffor he and his
companye hadde brought to an ende that he and his peple ne
myght not do, and Gawein rode forth and spake no worde, and
well semed by his armes that he hadde not be at soiourne that
day; and the kynge looth hym asked where he hadde lefte his
squyer, and he seide how the saisnes hadde hym all to-hewen,
and ther-fore be hym to purchase a-nother, and the Duke seide
he wolde yeve hym a-nother myghty and stronge, and he seide
"gramercye."  Than the Duke asked of the kynge looth, and
praide hym full hertely to tell hym his name, for that he herde
hym clepe Gawein his sone; and he ansuerde that his name
was neuer hidde for no man, ne fro hym sholde it not be kept
pryve, and than he seide, "Ye ought me well to knowe, for
many an euell iourney, and many myry dayes haue we hadde
to-geder;" and he seide how he was kynge looth of Orcanye,
and how these foure were his sones; and whan the Duke this
vndirstode, he seide that he was welcome, and "so verily helpe
me god," quod he, "as I knewe yow not, and blissed be that
goode lorde that sente yow hider, ffor this day hadde we all be
distroyed ne hadde ye ben, and of this ye seide full trewe that

<PB REF="" N="555" ID="pb.555"/>

moche wele and moche woo haue we suffred to-geder.  Sir,
are these foure knyghtes verily youre sones?" and he seide,
"Ye trewly."  "So helpe me god," seide the Duke, "thei be
full noble and worthi men, and goode knyghtes, and yet shull
be better yef thei live to age."</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="198a" UNIT="folio"/>    Thus thei rode alle vj to-geder spekinge till thei com to
the Citee of Cambenyk, and wente to the maister
paleys and a-light at the greeces, and Elizer was besy to serue
sir Gawein and stable Gringalet, and helped him to vn-arme,
and also the kynge looth, and while thei were in vn-armynge
thei saugh comynge the squyer of Elizer, and the yoman that
hadde made the present to Mynoras the forester, and salued
the kynge fro Mynoras, and from his wif and alle his children,
and seide how thei alle hym thanked of his grete bounte.  Than
Gaheries be-hilde Agravain his brother, and be-gan to laugh,
and asked lydonas how the doughtres of Mynoras ferden, and
he seide how thei hem salued alle.  "Trewly," quod Gaheries,
"thei haue reson yef thei knewe the dought of my brother
Agravain."  At this worde thei lowen alle bothe Gueheret and
Agravain hym-self and wax rody, but he spake no worde, for
he wiste well that he Iaped, and thus thei laughed and pleyde
till the mete was redy, and than were sette and well serued
and richely, and hit neded not to aske yef the Duke were besy
and gladde hem for to wurship, and that were ther-ynne; and
after soper the Duke asked the kynge the names of his sones,
and the kynge seide how the eldest was cleped Gawein, and
the seconde Agravain, and thridde Gueheret, and the fourth
Gaheries.  "And this feire yonge gentilman," quod he, "that
is so comely and well faringe, and is so worthy and noble, what is
he?"  And the kynge seide that he aparteined not to hym, "but
he is the sone of a kynge that is of high lynage, and by his
debonerte is come for to serue sir Gawein my sone, for of hym
he will take his armes."  "So helpe me God," seide the Duke
of high herte, "and gentill cometh hym that corage, and blessed
be the body that hym bar for he doth as debonair and gentill,
and god sende hym encrece of vertu, for he is full of high


<PB REF="" N="556" ID="pb.556"/>

valoure and worthinesse, and therfore he may not faile to come
to high prowesse, yef he lyve eny while;" and than he asked
whi he wente so to Arestuell with so fewe in his companye so
hastely.  "That shall I telle yow," quod the kynge looth, "ye
se and knowe how the saisnes be entred in to this londe, and
waste and distroie, and it is more than two yere that thei
cessed neuer to robbe and to pile oure londes, and therfore me
semeth it were grete profite to sette soche counseile how thei
myght be chaced oute, and ye se well that all our force ne
a-vaileth not a-gein hem.  Ne for vs shull thei neuer be putte
a-wey, but yef god and other peple helpe ther-to, ffor we haue
foughten with hem thre tymes, and we spede neuer but loste;
and ye knowe well that all this londe oweth to be holde of the
kynge Arthur, and thei that holde a-gein hym bith a-cursed,
and therfore it were good ther-of to be a-soyled, and theire
londes to be delyuered from the saisnes, and who that this
myght bringe to an ende had he not well spedde."  "Yesse
trewly," seide the Duke.  "Now shall I sey yow," quod the
kynge, "how it shall be.  I haue take a parliament with the
kynge Clarion of Northumbirlonde,   <MILESTONE N="198b" UNIT="folio"/>and the kynge de Cent
Chiualers at Arestuell, and with the kynge Arthur hym-self at
the feste of seint Mary day in Septembre, and ye and alle the
worthi princes shull be there, and we shull take trewis in soche
manere that eche of vs shall assemble his power as grete as he
may a-gein the day that shall be named and sette, ffor to fight
with the saisnes whan we be alle assembled, and but yef thei be
driven oute in this manere thei shull neuer be hadde oute of
this londe;" and the Duke ansuerde that this were the grettest
almesse that myght be do, "and wolde oure lorde that this were
don, and wite ye wele that I haue thought often that the saisnes
hadde neuer entred this londe ne were for the synne that is
a-monge vs, and be my will we shall a-corde with the kynge
Arthur so that we shull neuer haue a-gein hym werre, but do
that he vs requereth with-oute eny delay, ffor seth he is
a-noynted and sacred hit is no light thinge hym to depose that
the clergie and the peple of the londe haue chosen; and the


<PB REF="" N="557" ID="pb.557"/>

remes of Beynok, and of Gannes holde with hym, and we se
well we may neuer haue the better."  "Yef ye haue thought
thus," quod the kynge looth, "soone shall the pees be made
be-twene yow and hym, and of my partye I sey not nay but
that hit is made.  Ne ye may not hens-forwarde, neyther ye
ne noon other make no werre a-gein Arthur, but ye haue werre
a-gein me."  "How so," quod the Duke, "be ye with hym
a-corded?" and he seide, "Ye, with-oute faile."</P>
<P>  Than he tolde hym all how the pees hadde be made, and
all the traueile as it hadde be, and how his childeren
hadde hym lefte, and tolde hym all in ordre, and spake so
to-geder be-twene the kynge and the Duke, that the Duke hym
graunted to be at Arestuell at the day that was named, and
seide the pees sholde not be letted for hym, and than yede thei
to bedde to reste, for thei were wery for traueile of the grete
stour that thei hadde ben ynne; and on the morowe erly the
kynge looth a-roos for to here masse, and so dide his sones, and
the Duke Escam, and wente to the mynster, and whan the
masse was seide, the kynge com to the Duke, and seide, "Sir,
it were well don that ye toke foure messagiers, and sende to
the kynge ydiers of Cornewaile, and a-nother to kynge Vrien,
and the thridde to kynge Aguysans, and the fourthe to kynge
Ventres of Garlot, and sendeth to theym in oure be-halue that
thei be at Arestuell at oure lady day in Septembre, and than
sende a-nother to kynge Tradilyuaunt of North Wales, and to
the kynge Belynaunt his brother, and to the kynge Carados,
and to the kynge Brangore, that thei be at this parliament at
Arestuell on seint Mary day in Septembre;" and he seide this
sholde gladly be do, and a-noon thei sette forth the messagiers
and spedde hem so that thei be come to the princes, and dide
right well theire message as thei were comaunded; and the
princes com as soone as thei hadde herde the message, but of
hem alle now resteth a-while, and speke of the kynge looth and
his sones.</P>
<P>  As soone as the messagiers were departed from Cambenyk,
the kynge looth and his sones rode forth theire wey

<PB REF="" N="558" ID="pb.558"/>

towarde Arestuell, and the Duke hem conveied on the wey, and
yaf eche of hem a shelde peynted with soche armes as thei were
wonte to bere and helmes fresch   <MILESTONE N="199a" UNIT="folio"/>and newe, and than the Duke
toke his leve and returned hom a-gein, and made hym redy for
to come after the kynge looth, and thei hilde her streight-wey
toward north wales to a Citee that longed to the kynge
Tradilyuaunte, and fonde the kynge in the Citee that gladde was of
theire comynge, ffor he loved well the kynge looth and asked
hym in to what contrey he was goinge; and the kynge looth
tolde hym all as it was; and Tradilyuans seide how a messager
hadde tolde hym the same that the Duke Escam hadde hym
sent, "and ther shall I be yef god will that I haue so longe
lif and hele."  And than was the kynge looth and his sones
gladde and iocunde; that nyght was the kynge looth and his
children richely served, and as soone as it was day, thei toke
theire wey and com to Arestuell in Scotlonde where thei
soiourned foure dayes er eny prince were come, and ledde meri
lif, and a-bode after the princes till that the kynge Clarion com
alther firste the lorde of Northumbirlonde that was oon of the
gentillist and deboneir prince of the worlde, and ther-to he was
a good knyght, and the kynge looth made of hym grete ioye,
and so dide he of hym and of his foure sones, for he hadde hem
not seyn be-fore.</P>
<P>  On the morowe com the kynge de Cent Chiualers, of whom
theire myrthe be-gan gretly to encrece, and than cam
the Duke Escam that was a good knyght and a sure, and
after com the kynge Tradilyuans of <CHOICE><CORR>North</CORR><SIC>Noth</SIC></CHOICE> walis, and the
kynge Belynans his brother, and after com the kynge
Brangore and the kynge Carados of Strangore, and than the
kynge Vrien and the kynge Aguysans of Scotlonde, and the
kynge ydiers of Cornewaile, and the kynge Ventres of Garlot,
and than com the lorde of the streite marche; and whan
thei were alle assembled the kynge looth seide that on the
morowe he wolde hem telle wherefore he hadde made hem to
assemble, and this was on seint marie even in Septembre, and
eche of hem made to other grete ioye and myrthe, and rested


<PB REF="" N="559" ID="pb.559"/>

ther all that nyght; and on the morowe thei assembled to-geder
all the prevy counseile, and sir Gawein and his thre bretheren,
and whan thei weren all sette vpon a cloth of silke that was
leide vpon the grene grasse, than a-roos Gawein by the
comaundement of his fader the kynge looth, and seide, "Ffeire
lordes, we be come hider for to speke with yow in the name
of the kynge Arthur with whom we be, and my lorde yow
sendeth and prayeth as to hem that he wolde gladly haue to
his frendes yef it myght be, that ye sholde yeve hym trewys
saf to come and saf to go by feith and suerte be-twene this and
yole; and ye also to go and come thourgh his power suerly,
and he in yours at youre plesier; ffor yef it plese yow that we
go alle to-geder and fight with the saisnes that be come in to
this contrey till that we haue hem oute chaced, and yef god
will ordeyne that thei be discounfited than acorde yow to-geder
yef ye may be, and the pardon is yoven and graunted to alle
tho that will go fight with saisnes, that thei shull be clene
quyte of alle ther synnes as thei were the day of theire birthe."</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="199b" UNIT="folio"/>    Whan the princes herde the request of sir Gawein of
that he dide hem amoneste, thei asked the kynge
looth his advise, and he seide it was the grettest bounte that
euer was seide or don.  "And I do yow to wite I sey it
nothinge for that I am his sworn man, but I sey as longe as ye
haue ben a-geins hym ye haue mys-happed, ffor as I trowe this
peple hadde neuer entred in to this londe yef we hadde holden
to-geder, and knowe it verily that it cometh thourgh oure
synnes."  "What!" seide the kynge Vrien, "haue ye don
hym homage, ye haue nothinge do as a trewe knyght, and I
will telle yow whi, ffor yef it fill so that we yede vpon hym,
hit be-hoveth vs to go a-gein yow."  "That were right," seide
the kynge looth, "with-oute faile, and wite ye well who so
hath werre a-gein hym hath werre a-gein me." "Ffor sothe,"
seide the kynge Vrien, "that is vn-trewly don, ffor ye be oon
of vs, and ye sholde not vs so leven."  "Sir," seide the kynge
looth, "I dide it magre myn, and a-gein my will, ffor I do yow
to wite that day I wende hym moste to greve or a-noyen.  I


<PB REF="" N="560" ID="pb.560"/>

dide hym homage, and all this made me Gawein for to do, that
ye here se."  Than he tolde hem alle worde for worde how
the cas was be-fallen; and whan the other princes herde this,
thei seide he myght noon other do seith it was so he was not
moche to blame, and some of hem that were there wolde right
gladly that thei hadde happed in the same manere.  Thei  
spake of oo thinge and of other, that thei accorded to holde the
trewis, and ther-to thei it assured in sir Gaweins honde hit
trewly to holde, and sette hem a day that eche of hem sholde
be with all his power on the playn of Salisbery with all his
peple as eche of hem myght bringe.  But thei seide well that
whan the saisnes were driven oute of the londe that thei dide
the kynge to wite that he diffende hym from theym; and sir
Gawein hem tolde that whan it were come ther-to that yef thei
wolde hym ought mysdon thei sholde fynde that thei sholde
haue hym theire armes wery and ouer-charged.</P>
<P>  Whan the princes vndirstode the wordes of sir Gawein
ther were some that lough and some frowned with
the heede, and the kynge de Cent Chiualiers that liste not hym
to a-vaunte ne noon other to manace, seide he wolde be ther at
halowmesse yef god hym sende lif in the playn of Salisbery,
and so seide eche of hem for his partye; and the kynge looth
seide that he wolde not thens remeve till he hadde assembled
all his power, and than thei toke leve eche of other, and
departen, and eche of hem wente in to his contrei, and the londe
was assoiled by the legat; and thei moustred and assembled all
the peple that thei myght gete, and sente for to seche frendes
and kynnesmen thourgh-oute all cristindome and dide proclame
all the pardon that was graunted, and he that first myght
assemble his peple wente in to the playn of Salisbiry, and
loigged in tentes and pavilouns, and ther a-bide eche of hem
other, and as the story seith thider com alle that myght eny
wepen weilde, and on that othir side of the   <MILESTONE N="200a" UNIT="folio"/>londe of kynge
Clamedin, and of the londe of kynge Guygueron, a riche baron


<PB REF="" N="561" ID="pb.561"/>

of the londe of Sorloys, and thider com the kynge Brangores,
and ther was moche peple of the kynge looth of Orcanye, and
of the londe of kynge helain, and of the londe of kynge pellynor,
and of the londe of kynge Pelles of lystenoys, and of the londe
of the Duke Roches.  But here resteth the tale of hem and
returneth to the kynge Arthur and his wif Gonnore.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.28">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXVIII 
<LB/>ADVENTURES OF SEGRAMOR, GALASHIN, AND DODINELL; MERLIN'S VISITS TO BLASE AND TO THE PRINCES; ARTHUR'S PREPARATIONS FOR THE WAR.

</HEAD>
<P>Now seith the storie that myri lif ledde the kynge Arthur
and his wif after that the kynge looth and his sones
were departed, and the kynge looth sente to the kynge Arthur
that the trewis were graunted, and therfore was arthur gladde
and iocunde, and the quenes knyghtes, and so were the knyghtes
of the rounde table, and so were also the two kynges that were
brethern; and on the morowe that the tidinges were come to
court Segramor a-ros erly, and Galasshin and Dodinell le sauage,
and armed hem right wele of alle parties, and yede to disporte
in the foreste that was grete and depe, for on the nyght be-fore
hadde thei caste for to a-rise erly hem to pley and disporte; and
whan thei were come thider hit hem liked well, for thei herde
the songe of the fowles and briddes that myrily were entuned,
and thei seiden that thei wolde go serche the forest and the
contrey for to wite yef thei myght finde eny a-uenture where-by
thei myght be preised and comended; and also on that other
side were there dissevered thre knyghtes of the rounde table
from the Courte, and hadde taken straunge armes for thei wolde
not be knowen, and thei desired sore for to mete with the
quenes knyghtes for to prove hem-self a-geins hem; and that oon
of the knyghtes was Agrauandain the brother of Belynans, the
beste knyght destramors that after werred the kynge Arthur.

<PB REF="" N="562" ID="pb.562"/>

The seconde was Mynoras, and the thirde was Monevall that
was a noble knyght and richely armed of alle pointes, and whan
thei were in the playn felde thei ronne with theire horses oon
a-gein a-nother with-oute smytinge of eny stroke, and than seide
Mynoras to his felowes, lete vs go for to pley vs and disporte in
this foreste to assay yef we fynde eny aventure, and his felowes
therto graunted a-noon with goode chere, and ride forth towarde
the Castell de lespine, for that it was the more auenturouse
than eny other wey, and thus these thre felowes ride in
companye till thei founde thre weyes that made hem departe, so
that eche rode sooll by hym-self as auenture dide falle.  But
now we moste cesse of hem awhile, and returne to speke of
Merlin.</P>
<P>  Here seith the boke that whan Merlin was departed from
the kynge Arthur from a thiside of Toraise in
Carmelide, that he wente in to Northumbirlonde to Blaise his
maister, that gladde was of his comynge, ffor he loved moche his
companye; and whan Merlin a-while hadde be ther he tolde
hym how the kynge Arthur was spoused to his wif, and how
she sholde haue be by-traied, and how Vlfin and Bretell   <MILESTONE N="200b" UNIT="folio"/>hadde
hir rescewed, and how the false Gonnore was banysshed, and
how Bertelais slough the knyght, and of the turnement that the
knyghtes made be-fore Toraise, and how the kynge Arthur
hadde sente Gawein his nevew to logres for to somowne his
court, and how the kynge loth wolde haue refte a-wey his wif;
and how that Gawein com and hym socoured, and toke his
owen fader, and how the avowis were made at the Court, and
how the quenes knyghtes turneyed a-gein the knyghtes of the
rounde table, and the merveles that sir Gawein ther dide, and
how the kynge Ban yaf counseile to the kynge Arthur that his
knyghtes sholde neuer haue turnement oon a-gein a-nother, and
the counseile that kynge looth yaf for to sende messages to the
princes, and all that be-fill hym and his sones on the wey, and
how the princes were assembled at Arestuell, and how the trewys
were take for to go vpon the saisnes; and Blaase wrote all this
in his boke, and by that haue we the knowinge ther-of, and


<PB REF="" N="563" ID="pb.563"/>

than Blase asked yef thei myght haue peple I-nowe for to fight
a-gein the saisnes; and Merlin seide, "Nay be-fore that the peple
were come oute of litill Breteigne, and thei of the reame of
Carmelide, and thei of lamball that was longinge to the kynge
Amaunte that Gosenges hilde, and as soone as I go fro hens
I will go fecche the peple of kynge Ban and of kynge Bohors
in the two reames, and make hem to come hider, and I do yow
to wite," quod Merlin, "that ther shull come peple hider of
many londes for the sauacion of theire soules, and for to diffende
the cristin feith, and I do yow to wite it is grete nede that
oure lorde helpe at this tyme, ffor neuer be-fore was ther sein
so moche peple as shall be now at this assemble.  Ne neuer for
no power shull thei be put oute of this londe be-fore that the
princes ben acorded with the kynge Arthur;" and Blase seide
that he a-parceyved well that he loved a lady where-of the
prophesie sholde falle and hadde be seide, and Blase hym preide
full hertely and seide,</P>
<P>  "Merlin, dere frende, I praye yow for the love of god that
ye will telle me who shall be-gete the lyon to the
two messages, and whan this shall be do."  And Merlin seide
that the terme drough faste on that it sholde be do; and blase
seide that it was grete damage; and yef I knewe the tyme and
place I wolde fain do my peyne it for to cesse; and Merlin
seide, "Write soche lettres as I shall yow devise, and than
shall ye knowe whan ye may hem helpe, and he hem wrote
that seide in this wise, "Cest li comenchemens et li contes des
auentures de pais pur coy li merveilleux lyons fu enseres et que
fitz du roy et de royne le destraindra et couenra qu' il soit
chastes et le myldres cheualiers del monde," and these lettres that
Blase wrote Merlin sette by alle the weyes where the auentures
were, and ne myght neuer be taken a-wey, but by theym that
sholde hem acheve, and ther-fore were the knyghtes the better
willed for to labour.  Ne neuer other-wise was distroied the
grete lyon; and than seide blase, "How is it that I may it
noon other weyes helpe;" and Merlin seide, "Noo."  "And
shall I lyve so longe," quod Blase, "that I may it knowe."

<PB REF="" N="564" ID="pb.564"/>

"Haa! dere frende," seide Merlin, "ne dowte it not, and
many   <MILESTONE N="201a" UNIT="folio"/>other merveiles shull ye se after these."  Than made
Merlin Blase to write soche letteres as he dide hym devise, and
bar hem ther as he wolde, and sette hem by the passages in
high weyes, and than comaunded hym to god, and than he
wente in to litill Breteigne; and whan he toke his leve of
Blase it was a-boute the houre of pryme, and a-boute the houre of
noone he com in to litill Breteigne, and fonde leonce the lorde
of Paerne, and Pharien that grete chere hym made and ledde
hym with hem full debonerly and were with hym gladde and
myry thre dayes hooll; and on the forthe day thei asked Merlin
why he was come in to that contrey, "ffor we knowe well that
for nought be ye not come," and he hem tolde that thei moste
passe the see with as moche peple as thei myght haue oute of
that contrey.  "Sir," seide leonce, "in to what place shall
we go?" and Merlin seide "to the Roche flodomer, and fro thens
in to the playn of Salisbery where ye shull fynde peple of many
dyuerse langages that alle shull be come thider for the same
cause that ye shull come fore, and ye shull loigge ther by
youre-self with alle youre peple, and remeve yow not till ye se
me a-gein, and loke ye make youre baner all white and ther-ynne
a rede crosse and no more, and so shull haue alle the other
princes that shull come thider, and noon of hem knoweth no
worde of other ne wherefore it is don, and ther-ynne is grete
significacion;" and leonce and Pharien seide this sholde be
don.  "Now," quod Merlin, "loke that ye take with yow alle the
beste peple that ye may haue, ffor I do yow to wite that there
shall be grete multitude of peple a-geins hem."  "And who
shall kepe this londe," seide leonce.  "Haue no doute of the
kepinge," quod Merlin, "ffor ther shall noon a-bide to kepe it,
but lambuges and the nevew of Pharien, and Banyns the sone
of Gracien of Trebes, and Galiers the lorde of the haut moor;
and ye shull lede the hostes of youre two reames, and Grascien
shall lede the hoste of Orcanye, and the stiwarde Antyaume
shall be with yow, and Pharien and Dionys shull lede theym
of Gaule, and loke that ye neuer leve for noon avoir, but with-holde 


<PB REF="" N="565" ID="pb.565"/>

all the peple that ye may haue of sowdiours yow for to
serve."  And leonce seide that this sholde be do as he hadde
devised.</P>
<P>  Than Merlin be-taught hem to god, and praied hem to go
hastely, for it myght not be taried, "and I ne may no
lenger with yow a-bide."  "Sir," quod leonce, "god haue yow in
kepinge, for I dare not pray yow to a-bide, for ye knowe better
what is for to do than I."  Than departed Merlin, and com to
Nimiane his love, whiche of hym was gladde and ioyfull as
soone as she hym saugh, and the love of hym encresed so moche
that loth he was to departe, but taught hir grete part of his
connynge; and than he wente in to the reame of lamball, that
was the kynges Amaunte that the kynge Bohors hadde slayn,
and bad Gosengos that he ne sholde leve in no maner but that
he sholde be on the playn of Salisbery at halowmesse with all
his peple, and he seide he wolde be ther with-oute faile.  Than
wente Merlin in to the reame of Carmelide, and dide his message
ther on kynge Arthurs be-halue, and thei seide thei wolde go
thider with good chere, and meved a-noon thiderward with
xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> of bolde men and hardy; and Grascien and   <MILESTONE N="201b" UNIT="folio"/>Pharien and
Dyonis spedde hem so wele that in litill terme thei assembled
xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men in the medowes be-fore Gannes; and whan it was tyme
for to meve, these felowes toke theire wey and spedde so theire
iourneyes be londe and be water till thei com in to the playns
of Salisbiry, and ther thei fonde the xij princes that were there
with as moche peple as thei myght assemble to-geder, and ech
kepte his hoste by hym-self, and Nabulall that hadde be stiward
with the kynge Amaunt somowned his peple and assembled hem
to-geder, and preied the sone of the kinge Amaunt for to come
with hym; and he dide his counseile, ffor he was a feire yonge
squyer, bolde and hardy, and hadde loved the quene Gonnore,
and fayn wolde haue hadde hir to his wif, yef he hadde be
knyght, but the werre be-twene the two fadres it letted; ffor
the queene hadde hym desired more than eny other man while
she was a maiden, and yet ech of hem desired other to se, and
sente often messages that oon to the tother <SUPPLIED>and</SUPPLIED> tokenes.


<PB REF="" N="566" ID="pb.566"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan this yonge lorde com to Nabulall that kepte the
reame to the be-hofte of kynge Arthur, he tolde hym
how the kynge wolde fight with the saisnes, "and sente me in
comaundement," quod Nabuall, "that I sholde bringe alle hem
that myght armes bere bothe moche and litill, and therefore I
wolde knowe youre will yef ye will come thider."  And he
seide, "Ye, trewly;" and than was Nabulall gladde, and seide
thei wolde go to-geder to se alle the worthi men of the worlde;
and than Nabulall assembled all the peple that he myght till
he hadde xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and spedde hym so till that he com in to the
playn of Salesbiry; and Merlin com to Bandemagn as soone
as he was departed fro Nabulall and badde hym sende to the
hoste the grettest people that he myght; and the kynge
Bandemagn assembled his peple that he hadde xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and Merlin
bad hym a-bide and sende with his hoste Patrides his stiwarde
for to lede his peple, and thei shull finde at the Court Guyomar
and Sadoyne, and Guyret de lamball that shull go with hym,
and helpe to lede thy peple ther as thei shull go; and ther-with
Merlin departed from the kynge and com to logres the same
day that the vj knyghtes were gon hem to disporte in to the
foreste auenturouse, where-of ye haue herde speke a-fore how
thei wente for to seche her auenturous.</P>
<P>  Whan Merlin com to court, he fonde the kynge Ban, and
the kynge Bohors, and the kynge Arthur, and the
quene that lened oute at the wyndowes of the paleys, and
loked on the medowes, and the thre knyghtes that were go in
to the foreste, that were of the companye of the rounde table
of whom the names were rehersed to yow be-fore; and the lordes
wiste no worde till that Merlin com in euen vpon hem, and
a-noon as thei were of hym war thei ronne ageins hym and
made hym the grettest ioye that thei cowde; and whan thei
hadde spoke to-geder of many thinges, than com Merlin to
Arthur, and   <MILESTONE N="202a" UNIT="folio"/>bad hym sende for all his power in all haste
with-oute taryinge, and dide hym well to wite how the kynge
looth hadde right wele spedde, and tolde hym also how the
straunge peple com oute of <CHOICE><CORR>dyuerse</CORR><SIC>dyuese</SIC></CHOICE> contrees, bothe on horse and


<PB REF="" N="567" ID="pb.567"/>

on fote, in to the playns of Salisbery, and he <SUPPLIED>asked</SUPPLIED> hym what
peple ther com, and he tolde hym how the kynge looth rode with
all his power, "and ye hadde full noble counseile for to take
the trewys, and what peple trowe ye shall come on youre
partye, ye shull haue the power of kynge Ban of Benoyk, and
of kynge Bohors of Gannes, and thei be well xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>;" and whan
the kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors vndirstode this, thei sterte
vpon hire feet and asked by whom that was; and Merlin hem
ansuerde a-noon, and seide he hadde do the message hym-self,
"and thei trowed me well god yelde it hem," and the two
brethern ansuerde that ther-of he hadde right well spedde, and
that of nothinge myght he haue made hem so gladde; and than
Merlin seide to kynge Arthur,</P>
<P>  "Sire," quod he, "wite ye who cometh hider also, ther
cometh Nabulall de Camadayse of the reame of
kynge Amaunt, that the kynge Bohors that is here slough in
bataile, and with hym cometh a yonge lorde that is yet no
knyght, and hider cometh all the power of Carmelide that
Cleodalis the stiward doth lede; but the kynge leodogan ne
cometh not, and all this chiualrie haue I yow somowned, and
therfore I owe to haue guerdon."  And the kynge seide, "Merlin,
I can not sey what I sholde yow ofre, but I will that ye be
lorde of me and of all my londe, for by yow is all that I haue."
"Sir," quod he, "whan I com thus sodeinly vpon yow right
now, what dide ye be-holde so ententifly down the medowes."
Quod the kynge, "We loked on thre knyghtes that we saugh
entre in to the foreste."  "Wote ye euer," quod Merlin, "who
thei be." "No," seide the kynge."  "Wite it verily," quod
Merlin, "that it be thre knyghtes of the rounde table that be
full noble and hardy.  But foles thei ben and folily haue thei
don, for thei be envyouse; and I telle yow trewly that neuer in
theire lif hadde thei so grete nede of socour and helpe as thei
shull haue er thei come a-gein, and all is thourgh her owne
folye."  "Merlin," seide the kyng, "telle me who thei be I
praye yow."  "Sir," quod he, "that oon is Agrauadain des
vals de gailore, and the seconde is Mynoras ly engres, and the

<PB REF="" N="568" ID="pb.568"/>

thridde is Monevall; and I lete yow wite that thei ne hadde
ride but litill wey er thei shull meete with thre of the queenes
knyghtes that shull fight with hem, and therfore yef ye do
wisely sendeth after hem, ffor but yef thei be departed ther
shull some be deed, and that were grete damage and pite."
"Haa? lorde god," quod the kynge, "who shall go hem for to
disseuer a-sonder."  "Sir," seide the quene, "sir Ewein and
kay the stiward, and Gifflet."  "Sir," quod Merlin, "the quene
seith well, sende hem forth a-noon hastely;" and a-noon the
kynge hem cleped and comaunded hem to armen, and thei dide
so a-noon right, and whan   <MILESTONE N="202b" UNIT="folio"/>thei were redy araide thei com to
the kynge, and asked whider thei sholde go, and Merlin bad thei
sholde go in to the foreste the streight wey to the crosse, "and
ther shull ye finde vj knyghtes fightinge, and loke that ye hem
departe;" and whan thei this vndirstode thei wente out of the
paleis and toke theire horse delyuerly, and rode a grete walop
in haste as thei were comaunded, but er thei were come there
were strokes yoven.  But now we shull returne to speke of the
vj knyghtes how thei haue spedde.</P>
<P>  As the storie seith the thre knyghtes of the quenes haue
so riden thourgh the foreste that thei haue founde a
feire launde, and thei a-light and rested hem on the grene herbes,
and Galashin seide to his felowes, "Wolde our lorde god that
sir Gawein and his brethern were now here, and we wolde go
se the saisnes yef ye wolde assent;" and than seide Dodinell
the sauage that it were a shrewe to go, for in this foreste is
noon rescettes, and oure horse sholde dyen for the faute and for
hungir; and while thei spake of these thinges, com the thre
felowes of the rounde table disgised of theire armes, for fayn
wolde thei haue be pursued of some of the quenes knyghtes;
and Segramor asked of his felowes yef thei knewe hem ought,
and thei seide, "Nay," and euer thei come faste on.  Than
seide Agrauadain to his felowes, "I se yonder soche thre
felowes that me wolde for-thinke that thei sholde lede a-wey
with hem theire horse hom a-gein."  "How so," quod Mynoras,
"be not we thre as well as thei;" and while thei spake thus,


<PB REF="" N="569" ID="pb.569"/>

the thre knyghtes laced theire helmes that thei hadde don from
theire hedes for to take the air; and thei lepte on theire horse,
and wolde haue gon theire wey as they thought noon euell,
seth that noon hem nought asked; and whan these other thre
saugh hem goinge, thei hem a-scried with lowde voice, "Iuste
yow be-houeth or elles ye shull vs leve youre horse, and so
may ye passe quyte;" and whan Segramor that vndirstode, he
turned the heed of his horse and seide, "What be ye than
robbours that lyve be soche mysteir, wite it verily whan ye
com home to youre hostell to nyght, ye shull have but litill to
ete of the wynnynge that ye shull bringe from vs, for we yow
diffie."  Than thei smyte the horse with the spores that the
blode stremed oute on bothe sides, and sette the sheldes be-fore
theire brestes and the speres a-gein the assels of theire sadelis;
and whan Segramor and his felowes saugh hem come in this
maner thei dide the same, and com hem for to mete, and fill
so that Segramore and Agrauadain mette with speres a-gein the
sheldes so rudely, that thei perced thourgh-oute, and the
hauberkes brosten agein the lifte side, and Agrauadain felte the
sharpe spere so depe that the blode folowed after; and
Agrauadain brake his spere on Segramours hauberke at the same cours,
and Segramor that hadde herte I-nough and force shof so harde
that he threwe hym to grounde and his horse bothe.  But
Agrauadain that was wight and delyuer, and full of grete
hardynesse, lepte on his feet full lightly and drough his swerde,
and appareiled hym self   <MILESTONE N="203a" UNIT="folio"/>to diffende, and whan Segramor hadde
parformed his cours he drough a litill a-side and sette foot to
grounde, and tacched his horse to his spere, and Agravadayns
horse ran faste to the wode, and Segramor drough his suerde
and dressed his shelde, and com towarde Agravadain a grete
spede, and he com for to mete hym vigerously, and smyte grete
strokes vpon the helmes, and over all ther thei myght atteyne,
and so endured the medle of hem longe while; and Segramor
seide, "Sir knyght, thow art deed, but thow yelde;" and
Agrauadain ansuerde "that to that pointe was he nothinge yet
comen;" and Segramor seide he sholde come ther-to soner than


<PB REF="" N="570" ID="pb.570"/>

he wende, and that other ansuerde that right litill he hym
douted, and seide he cowde well manace; and Segramor seide
that verily it was the maner of a fooll, and ther-fore is seide a
proverbe, that foles love neuer a thinge till he take the a-coole,
and so is it yow be-fallen.  Than thei ronne to-geder and fought
longe, but Agravadain hadde the werse of the bataile.</P>
<P>  On that othir side mette Galasshin and Mynoras, and fill
that Mynoras brake his spere vpon Galashyns shelde,
and Galashin hym smote with soche vigour vpon the penon of
the shelde that he shof the spere thourgh his thigh, and thourgh
the horse flanke that thei fill to grounde vpon an heep, and his
horse slode also with all foure feet that he also fill to the erthe,
but soone was he vpon his feet, and so was Mynoras, and
drough theire suerdes, <CHOICE><CORR>and</CORR><SIC>and and</SIC></CHOICE>   be-gonne the medle be-twene hem
two full grete and fell with all theire power.</P>
<P>  And also ran to-geder Dodinell le sauage, and Monevall,
and mette with speres wher-of the hedes were sharpe
I-grounden that the sheldes were perced and stinte at the
hauberkes that were harde, and the speres bothe fly on peces;
and in the passinge forth Dodinel hurteled so harde with his
shelde and his body that Monevall fill to grounde, but a-noon
he a-roos a-gein, for he was hardy and delyuer; and whan
Dodinell hadde parformed his cours he returned with swerde
drawen, and fonde hym redy hym to diffende.  Than he drough
a litill a-side and a-light, and com with his suerde in honde
gripinge his shelde, and be-gonne to medle and to scirmyssh
strongely.  Thus faught these vj knyghtes longe from prime to
mydday, and the quenes knyghtes be-gonne to gete grounde
vpon hem of the rounde table, and somwhat ledde hem at hir
volunte; and whan thei saugh hem glenche thei hem ascride,
and seide, "Yelde yow;" and thei seide thei hadde lever be
deed; and whan thei saugh it wolde noon other be thei ronne
vpon hem fiercely, and Segramor saugh that his felowe wolde
not yelde, and he lepte to hym lightly, and hitte so Agravadain


<PB REF="" N="571" ID="pb.571"/>

on the helme that he slitte it on two partyes, and the coyf of
maile that he wounded sore hym in the heed that he fill to
grounde all a-stonyed; but he lay not longe, for he douted sore
a-nother stroke, and covered hym vndir his shelde the beste
that he myght, and Dodinell caste a stroke of skirmerye to
monevall, and smote hym so harde vpon the arme that he hilde
with his shelde, that the shelde fill   <MILESTONE N="203b" UNIT="folio"/>to grounde that ner he
hadde hym shente; and Galashin smote so Mynoras on the
helme that he bente down to the erthe, and fallen hadde he;
but as he kepte hym on his handes, and than Galashin hente
hym by the helme and raced it of his heed so felliche that nose
and browes bledde, and yaf hym soche a buffet with his swerde
that he fill flatte to grounde, and than he lepte to and a-valed
the coyf of maile from his heed and seide he wolde smyte it
from the sholdres, but he wolde hym yelde outerly; and he
seide he wolde it not do in no wise, and Galashin seide than
sholde he dye with-oute raunsom.</P>
<P>  And while thei demened hem in this maner, com kay the
stiwarde, and sir Ewein, and Gifflet the sone of Doo
of Cardoell that the kynge hadde sent, but to longe hadde thei
taried; ffor Segramor hadde so araied Agrauadain, that he was
all couered in blode, and dide but glenche here and there fro oo
place to a-nother, and Segramor hym chaced for to take hym
a full stroke, and Dodinell hadde his felowe so be-seyn that he
hadde nother shelde ne helme on his hede, and dide but glenche
for to eschewe the deth, and Galashin helde his felowe at the
grounde, and with that oon hande hilde hym by the ventaile,
and his swerde in the tother hande redy to smyten of his heed,
and in short tyme alle thre sholde haue loste theire lyves; but
as sir Ewein, and kay, and Gifflet com walopinge as faste as
thei myght, and cried with lowde voice, "I-nough it is, for
we se well how it is, and we shull hem plegge of what ye will
hem aske;" and Segramor turned toward hem and knewe hem
wele, and ansuerde to sir Ewein, "Sir, gladly for more wolde I
do for yow than this a-mounteth;" and in the same wise seide
Galashin and Dodinell, and lefte hem with that, and these com


<PB REF="" N="572" ID="pb.572"/>

to hem and blamed hem for that thei hadde be-gonne soche
folye; and Segramor ansuerde hastely, and seide, "How so, my
lorde, sir Ewein haue we vs so mys-taken whan of these thre
vassals we haue rescewed oure horse, that thei wolde vs haue
be-refte.  Nay than hadde we be more shame-worthi yef thei
hadde hem taken be force, ffor than sholde we neuer haue hadde
honour in no place that we hadde comen, and full euell sholde
he diffende his felowe that dar not diffende his owne
thinge."  "Ha," quod Ewein, "thei dide it for noon euell ne for no
felonye that thei wolde yow haue don, but pleide with yow;"
and Galashin be-gan to laugh vndir his helme, ffor he aparceived
be that sir Ewein seide that thei were of the companye of the
rounde table, and Dodinell seide that "blissed be soche pley, and
hem that it be-gynne, for so shull we well lerne."</P>
<P>  "Lete be these wordes," quod sir Ewein, "and take youre
horse, and lete vs repeire hom to the Court, ffor
ther is noon so myghty ne puyssaunt that ne shall haue I-nough
bataile with-ynne these vj monethes;" with that these thre
knyghtes be lepte on theire horse, but the tother thre be trist
and dolent.  Than Segramor asked of sir Ewein what   <MILESTONE N="204a" UNIT="folio"/>thei
thre weren.  "What," quod sir Ewein, "ne knowe ye hem
nought."  "So moche ought thei haue the more damage;" "wite
it verily," quod Ewein, "that these with whom ye haue foughten
it is Agravadain des vaus de gailore and felowe of the rounde
table;" and Segramore seide he knewe hym not, "but seth it is
so be-fallen I may no more do."  "And Galashin hath foughten
with mynoras."  "What," quod Galashin, "Mynoras be that
ye, so helpe me god ye haue yow to moche mystake a-gein vs
whan that ye knewe vs well, and com vpon vs with-oute oure
knowinge of yow."  Than Dodinell drough hym to monevall,
and asked hym what he was; "ffor," quod he, "I will here
it of youre mouthe."  And he seide in bas voice, "I am
monevall."  "Ye be-gan the foly," quod Dodinell, "and seth
ye folye haue sought, folie haue ye founden, and therfore may
ye seye verily that ther nys noon so moche a fole but he may
finde his felowe."  "Now lete be all this," seide kay, "for thus


<PB REF="" N="573" ID="pb.573"/>

shull the knyghtes of the rounde table go to a-venge the deth
of the wrenne;" and than be-gonne thei all to laughe saue
the thre that were hurte sore, ffor thei hadde no talent to laugh;
ffor thei were shamefast and mate for that was hem be-fallen;
and forth thei riden to-geder alle ix till thei com to the court
at logres, and the thre wente to their hosteles hem to vn-arme,
ffor thei hadde nede of reste, and the tothere vj wente to court
and fond the thre kynges, and the quene, and Merlin that yet
were at the wyndowes of the paleys, and spake with Merlin,
for longe hadde thei hym not seyn; and the vj knyghtes wente
in to a chamber hem to vn-arme; and whan thei were vn-armed
sir Ewein com to the kynge, and as soone as the Quene hym
saugh, she seide, "Sir, telle vs of youre tidinges."  "Madame,"
quod Ewein, "men may telle I-nowe."  Than he be-gan to
telle how he hadde founde the vj knyghtes fightinge, and the
kynge asked whiche hadde the werse; and he tolde hem all
euen as it was, and the scorn that kay hem yaf, and Dodinell
and Segramor ther-at lowen faste I-nough, but sone thei lefte
the wordes, for thei saugh the kynge pensif and dolent; and
Merlin stode forth and seide, "Wite ye why is this discorde
be-twene the knyghtes of the rounde table, and the quenes
knyghtes; wetith it well," quod Merlin, "that it is but enuye
that the ton hath a-gein the tother, and therfor thei will preve
to-geder theire prowesses;" and thei asked whiche were the
beste knyghtes owther the rounde table or the Quenes knyghtes,
and the kynge seide that thei were all the Quenes, ffor the
rounde table wente all by hir; and than the kynge Ban seide
"that the beste myght soone be chosen, for it is my lorde, sir
Gawein," and thei seide all how it was trewe; and the kynge
seide that he sholde hem companye with the rounde table as
soone as thei were come a-gein; and Merlin seide that sholde
not be by-fore that the saisnes were chaced oute, and than thei
lefte the tales and wente to mete, and after mete a-noon the
kynge sent his messages thourgh the londe   <MILESTONE N="204b" UNIT="folio"/>to alle hem that
were his men that eny armes myght bere that thei sholde come
to hym araied, for to diffende the londe and mete with hym


<PB REF="" N="574" ID="pb.574"/>

vpon the playn of Salisbery, and that there-of thei sholde make
no delay.</P>
<P>  Thus sente the kynge his messages thourgh all the londe,
and a-noon as thei were fro hym departed, the kynge
Arthur toke the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and Merlin,
and seide, "Lete vs go se oure felowes that be seke;" and
thei wente a-noon, and with hem many a knyght; and whan
thei wiste it was the kynge thei wolde haue risen to haue gon
a-geins hym; but the kynge hem so surprised that he wolde
not suffre hem to a-rise, and blamed hem for the folye that thei
hadde don; and thei seide thei myght hem not with-holde, and
thei wiste not how it com, and than the kynge delyuered hem
leches to couer theire woundes; and they bad the kynge be not
dismayed, for with-ynne viij dayes thei sholde be hooll and
sounde, so that thei myght bere armes and ride at hir own will;
and than the kynge comaunded hem to god, and seide to hem
at his departinge that as soone as thei were hooll thei sholde
come after hym to playns of Salisbery, "ffor I go now," quod
the kynge, "and ther shall be moche peple and grete
assemble."  With that the kynge departed, and com in to the halle, and
fonde knyghtes I-nowe that wolde haue sette a turnement as
many for as many a-gein the Quenes knyghtes, for that sir
Gawein was not there, and for to a-venge theire felowes that
were wounded; and the quene hem diffended, and seide that thei
spake a-boute nought, ffor neuer shull ye haue turnement oon
agein another, and ther-fore I pray yow for the feith that ye
owe to my lorde and me, that neuer ye ther-of speke till that
I comaunde;" and they seiden that neuer more wolde thei speke
ther-of seth that she dide it comaunde, and at euensonge tyme
the kynge comaunded that alle men sholde hem appareile on
horse bakke, and on foote alle that myght armes bere, ffor on
the morowe erly wolde he ride toward the plain of Salisbery,
where-as the comounte of the peple sholde assemble; and as
soone as the kynge hadde comaunded, thei made hem redy in the
beste wise thei myght <CHOICE><CORR>for</CORR><SIC>fo</SIC></CHOICE> to go on that grete nede: knyght,
and squyer, and burgeise; and than a-roos soche brut and soche

<PB REF="" N="575" ID="pb.575"/>

noyse thourgh the town that men myght haue herde it half a
myle, and on the morowe com the kynge Ban and the kynge
Bohors, and the kynge Arthur, and the quene, and alle that
euer ther were assembled rode forth v dayes hool er thei com
to the plain of Salesbiry, ffor thei made but smale iourneyes;
and whan thei were come, thei loigge a-monge theire owne peple,
and kay the stiward hadde brought the grete baner wherof
the champe was white as snowe, and the dragon was a-boue
the crosse, ffor thus comaunded Merlin; and whan the kinge
was loged he ledde his companye in grete myrthe and ioye,
and a-bode ther the Princes, and the peple com on alle parties
out of many a contre.</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="205a" UNIT="folio"/>    Renomee that thourgh the worlde renneth wente so
thourgh the contrey, that the saisnes it wisten by
theire esspies, that thei hadde thourgh the contrey, that brought
tidinges to the sege at Clarence, that the peple of the londe and
the contrey assembleden on the playns of Salesbiry, but thei
knewe not whiche wey thei sholde ride; and the kynge
hardogabran sente for his xix kynges, and thei com to hym a-noon,
and than he tolde to hem his aspies hadde hym brought tidinges
how the cristin made assemble in the plain of Salisbiry, and
ther-fore he asked her counseile; and thei seide it were best
to wacche well her hoste bothe be day and be nyght that thei
were not surprised in slepinge, ffor by day light hadde thei no
drede of all the peple of the londe, ffor thei hadde so grete
multitude of peple that thei thought noon myght a-gein hem
endure.  But for all the seide thei "we rede that alle oure
peple holde, and we holde vs to-geder, and that noon go no
more on forrey fro hens-forth with-oute xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men at armes,
or mo, so that yef thei be mette that thei be not founde oute of
aray, and ye knowe well that in all this londe that is so longe
and brode is not the fourthe part of peple that we haue," and
in the fin thei acorded to this counseile that thei sholde alle
holde hem to-geder and make gode wacche; and than repaired
the xix kynges to theire tentes, and so departed in soche maner
and appareiled hem full well, and comaunded alle hem that


<PB REF="" N="576" ID="pb.576"/>

were vnther theire Iustice, that eche man sholde euer be redy
and make goode wacche; and thei lete this be knowen at the
sege of Valdesbiry, and made hem alle to leve the sege, and
com alle to the sege be-fore Clarence, and so ther was so grete
assemble and so huge that the sege aboute the Cite dured v
myle of lengthe, and the herberowes lasted fer.  But now lete
vs leve the saisnes, and tell how the princes com to the playn
of Salesbiry oon after another eche by hym-self.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.29">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXIX. 
<LB/>PARLIAMENT OF THE PRINCES AT SALISBURY; THEIR HOMAGE TO ARTHUR; AND DEFEAT OF THE SAXONS.

</HEAD>
<P>  Here seith the storye that so spedde hem the Princes after
the Parliament that was take of the trewys that thei
be meved to come towarde the plain of Salesbiry wele appareiled
as soche myghty princes ought for to do; the firste prince that
com in to the plain of Salesbiry was the Duke Escam of
Cambenyk, and brought in his companye vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes
well a-raied of alle maner thinges, and thei hem loigged streite
and clos to-geder, and renged in tentes and pavelouns; after
that com the kynge Tradilyuans of North-walys with vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men
of armes vpon stedis of pris, for thei hadde a riche contrey
and a plentevous of alle godes, and thei loigged hem next the
Duke Escam vpon the playn; after hym com the kynge de
Cent chiualers with x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men wele a-raied, and loigged next
after; and than com the kynge Clarion of Northumbirlonde
that was a feire knyght, and a wise and bolde and hardy, and
in his companye viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and hem dide condite with a baner
as white as snowe ther-in a reade crosse, and soche baners hadde
all thei that com thider, and these hem loigged; after hym
  <MILESTONE N="205b" UNIT="folio"/>com the kynge Belynans of South walis that was brother to
kynge Tradilyuaunt, and with hym x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and he hadde
grete desire to se his sone Dodinell le sauage that he loved so


<PB REF="" N="577" ID="pb.577"/>

well, and loigged hym by the kynge Clarion that was so gentill
and curteise.  After hym com the kynge Carados of Strangore
that was a felowe of the rounde table of hem that were firste
founded; but after the discorde fill be-twene Arthur and the
princes neuer after wolde he be at the rounde table; and he
brought with hym x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and loigged hym by the kynge
Belynans that was a good man; and than he asked yef the
kynge Arthur were come, ffor hym thought longe to se his
thre nevewes that were with Arthur, and that oon was Aglins
des vaus, and the tother kay destranx and the thridde kehedin
le petitz; but at that tyme was not the kynge Arthur I-comen,
but he taried not longe after; and after the kynge Carados com
the kynge Brangores, and brought in his companye x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men,
and loigged hym by the kynge Carados, and sore he desired to
se hys wifes nevew that was in the court of kynge Arthur,
ffor that he herde hym preised and comended of merveilouse
bewte and valour, and his name was Segramor of
Costantynnoble; after the kynge Brangore com Mynoras the Senescall of
the kynge lak of the grete ynde that the kynge lak hadde
sente only for the love of god for to haue the pardon that the
legat hadde graunted and proclaymed thourgh all cristindom,
and brought in his companye vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men well araied; after hym
com the kynge Pelles of lytenoys with vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that his stiward
brought for the love of oure lorde, and thei were richely armed
and horsed, and hem dide condite Pellynaus the stiwarde that
was a full proude knyght, and he hym loged next Mynoras;
after hym com the Senescall of the kynge Pellynour of the
waste londes, and he brought vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that the kynge Pellynour
sente for the love of Ihesu Criste, and loigged by the peple of
kynge Pellynaus; after hym com the Senescall of the kynge
Alein of the forayn londes that was brother to the kynge
Pellynour, and he brought vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and loigged hym by the peple
of kynge Pellynor; after hym com Galehaut, the sone of the
feire Geaunt that was lorde of the fer oute ylles, and brought
in his company x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and he com only for the love of Ihesu
crist; after hym com Aguygneron, a merveilouse knyght, and

<PB REF="" N="578" ID="pb.578"/>

was Senescall to Clameden the kynge of the yles; and this
kynge sente thider vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men for the love of Ihesu criste, and he
loigged next Galehaut; after hym com the kynge Cleolas that
after was cleped firste conquered kynge, and in his company
vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and he loigged next Aguygueron, the Senescall of
Clamedien.  But this kynge Cleolas hadde but litill tyme be
ther whan hym be-hoved to go thens for grete sekenesse, and
lefte his peple to Guyonce his Senescall that was a goode man
and a noble knyght; after hym com the Senescall of Sorloys
for the love of god only, and with hym vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and his name
was Margoundes, and he loigged hym by the Duke Belyas; and
than   <MILESTONE N="206a" UNIT="folio"/>com the kynge Arthur and hym loigged; and Merlin
com to hym, and seide in counseile, "Sir, now be-holde what
oure lorde doth for yow, and for to saue youre peple, moche
ought ye hym honoure and yelde graces with goode herte whan
he thus you socoured and helpeth in soche nede."  "Merlin,"
quod the kynge, "oure lorde foryeteth not his Synner; and he
hath <SUPPLIED>shewed</SUPPLIED> me yet hidyr-to that he hath me not for-yeten, and
yet I truste to his mercy he will shewe me better than he hath
don yet, ffor I haue in hym full by-leve, and all my truste,
In so moche that I putt <SUPPLIED>me</SUPPLIED> in his volunte whiche for his grete
mercy and pite haue me in his kepinge bothe body and soule."</P>
<P>  "The goode by-leve," quod Merlin, "that ye haue in
oure lorde Jhesu, hath yow moche a-vailed and yet
shall ther-of haue ye no doute, wherfore I rede yow kepe
stedfastly in that purpos while ye lyve, ffor while ye be in
godes purpos shull ye haue the victorie of your enmyes."
"Merlin," quod the kynge, "I be-seche oure lorde suffre me
neuer to departe fro his creaunce, but that I may holde it in
soche maner that I yelde hym my soule whan it shall departe
from the body;" and Merlin seide, "Amen.  But now moste ye
take goode hede <SUPPLIED>how</SUPPLIED> ye shull yow demene a-gein this baronye
that is here assembled for to diffende the cristin feith, and to
chace this mysbelevinge peple oute of youre londe."  "Merlin,"
quod the kynge, "I will do euen in all thinge as ye will
counseile, for with-oute yow I can nought do, and therefore I


<PB REF="" N="579" ID="pb.579"/>

putte me in god and in yow."  "Sir," seide Merlin, "I wolde
ye dide ioy and honour these lordes that here be assemled to
diffende youre reame, and goth to theire tentes eche by
hym-self, and thanke hem for the socour that thei haue brought;
and in speciall hem that of yow nothinge holden ne be not
youre men, but beth come in reverence and worshippe of god;
ffor neuer shewde oure lorde so grete honour to no prince,
ffor ther is no kynge born that euer assemblede so feire a
companye wher-ynne were so many noble men and goode
knyghtes.  Ne neuer ther shall be so many goode knyghtes
to-geder assembled be-fore that the fader shall sle the sone and
the sone the fader, and that shall be in this same place, and to
hym shall remayne the londe of the grete breteigne with-outen
lorde, and with-outen heir."  Whan the kynge herde Merlin
so speke, that in the same place the fader sholde sle the sone,
and the sone sle the fader, and the londe of the grete breteigne
a-bide with-outen heir and lordles, he hym prayed and requyred
to telle a partye of that more clerly to his vndirstondinge; and
Merlin seide it was not to be seide, "but I shall telle yow so
moche after this iourney shall come the lyon vn-crowned, and
bringe with hym foure lyouns wher-of tweyne shull be crowned,
and the thirdde is with-oute crowne; these shull devoure the
shrewde ligne of the reame of logres.  But aske me no more,"
quod Merlin, "but goth to the barouns as I haue yow seide."
"I shall so with goode chere," seide the kynge.</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="206b" UNIT="folio"/>    A noon the kynge lepe on his horse and ledde with hym
the kynge Ban of benoyk, and the kynge Bohors of
Gannes, and kay, and Segramor, and Ewein, and Galashin, and
Galescoude, and Merlin.  These ix com to the lordes to theire
tentes, and whan thei knewe the comynge of kynge Arthur,
thei com oute of theire tentes to mete hym, and the kynge
and his companye a-light on foote, and salewed hem alle eche
by hym-self, and thanked hem hertely of that thei were come
to helpe hym in that grete nede a-gein the saisnes that thourgh
theire vntrouth and felonye hadde distroied his londe, and
haue also disire to distroie all cristin peple.


<PB REF="" N="580" ID="pb.580"/>
</P>
<P>  "Sir," seide the lordes, "thei shull neuer haue ther-to
power ne force, ffor to helpe holy chirche, and yow
to diffende we be come and here assembled, and we will put
oure bodyes in auenture of deth for to encrece holy chirche
and the cristin feith to mayntene, and be the grace of oure lorde
we shull do so moche er we departe oute of youre companye
that holy cherche shall haue the victorye, and the saisnes shull
haue the shame and the damage, and we will that ye wete that
we be not youre men, ne neuer we hilde nought of yow, but we
be come propirly for the love of god, and for to diffende holy
chirche."  "God yow quyte," seide the kynge Arthur, "in
whos honour and reuerence ye it don, and bringe yow alle wele
to youre repeire as he is al-myghty."  "Amen," seide the
lordes, "and be it so as ye wolde."  Now reste a-while of
Arthur and Merlin, and of the straunge lordes that be come
hym for to helpe, and I shall telle yow of the xij princes that
be alle assembled at the tente of kynge looth.</P>
<P>  Whan the xij princes were come in to the plain of
Salisbiry, thei wente alle to thanke the straunge princes
of that thei were come for to diffende the londe from the hethen
peple for the love of oure lorde god, and whan thei hadde this
don, thei assembled alle at the tente of kynge looth, and satte
down on a cowche that was covered with a cloth of silke, and
spake of oo thinge and othir, and while thei were thus sette,
entrid Merlin in to the tente, and as soone as thei saugh hym
come, thei a-ros alle and wente to mete hym, and seide he was
welcome; and he preide god yeve hem good a-uenture and
grace to do so that it myght be savacion to theire soules, and
honour to theire soules, and honour to theire bodyes; and
that by hem myght holy chirche be diffended and caste oute
of the power of her enmyes that by force were entred, "and it
shall be mayntened, but yef it reste in yowre deffaute."  "In
vs," seide the Barons, "shall no defaute be founden, for we
be come hider it to diffende."  "Trewly," seide Merlyn, "the
damage is full grete, but it is so be-falle that bothe prevy and
straunge be here assembled for othinge and for oquarell, and

<PB REF="" N="581" ID="pb.581"/>

well ought ye be reson a grete mater to bringe to ende be so
that ye be of oon acorde, and of oon will, ffor other-wise may
ye not spede, and good it were that ther were pees be-twene
yow and my lorde the kynge Arthur which ought to be youre
lorde, and so sholde ye be the more dredde and douted thourgh
euery londe."</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="207a" UNIT="folio"/>    At this worde stode vp the kynge looth of Orcanye, and
seide, "Lordes, Merlin seith wele, ffor it were grete
honour to god and the worlde at this pointe, yef ye wolde
acorde yow with hym."  With these wordes the kynge Vrien
a-roos full wroth, and stode vpon his feet full angry, and seide
to the kynge looth, "Ye haue made vs to com hider by trewys
till we hadde distroied the saisnes and chaced oute of the
contrey, and than yef it were oure honour than myght we do
as our hertes vs bar, and ye now wolde vs meve with other
materes and tales other weyes, and ther-fore we pray yow and
requyre speke no more ther-of; ffor as for me I shall it neuer
do.  I wrote neuer what these other will do, but yef thei it
ought do I shall sey thei be for-sworn a-gein me."  "Certes,"
seide the kynge Ventres, "I will not <CHOICE><CORR>be</CORR><SIC>be be</SIC></CHOICE>   for-sworn, for I will
not do with-oute youre counseile;" and so seide alle the other,
and ther-fore was the kynge looth full wroth, but he moste
nede suffre, and so he seide no more at that tyme; and Merlin
be-gan to smyle and seide, "Ffeire lordes, be not wroth ne
angry, for the wratthe were nothinge good at this tyme."</P>
<P>  While thei entended a-boute this talkinge, com the kynge
Arthur, and the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors,
and the straunge princes with hem, and saugh the xij princes
that were at the teinte of kynge looth; and as soone as the
kynge looth hym saugh, he lepe on his feet and seide, "Lo,
here cometh my lorde;" and a-noon the princes hem dressed
in honour and reuerence to hym, for that he was a kynge sacred
and a-noynted; and the kynge Arthur that was full curteise
and wise, and wele knewe what was for to do, hath hem


<PB REF="" N="582" ID="pb.582"/>

salewed first er thei were alle risen vp, and seide, "Welcome
was al the companye;" and thei ansuerde alle attonys that
god yeve hym goode a-uenture and alle his companye, and than
he satte down vpon the kynge loothis cowche; and the kynge
Arthur made hem alle to sitte down by hym as he that was
the curteisest man of the worlde and beste taught; and than
he seide, "Feire lordinges, I thanke yow alle hertely that ye
be come hider at this tyme as I haue yow required for the
profite of holy chirche, and the peple and youre londes to
diffende, and warant a-gein the felon saisnes that haue a grete
parte brente and distroide, and our peple slain and maymed,
and for that ye be come at my request, I thanke yow hertely
alle, and goode it were yow to a-raye in soche maner that we
were not surprised ne blamed.  Ne that the saisnes may not
sein a-monge theym that thei haue vs founde foles ne musardes."
"Sir," seide the kynge looth, "as of apparailinge be-hoveth
Merlyn to devise, ffor he shall comaunde, and we shull do his
comaundement; ffor he knoweth better what we shull do than
we knowe oure-self;" and the princes seide that ther-to acorde
thei well, and so thei putte the rule all to Merlin, and
ther-with lefte the speche; and the kynge   <MILESTONE N="207b" UNIT="folio"/>Arthur repeired hem
to his teinte, and alle the princes hym conveyed bothe prive
and straunge, and after eche of hem repeired to his pavelon;
and the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and Merlin entred
in to the chambre of Arthurs Pavelon, and than seide Merlin
in counseile, "Ffeire lordes, these peple that be comen here
ben wery of traueile, ffor some ther be that be come right ferre,
and thei haue nede of reste and ese, and therfore will I that
thei reste to-day and to-morowe, and on monday by goode
distyne we shall meve alle to go towarde Clarence, for ther is
the moste plente of saisnes, ffor thei that were at the sege of
Valdisbery be ther alle assembled, and I shall do euery prince
to wite by hym-self that thei be appareilled the same day to
meve and to go vpon theire enmyes."  To this counseile called
the thre kynges sir Gawein with hem, and seiden alle be it so
in the honour of Ihesu criste and his moder Marie, and than


<PB REF="" N="583" ID="pb.583"/>

thei departed from this counseile, and com to the maister
pavelon and ther a-bide.  Than com Elizer, Gaweins squyer,
and kneled down be-fore sir Gawein, and seide, "Sir, I am
come oute of lytenoys, and lefte the kynge Pelles my fader for
to seche yow, and by the will of oure lorde I fonde yow in
soche place that but god hadde sente yow thider I moste haue
ben deed; but the grete prowesse of yow rescowed me from the
saisnes that me wolde haue putte to deth, and ther-fore I knowe
well that the renomee that renneth of yow thourgh the worlde
is trewe, and I knowe also verily that of a more worthi man
than ye myght I not take my garnementes wher-fore I pray
yow and requyre of youre grete fraunchise that ye make me
knyght.  So that I may prove my firste chiualrye vpon these
false mysbelevinge peple that thus desire for to destroye holy
chirche, ffor I shall neuer be knyght of all my lif tyme, but
I it resceyve of youre hande, and ye it me promysed the firste
day that I yow saugh that ye shull me yeve armes at my
request, and I yow require be-fore my lorde the kynge youre
vncle that is here be-fore this baronye."  Whan sir Gawein
saugh Elizer his squyer be-fore hym on his kne, he a-reised
hym vp be the armes, and seide swetely, "Dere frende, I
graunte youre request, ffor ye be full digne to resceyve the
ordre of chiualrie, and ther-fore all youre will shall be
performed."  "Sir," seide the yonge lorde, "gramercy."  Than
sir Gawein be-helde and saugh Gaheries his brother, and seide,
"Feire brother, do ordeyne me armes soche as is a fieraunt for
a kynges sone, and to so noble and worthi a man as is this."
"What is he than feire nevewe," seide Arthur.  "Sir," seide
Gawein, "it is the sone of kynge Pelles of lytenoys, and is
nevewe to the kynge pellenor and to the kynge Alain, and
wite ye well yef he lyve he shall be oon of the beste knyghtes
of the worlde."  Than he tolde the kynge of the grete occision
and the merveile that he hadde sein hym do of the saisnes;
and whan the kynge it herde he hadde grete wonder how so
yonge a childe myght endure so grete dede of armes, and the
two kynges ther-of were gretly astonyed; and the kynge Arthur

<PB REF="" N="584" ID="pb.584"/>

comaunded to   <MILESTONE N="208a" UNIT="folio"/>Gaheries that he sholde do be brought the
richest armes that myght be founde in his cofers, "and the beste
swerde after myn owne."  "Sir," seide Elizer, "I haue armes
and horse and al thinge that is to me mystier."  Than he
cleped lydonas his squyer and badde hym bringe his armes
that his fader hadde hym yoven, and lydonas dide his
comaundement as he that was ioyfull and Gladde, and brought hem
be-fore the kynge and the other barouns that hem be-hielde for
merveile, ffor thei were alle white saf a bende of golde enbelynk,
and his hauberke was stronge and well holdinge of double
mayle.  And ther-to it was so light that a childe of ix yere
myght it bere, and arthur preysed it moche, and the other
barouns whan thei it saugh; and sir Gawein armed Elizer, and
Gaheries dide hym helpe, and dide on his hauberk that was of
grete bounte that in all the hoste was not the pareile.  Than
thei laced his aventaile that was as white as snowe, and whan
he was all apareiled, sir Gawein dide on his right spore and
girde his swerde on his side, and Gaheries dide on his lefte
spore; and whan he was thus araied sir Gawein yaf hym the
a-colee, and seide full debonerly as he that was the moste
deboner knyght of the worlde.  "Holde, feire swete frende, and
resceyve the ordre of chiualrie in the name of Ihesu crist oure
savioure, that in soche maner lete yow it mayntene that it be
to the profite of holy cherche and youre honoure."  "Sir,"
seide Elizer, "so graunte me oure lorde to his pleisier."</P>
<P>  Whan sir Gawein hadde a-doubbed Elizer, the sone of
kynge pelles of lytenoys, and toke hym a-noon
Guehet a Gaheries, and ledde hym in to the kynges chapell for to
wake, and thei bar hym companye till on the morowe that thei
hadde herde masse, and than thei returned to the court of kynge
Arthur that made grete ioye to Elizer; ffor he satte that day
at the kynges table be-twene the kynge Ban and the kynge
Bohors, and after mete their dide reise a quyntayn on the plain,
and these yonge bachelers yede hem to prove, and so dide the
knyghtes of the rounde table and other, and that day was many
feire strokes yoven with speres; and Elizer dide so well that


<PB REF="" N="585" ID="pb.585"/>

moche was he comended, and seide neuer hadde <CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> sein a
feirer Iustere with spere; and the knyghtes of the rounde table
wolde galdly haue taken a turnement a-gein other straunge
knyghtes that were come in the hoste; but the kynge Arthur
wolde it not suffre, for he douted that some sholde ben hurt,
and therfore was it lefte, and repeired hem to their teintes
gladde and myry.</P>
<P>  Than com Merlin to the kynge Arthur, and seide, "Sir,
ther is no more but euery man hym appareile and
make redy, for to morowe erly be-houeth vs to meve, and loke
that ye lete noon knowe whiche wey ye shull ride; but folowe
me ouerall whider that I shall yow lede, and so shall I sey
to alle the princes that thei be redy at the poynte of day for
to ride."  "Merlin," seide the kynge, "all be it at youre
volunte, ffor I putt me all hooll in god and yow;" and than
wente Merlin to the pavelons of the princes, and tolde oon
after   <MILESTONE N="208b" UNIT="folio"/>another in counseile to be redy to ride erly on the
morowe, and thei lete trusse teintes and pavilouns and alle her
other harneys and cartes, and charietes, and somers, cofers, and
malis, and lepe armed vpon theire stedes as hir bodyes to diffende
and her enmyes to assaile, saf only of sheldes, and speres, and
helmes that thei made theire squyers bere be-fore, and made
the baners to be bore all white, and eche hadde a reade crosse
in the myddell, and so hadde Merlin comaunded to all the
princes at the be-gynnynge of theire comynge; and Merlin
rode on a grete grey courser and bar the baner of kynge Arthur
be-fore all the hoste, and thus thei departed alle in this maner
from the playn of Salisbiry, and wente alle as Merlin dide
hem gide the streight wey toward Clarence, that the kinge
hardogobrand hadde be-seged and with hym xix kynges that
alle his londe hadde environed, and he hadde sente his forriours
<CHOICE><CORR>thurgh</CORR><SIC>thugh</SIC></CHOICE> the londe a xx myle or xxx that distroied and wasted
the contrey; and a partie of the forreyours com by the Cite of
Garlot that was the Chief forteresse of the kynge ventre, and
were in that companye foure myghty kynges, and with hem
grete plente of saisnes that hadde sesed prayes by strengthe,


<PB REF="" N="586" ID="pb.586"/>

and hadde do grete harme in the contrey and in esspeciall to
hem of the town, ffor thei were come oute to hem to bateile
for to rescowe the pray, and ther was grete slaughter of oon
and other, but thei of Garlot myght not endure, ffor ther were
of the saisnes grete force, so that thei of the town loste the
pray and theire horse, and the moste parte of theire chiualrie;
and the foure kynges swor that thei wolde neuer departe thens
er thei hadde take the town, and the Quene that was
with-ynne saugh the sege leide, and hadde grete drede to be taken
by force, and toke counseile of hir stiward what were beste for
hir to do, and hir stiward yaf hir counseile to go oute by nyght
thei tweyne sooll by hem-self, by a posterne that opened a-gein
the river, and sholde go to a-nother place of theires that was
thens vj myle, that was cleped the rescouse, for that Vortiger
was rescowed whan Aungis the saisne was slain and chaced
oute of the place.</P>
<P>  Euen as the quene and the stiward hadde devised thei diden,
ffor thei wente oute a-boute mydnyght, and hadde no
mo in her companye but two squyers.  But the saisnes that
were maliciouse hadde sette espies on euery side of the town,
and so was the Quene taken and the stiward slain, whereof was
grete harme, and the squyers fledden, and were wounded sore,
ffor that oon was smyten thourgh the body with a spere, and
the tother on the heed with a swerde, and so thei wente as
a-uenture hem brought to the hoste that Merlin ledde, and thei
stinte neuer of goinge till thei herde hem a foure myle from
Garlot; and whan the squyers saugh the comynge of the hoste
and parceyved the white baners with the reade crosses, thei
knewe wele that thei were cristin and dressed hem that wey,
and made the grettest dolour of the worlde; and whan Merlin,
that com all be-fore, herde hem make soche doell, he asked hem
what thei eiled, and thei hym tolde all   <MILESTONE N="209a" UNIT="folio"/>as was be-fallen, and
how the saisnes ledde a-wey the Quene, "and whiche wey wente
thei," seide Merlin.  "Sir," seide thei, "she is yet in the
hoste, but the pray goth by the cauchie;" and Merlin cried,
"Sewe me, ffor the Quene shall thei not lede yef god will."


<PB REF="" N="587" ID="pb.587"/>

Than he spored his horse and sir Gawein after, and Elizer, and
the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors his brother, and ech had in
his hande a stronge spere, and leonce of Paierne condited the
peple of Benoyk; and Dionas theym of Gannes, and Gracien
hem of Orcanye, and Dorilas condited the peple of kynge Ventre,
and the other batailes com alle in ordre, and Merlin rode so
till that he com <CHOICE><CORR>downward</CORR><SIC>donward</SIC></CHOICE> of an hill, and than they saugh the
pray that passed at the bregge, and ther were well a foure
thousande saisnes; and whan Gawein saugh hem come, he seide
now may we a-bide to longe.  Than he spored the Gringalet,
and than seide Elizer, "Sir suffre and a-bide for guerdon of
my seruise and for all frendship, and graunte me the firste
stroke of the bateile, ffor I entred neuer in to no stour seth
I was knyght."  "And I it yow graunte," quod sir Gawein,
all in laughynge, "for in yow it is right well employde."</P>
<P>  With that Elizer hem a-scride, and seide, "Lete be the
pray, ffor ye shall it no ferther lede;" and than com
Dioglus that was the stiward of the kynge Magloras, and turned
the heed of his horse, and he and Elizer mette with speres
vpon the sheldes so harde that thei perced vpon the bokeles,
and Dioglus brake his spere, and Elizer hym smote so harde
that he shof the spere thourgh the breste, and caste hym down
deed to the erthe, and his spere ther-with fly in peces.  Than
he drough his swerde and launced in a-monge the other that
sore hem peyned to passe the pray, and smote so Antidolus
that was stiward to the kynge Brandon that he slitte hym down
to the teth; and Gawein seide to Merlin that he hadde wele
be-gonne as of a newe knyght.  "Ye," qoud Merlin, "yet
shall he do better."  With that Merlin cried the signe of kynge
Arthur, and than spronge forth Gawein and his companye
a-monge the forreyours that many were there slain and wounded;
and thei be-hoved to forsake place and fledde toward Garlot
where the kynge Magloras was, and the kynge Brandon, and the
kynge Pynsonars, and the kynge Pignores that right vigerously
assailed the Castell, and thei were full wroth whan thei saugh
her men com fleinge, and lefte the assaut and com to theym that

<PB REF="" N="588" ID="pb.588"/>

fledde; and whan thei saugh the hoste comynge thei merveiled
fro whens so moche peple myght come.  Neuertheles thei sette
in a-monge hem for thei were moche peple and stronge, and the
cristin hem resceyved full fiercely, and made the saisnes for to
resorte a-gein a spere lengthe; and whan the foure kynges
that were hethen saugh sir Gawein and the kynge Ban, and
the kynge Bohors, and Elizer make of her men so grete slaughter,
thei ascride her men, and be-gonne to sle horse, and men, and
knyghtes as thei were wode, ffor thei were Geauntes, and the
strengest peple of the worlde; and thei made the peple of kynge
Ban and kynge Bohors to blush vpon the peple of kynge Ventre,
and vpon the bateile of the Duke Escam of Cambenyk, and
ther   <MILESTONE N="209b" UNIT="folio"/>suffred sir Gawein, and the kynge Ban, and his brother,
and Elizer many sharpe strokes, and full sore were thei greved;
and whan these two bateiles were come on, ther myght men
se merveiles don of armes, and sore were the saisnes greved
at that enuay, ffor many there were of hem leide to the
grounde.  But the kynge Brandon and the kynge Pyncenars dide grete
merveiles bothe with theire bodyes and theire meyne that were
full bolde and hardy; ffor after theire strokes a-bode but fewe
cristin in sadell, and so were thei of the grete Bretigne sore
a-basshed, ffor thei made hem alle resorte bakke hadde not be
the grete prowesse of sir Gawein, and Elizer, and the kynge
Ban and his brother, and the kynge Ventre of Garlot, and the
Duke Escam of Cambenyk; and neuertheles Grascien, and
Pharien, and Dorilas, and leonce of Paerne dide so wele that
thei ought to haue no blame; and Merlin that rode fro oo renge
to a-nother ascride hem often "ore auaunt;" and while thei
were in this angwyssh the kynge Pignores cleped xl saisnes
of the beste and moste hardy, and comaunded hem to take
the Quene of Garlot, and lede hir to the sege of Clarence,
and presente hir to the kynge hardogobran, and these seide
thei sholde do his comaundement, and departed and ride forth
the streight wey to Clarence, and ledde with hem the quene
that grete doell made for the a-uenture that was hir
befallen.


<PB REF="" N="589" ID="pb.589"/>
</P>
<P>  After that the kynge Pignoras smote in to the stour with
his swerde in honde, and be-gan to yeve soche strokes
that noon armure hym myght endure.  So that the moste hardy
douted hym to meten, for he smote down horse and men so
thikke that the moste hardy made hym wey, till that Gawein
that to euery nede was nygh it a-parceyved, and saugh the
grete harme that he dide of her peple, and seide to hym-self
yef this feende lyve eny while we may moche lese.  This worde
vndirstode Elizer that kepte hym euer nygh Gawein and smote
his horse with spores thider as he saugh Pignoras that hadde
all his arme be-soiled with blode and brayne of hem that he
hadde slayn; and whan Elizer saugh the harme that he dide,
he seide to hym-self, "Certes, it were to vs grete harme yef this
deuell lyve longe, what mysauenture hath he be suffred so
longe;" and than he drough ner and leide his reyne in his
sadilbowe, and threwe his shelde at his bakke and ficched hym
in his stiropes, and caught his swerde in bothe handes, and
smote the kynge Pignores thourgh the helme that nother coyf
ne helme myght hym warant till that the suerdes egge touched
hys brayn, and he drough a-gein hys suerde and Pignoras fill
down to grounde; and whan Merlyn hym saugh falle, he seide
to sir Gawein, "This hath take with vs trewys."  "Ye,"
quod Gawein, "god kepe vs that knyght that is so worthi;"
and than thei smyte vpon the saisnes that be sorowfull and
wroth for the deth of Pignores, and so dide theire other felowes
that sore thei harmed the saisnes.  But a-bove alle other dide
sir Gawein wele, and Elizer, and the kynge Ban of Benoyk,
and the kynge Bohors of Gannes,   <MILESTONE N="210a" UNIT="folio"/>and leonce of Paierne, and
Grascien of Trebes, and Pharien, for thei were not yet assembled
but v bateiles.  But tho that were assembled dide wonder wele,
for a-gein theire strokes myght endure nother Iren ne stiell;
and whan the kynge Pyncenars, that was bolde and hardy, saugh
his peple so a-peire, he seide he hadde leuer dye but Pignores
were a-venged, and he hilde a swerde in his right hande, and
ran in to the presse where he saugh it thikkest, and be-gan
to throwe down all that he raught, and slough a knyght of the


<PB REF="" N="590" ID="pb.590"/>

reame of Benoyk, that wele hadde don in armes all the day;
and tho the kynge Ban was nygh wood for Ire, and spronge
that wey with his swerde vp teysed to hym that hadde his
knyght slayn, and smote hym with so grete ire that he slitte
hym to the teth, and that was a thinge that hym moste
discounforte all the day, the deth of his knyght, and than thei
closed the saisnes rounde a-boute, and the bateile was grete and
horible, ffor the Bretouns were noble knyghtes; and whan
Merlin saugh the hostes were assemled on bothe sides, he
cleped Gawein, and Elizer, and the kynge Ban, and the kynge
Bohors, and tolde hem how xl saisnes ledde the quene of Garlot
to the sege of Clarence, "and yef thei lede hir thider it will
turne to reprof, and therfore I rede we go after."  "Now
ride," quod Gawein, "and we shull yow sue."  Than Merlin
rode forth his weye, and well an hundred knyghtes in his
companye; ffor thei douted to meten with moo peple on som
part.  But shull we speke of the xl saisnes that ledde the
Quene of Carlot that was the wif of kynge Ventre.</P>
<P>  Whan the xl saisnes were past the bateile two myle, thei
entred in to a wode, where-ynne was a feire medowe
and a welle springe, and thei turned that wey hem for to a-kele
and drinke of the clier water, and a-lighten with the quene
be-fore the welle, that made the grettest doel of the worlde,
and thei myght not hir conforte for nothinge that thei cowde
do; but she cried with lowde steuen, "Haa, kynge Ventres,
this day shall departe the love of me and of yow; ffor I trowe
yow neuer to se no more;" and than she swowned in theire
armes that hir hilde, and whan she was oute of his swownynge
she cried and made grete sorowe, and the saisnes were ther-of
doelfull and wolde well she hadde be in place that she hadde
liked beste, and counforted his moche, but ther-of was no nede;
ffor she braied and cried lowde, so that Gawein and his
companye it herde clierly, and turned thider her wey, and saugh
the knyghtes and the Quene that cried so lowede.</P>
<P>  Whan Gawein saugh his aunte, he spored his horse and
seide to the saisnes, "Ffeire lordes, lete be the Quene,

<PB REF="" N="591" ID="pb.591"/>

and go youre wey quyte, ffor I can yow good thanke for that
ye haue of hir pite, and gramercy for that curtesie."  Whan
Margouns the botiller of kynge Pignores herde sir Gawein thus
speke, he asked of his felowes what was her rede, and thei
seide thei hadde leuer to dye than leve the Quene.  "And to
that ar ye come a-noon," quod Gawein.  Than he ran to hem
with swerde drawen, and smote so the firste that he mette that
the heed fill on the grene   <MILESTONE N="210b" UNIT="folio"/>be-fore his aunte, and the saisnes
sterte vp a-noon, and the myschef was grete, for that thei were
on foote, and neuertheles thei slough bothe horse and knyghtes,
for thei were of grete prowesse, but ther-of myght not a-vaile,
for alle were thei deed, that nought oon ascaped, saf only
Margons the botiller that hidde hym in a bussh, and sir Gawein
and his companye com a-gein to the Quene, and counforted hir
swetly, and she hem asked what thei were.  "Madame," he
seide, "I am Gawein, youre nevewe, the sone of kynge looth
of Orcanye, and this lorde that is here is the kynge Ban of
Benoyk, and these other kyghtes ben oure felowes."  Whan
the lady this vndirstode she was gladde, and thanked hem
hertely of the socour, and than thei sette hir on a palfrey that
thider was brought, and returned to the hoste where-as was
the kynge Arthur and the other princes fightinge; and many
of her frendes loste the cristin er the saisnes myght be
discounfited.  Whan Arthur hadde slain Magloras the kinge that
was the sustenement of the saisnes, and the kynge looth hadde
smyte of the hande of the kynge Syuarus, than fledde thei alle;
and whan sir Gawein and his companye were returned, the
hoste enchased the saisnes so nygh euer at the spore; and
Brandons returned often, and he ne smote noon a right stroke,
but he were ther-with a-noon deed; and whan sir Gawein saugh
hym so demene, and saugh the grete slaughter that he made of
the peple, he thought wele that he was som high lorde of grete
lynage, and wele it shewed by his armes that he were a kynge
or a prince, and Gawein preised hym moche in his herte, and
fain wolde he hadde be cristin yef it myght haue be, and seide,
"Knyght, thow art right bolde and full of grete hardynesse, art


<PB REF="" N="592" ID="pb.592"/>

thow Duke or kynge that hast in the soche valour and strength?"
"In feith," quod he, "my name is Brandouns, and am kynge
of a partye of Saxoyne, and am nevew to the richest kynge of
all the world, that is the kynge hardogabrant, that is chief
lorde of all Saxonie."  "Certes," seide Gawein, "it semeth
well, for in the is grete valour and high prowesse, and it is
grete harme that thow art no cristin, and fain I wolde that
thow so were to respite the fro deth."  "Of that," quod the
kynge, "that thow spekest haue I merveile, for I haue lever
to be deed than to be cristin."  To that shalt thow come
hastely," quod Gawein, "and that me repenteth sore, ffor
moche wolde I love thy companye yef it the liked."  "Hit
shall neuer me plese," quod Brandouns; and whan Gawein that
herde, he ran vpon hym full Irousely, and smote hym so with
Calibourne his good swerde that the heed clef a-sondre; and
whan the saisnes saugh theire lorde deed, thei were sore
dismayed; and after that in hem was litill defence, and the
cristin hem wounded on euery side, and hem slough, and all
to-hewe; and whan thei hadde do this, thei thanked moche
oure lorde of the grete honoure that he hath hem do at this
iourney.  Than com sir Gawein and the kynge Ban be-fore
the kynge Arthur, and be-fore all the baronye, and presented
the kynge Ventre with his wif, and tolde herynge hem alle
how he hadde hir rescowed, and the kynge hem thanked hertely,
and made grete ioye, and alle the barouns were gladde, and
than thei drough a litill a-side from the felde where the bataile
hadde be, and Arthur made   <MILESTONE N="211a" UNIT="folio"/>picche his teintes in the medow
be-fore Garlot vpon the river, and so dide alle the other princes,
and rested till on the morowe, and the Quene entred in to the
castell of Garlot; and on the morowe, as sone as it was day,
Arthur sette forth his peple the streight wey towarde
Clarence.  But now a-while shull we reste of Arthur and his baronye, and
speke of Margouns the botiller.</P>
<P>  So longe dide Margouns hidde hym in the busshes till that
Gawein, and the kynge Ban, and her companye were
gon with the Quene; and than he repeired to the welle and


<PB REF="" N="593" ID="pb.593"/>

fonde his horse that he hadde tacched to a tre, and than he
rode forth faste till he com to the hoste be-fore Clarence, and
tolde the kynge hardogobran how alle the forreyers that he
hadde sente be-fore the town of Garlot were deed and
discounfited; and whan Hardogobran this dide vndirstonde he was
sorowfull and pensif.  Than sterte vpon his feet the kynge
Gondofles, and seide to the kynge Hardogobran, "Sir, yef it
like yow I will go se what it is, and lede with me Salebrun
and Magaloes, and Sorbare, and Meliadus, and the kynge
Brangore, and in oure companye xl<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, ffor I may not
trowe that foure so myghty kynges as the kynge Brandon
youre cosin, and the kynge Pyncenars, and the kynge Pignores,
and the kynge Magloras myght not be brought to disconfiture
by no power of the cristin;" and while thei spake these wordes
com Syuarus that hadde his hande smyten of, and tolde hem
trewe tidinges, and the tokenynge of his arme; whan the kynge
Hardogobran saugh the kynge Syuarus so araied, he was wo
for sorowe, ffor he hadde hym moche loved; and whan he
knewe the deth of the foure kynges than was he wood oute
of witte, ffor Magloras and Brandouns were bothe his nevewes;
and than he comaunded to the kynge Gondofles to go take
vengaunce for his nevewes, and he seide he wolde, and in all
haste rode forth his wey, and with hym fifty Ml men, and
devided her peple in v bateiles, and in euery bateile x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men;
and the first bataile ledde Salubrun, and the Duke lonor the
lestregues that other, and the kynge Sorbares, and the kynge
Meliadus, and the Eirll ffragelles the thirde, and the kynge
Brangoires, and the Castelein Melekins the fourthe, and the
kynge Gondofles, and his brother Transmaduc the fifte; these
rode fro the sege of Clarence oon after a-nother towarde the
Castell of Garlot, and rode so by day and by nyght till thei
mette the hoste that Merlin dide gide in a feire grene medow
that was a myle and a halfe of lengthe, and ther hadde Merlin
devised vij batailes that after hym dide folowe; and the first
bateile condited the kynge Ventres, and the kynge
Tradilyuaunt, and the Duke Escam with xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the kynge

<PB REF="" N="594" ID="pb.594"/>

Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and the kynge de Cent Chiualers
ledde the seconde with xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; and the kynge of
Northumbirlonde, and the kynge of South-walis, and Nabulall the
thridde with xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; and the fourthe ledde Cleodalis the
Senescall of Carmelide, and the kynge Carados, and the kynge
looth of Orcanye with xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; and Aguyneron the Senescall
of kynge Clamedien, and fflamus the Senescall of Evadain, and
the Senescall of kynge Pelles of lytenoys ledden the fifte
bataile with xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; and the kynge Brangoires and the
  <MILESTONE N="211b" UNIT="folio"/>Senescall of kynge lak ledden the vj bateile with xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men;
and Sir Gawein, and his brethern, and the companye of the
rounde table were with the kynge Arthur in the vij<HI REND="sup">th</HI> bateile
wher-in were so moche peple that vnethe myght eny man hem
nombre.  In this maner mette the tweyne hostes of the Cristin,
and the paynymes in the medowes from Garlot half a walsh
myle; and as soone as the kynge Salubruns hem saugh he
lete renne a-geins hem, and so dide Margons the botiller; and
the Duke Escam com hem a-geins; but Triamores that was
Castelein of Cambenyk rode be-fore, and smote Salubrun so
harde a-mydde the shelde that the spere splindred on splyntes,
and the hethen kynge hitte hym so sore that the shafte shof
thourgh his body and bar hym deed vpright to the erthe; and
than was the Duke Escam full angry, and smote Salubrun
through the breste more than a spanne lengthe, and than he
seide, "Hethen hounde, thy deth thou hast hent, yet haue I
not my frende, and that me mysliked."</P>
<P>  Ther-with assembled the bateiles on bothe two sides, ther
was many a grete growen spere frusshed a-sonder, and
many a gome to the grounde glode in a stounde; but as soone
as the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and the kynge de
Cent Chiualers were come with the seconde bateile, and saugh
the seconde bateile of the saisnes meve; than thei ronne to-geder
fiercely, and ther myght a man haue sein many a helme hurled
on an hepe, and many a shafte and shelde frayen to-geder,
and many hauberke rente of double mayle; grete and hidyouse
was the bateile, and the slaughter grete on bothe sides.  Neuertheles 


<PB REF="" N="595" ID="pb.595"/>

whan Merlin saugh the saisnes so vertuouse, he ascride
the kynge Ban, "Sir, what do ye now, ye myght haue hem
putte oute of the place longe seth, ffor ye be moo peple be
that oon half than thei be."  Whan the kynge Ban and the
other princes herde Merlin so crie, thei were half
shamefast.  Than thei ronne on the saisnes with grete vigour, and made
hem resorte a-gein magre them alle, and made hem frusshe on
the thridde bateile, that the kynge Meliadus, and ffragilles, and
lanor de betinges dide condite, and these sette hem a-geins;
ther was harde bateile, and merveilouse and grete occision on
bothe sides that piteouse was to be-holden, and grete traueile
thei hadden on bothe parties.  And than assembled Brancors
and Malaquyn the Castelein with the fourthe bateile, and
Gelegnyaunt, and the kynge Cleoles, and ther was crewell
bateile and fell that in litill while was the felde couered with
deed bodyes and wounded peple.  In that metinge was Margouns
the botiller deed, and he was sore regreted of the saisnes, and
with-oute faile the kynge Ban hym slough with a spere; and
whan the kynge Sorbares it saugh he hadde hertely sorowe,
and he com to the kynge Ban, and wende to smyte hym on
the helme, but he kepte the stroke on his shelde, and he smote
ther-on so sore that he slitte it to the bocle, and the stroke
glood and smote of the horse heed, and the kynge fill to
grounde, and his horse be-twene his legges,   <MILESTONE N="212a" UNIT="folio"/>and the kynge
Sorbares a-bode vpon hym with serde drawen.  But Pharien
com hym a-geins that full sory was that his lorde was fallen,
and smote so harde to the kynge Sorbares vpon the helme
that he clef hym to the brayn, and he drough to hym his
swerde, and he fill down deed; than he caught the horse be
 the reyne, and brought it to the kynge Ban; and whan the
kynge was vpon horse he smote in to the bateile wroth and
angry; and the kynge Bohors, and Dionas, and the kynge
Ventres, and the Duke Escam, and alle the other princes dide
merveiles of armes, ffor after theire strokes a-bode noon in
sadill, and the saisnes were so grete and so myghti that thei
dide hem grete damage of her peple, ffor so many thei slough


<PB REF="" N="596" ID="pb.596"/>

of the cristin that it was wonder; and so many were deed and
wounded of cristin and hethen, that the felde was all couered,
so that oon myght not come to a-nother but ouer deed cors.</P>
<P>  While this grete occision and this mortall strif dide dure
were alle the bateiles assembled on bothe partyes,
saf only the bateile of kynge Arthur, and that Merlin ledde a
trauerse till thei were come vpon hem be-hynde, and than thei
girde in a-monge hem crewelly; and after sir Gawein, and his
brethern, and Elizer, and sir Ewein, and Segramor, and the
companye of the rounde table were come to the bateile, ther
myght men haue sein a-pertly wonder chyualries shewed of
armes; and thei slough horse and men, and made sheldes to
shiver, and hewen helmes from hedes, and kutte handes and
legges a-sonder, and dide so wonderfull dedes that vn-ethe myght
eny man be-leve the merveiles ne the grete lardure that thei
made of the saisnes; and kay the stiwarde, to whom Merlin
hadde yove the grete baner to bere of the kynge Arthur, was
euer in the fore frounte as he that was of grete hardynesse,
ther be-fore alle other dide well sir Gawein, and so dide the
kynge Arthur, ffor he araught no saisne a full stroke, but he
were deed; and full wele dede the princes that were come for
the honor of god, these dide so well in that iourney, that thei
ought wele to haue the pardon; and also full wele dide the
knyghtes of the quene Gonnore, ffor after theire strokes a-bode
noon standinge, but straught to grounde all that thei myght
atteyne; and whan the saisnes were thus for-closed, thei were
sore a-baisshed and turned to discounfiture, and with-oute faile
thei were waxen so feble that of v kynges, and an erle, and a
Duke, and of fifty thousande saisnes ne ascaped not foure Ml
that all ne were deed or maymed; and with-oute doute it was
right dere I-bought, ffor thei hadde slayn so many of the
cristin that it was sore be-wepte as longe as the kynge Arthur
lyved, ffor many a gentill lady be lefte wedowe, and many a
gentill mayden dysolat, and with-outen counseile.</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="212b" UNIT="folio"/>    Whan the kynge Gondofles, and lanor de betinges saugh
the grete slaughter of her peple that the cristin hadde


<PB REF="" N="597" ID="pb.597"/>

slain and alle to-hewen, and sye how thei were for-closed in
soche maner that thei myght not returne to theire hoste, and
than were thei wroth, ffor thei sye wele thei were but deed,
but yef thei toke counseile of hem-self.  Than thei loked a-boute
and be-helde towarde the see where thei saugh the cristin a
litill vn-closed, and that wey thei toke the flight thourgh the
medowes, streight toward the see that was ther nygh; and
whan the kynge Arthur saugh hem goinge, he cried, "Now
after hem alle attonys;" and there was many a stroke smyten
in the chace, ffor the saisnes were grete and stronge, and bolde
and hardy, and full of grete prowesse, and often thei returned
vpon hem that hem pursued, and the cristin hem resceyved
with good will, and there were many of the saisnes deed and
sore wounded, and the chace so endured, turnynge often as thei
were in flight, till that thei com to the see, where their fonde
thre of theire Galeyes, that Landalus dide guyde, and a-boode ther
for vitaile that sholde come from hem that were gon in forrey
to the Castell of Garlot; and whan the saisnes saugh the Galeyes
thei were full gladde, and ronne in who that myght first in the
grettest haste.  But thei cowde not hem so hasten but ther
was of hem drowned mo than two thousande, and thei that were
entred kutte a-sonder the ropes and <SUPPLIED>dressed</SUPPLIED> theire sailes, and
ascaped in to the see, and wente ther as the wynde and fortune
wolde hem drive, that in euell maner hadde theire ioure araied;
and whan the kynge Arthur and his barouns saugh that thei
haue hem so loste, thei returned to the playnes of Garlot to
theire tentes, and yolde graces to oure lorde of the victorie that
thei hadde in this bateile; and for thei were wery for traueile,
thei hem resten at theire ese of all that thei myghten as thei
that hadde grete myster, ffor wery thei were of the traueile of
the strokes yevinge and also <CHOICE><CORR>resceyuinge</CORR><SIC>resceyinge</SIC></CHOICE> in the stour, that
hadde be right grete, and than ete and dranke, and than loked
the wounded and hurt peple, and hadde hem to the castell of
Garlot, and were of hem xxxv knyghtes, and v were wounded
of the companye of the rounde table, wherfore the kynge Arthur
was full pensif and sory, and that oon was hervy de rivell, and

<PB REF="" N="598" ID="pb.598"/>

males le bruns, and the thridde was Clamedos, and the fourthe
was Arestobolus, and the v<HI REND="sup">e</HI> landouns of Carmelide; and the
kynge Arthur praied the leche to take of hem good hede, and
thei badde he sholde not be dismayed, ffor in short terme thei
sholde be hool, and sounde with helpe of god; and ther-fore was
the kynge gladde and alle the Barouns, and ther thei soiourned
that nyght till it was day, that Merlin bad hem trusse tentes
and Pavilouns, and that thei sholde come after hym redy armed
her enmyes to assaile, and a-non it was don as he comaunded;
and than thei ride forth toward Clarence, and whan thei were
so nygh, that thei myght se tentes and Pavelouns, Merlin
hem shewed to the kynge Arthur, and seide, "Sir, lo yonder
theym by whos comaundement the londe is distroied of yow
and youre barouns.  Now shall it be shewed how ther-of shall
be take vengaunce, ffor this day be ye come all for to lese or
all for to wynne, this day shull men se who is bolde and hardy,
or who is of valour, this day shall be sein who can smyte   <MILESTONE N="213a" UNIT="folio"/>with
swerde or spere, this day shall be shewed the grete prowesse
of the reame of logres, thys day is the grete nede and the
myster, ffor this day shall the reame of logres be distroied or
honoured, and I do yow to wete alle the barouns that be here
assembled that ye praye oure lorde to diffende the reame of
logres from shame and myschaunce;" and thei alle seide,
"Amen."  And than alle thei cried bothe prevy and straunge
that thei wolde alle do at his wille and at his pleiser; and he
seide that seth thei wolde do after his counseill, thei sholde
haue no drede of nothinge, and "ye shull haue this day the
victorye;" and thei ansuerde, "We be alle ther-to redy and
appareiled."  Than seide Merlin, "I will that ye me graunte
that in all thinge ye shull do my wille;" and thei seide thei
wolde with good will.  "Yet," quod Merlyn, "I will that the
kynge Arthur me graunte firste of alle;" and than he graunted
hym a-noon right, and so dide alle the other; and than seide
Merlin, "Ffeire lordes, this day is come the grete distruxion of
the grete Breteigne, but yef god put to his hande and his good
counseile, ne it may not be distrued in no maner.  Ne these


<PB REF="" N="599" ID="pb.599"/>

peple shull neuer be disseuered ne departed er ye haue pees
with the kynge Arthur, and that heue ye me graunted."</P>
<P>  Whan the barouns this vndirstoden ther were some that
it liked nothinge, but other-wise myght it not be,
and so thei graunted alle to the volunte of Merlin, and dide
homage to the kynge Arthur oon after a-nother, and of hym
resceived theire londes and theire fees all tho that ought it for
to do; and than the ioye was grete thourgh all the hoste; and
than thei devised theire bateiles, and wente a-gein the saisnes
that weren at the sege be-fore Clarence that it dide assaile from
day to day, but it was so stronge that thei myght but litill
wynne, ffor it was well garnysshed of good peple and vitaile,
ffor alle tho that eny armes myght bere of x myle a-boute were
with-ynne the town bothe knyght, and burgeise, and oon and
other, wher-of ther was lv.<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> that many of hem were full bolde
and hardy, and defensable, and diffended the town a-gein the
saisnes full vigerously, and launched at hem many a quarell,
and many a sharpe spere and dart wher-with many a saisne was
slain and sore wounded, that neuer after ne dide ride ne go;
and grete and hidouse was the assaut the same hour that the
cristin com vpon; and Merlin and his companye com with the
grete baner in his hande, and whan he com nygh the saisnes
he sente his peple in four partyes of the hoste of saisnes, and
smyten thourgh the tentes and <CHOICE><CORR>thourgh</CORR><SIC>though</SIC></CHOICE> the pavelons, and kutte
a-sonder ropes and cordes, and threwe down all that stode
vpright, and the saisnes that of this comynge toke no rewarde,
herde the noyse, and the bruyte, and the lowde cries, and
saugh theire pavelouns ouerthrowen on euery side, thei were
gretly affraied and lefte the assaute, and turned that wey who
that myght sonest, eche hastyer than other; and than ther was
soche noyse and shoute whan eche man cried his ensigne that
oon myght here it a myle of lengthe; and than be-gan the
bateile fierce and merveilouse, and smyte sore with speres and
swerdes that oon vpon the tother, and grete was the slaughter
on bothe sides.  But for oon   <MILESTONE N="213b" UNIT="folio"/>that was deed of the cristin was
foure deed of the saisnes, neuertheles thei were moo peple, and


<PB REF="" N="600" ID="pb.600"/>

of gretter strengthe than were cristin.  But the cristin were
wonder light and delyuer, and full of high prowesse to furnyssh
a bateile, and at the firste brunt was many a cristin leide to
grounde, and many a saisne deed, wherfore the kynge
hardogobran was full wroth and angry, and he griped in his hande a
grete plante of an oke ther-on an heed of steill sharp I-grounde,
and com rynnynge with grete randon a-gein the kynge Cleoles
that for the love of oure lorde was come to that iourney with
vij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that full well dide in that stoure; and whan Cleoles
saugh hym come, he deigned not to fle as he that was of grete
hardynesse, but turned the heed of his horse with his spere in
fewtre, and mette so with grete raundon and force that the
sheldes perced and hauberkes dismayled, but the flessh thei not
touched, but thei hurteled so to-geder with theire helmes and
sheldes, for the horse com with grete ravyn, and mette breste
a-gein breste that bothe fill to grounde, horse and the men, ffor
the speres were spent, and thei lefte lyinge on the grounde sore
a-stonyed that thei myght not meve, ffor the horse lay vpon
hem as thei hadde be deed, and the two kynges were bothe in
swowne theym vnder; and grete was the bateile to rescowe the
two princes, ffor alle the bateilles of the saisnes ronne that
wey, and also dide the cristin.  Ther was many a hevy stroke
yoven and resceyved, and the saisnes remountede the kynge
hardogobran; but first was deed moo than two thousande what
oon and other, and on that other side the cristin remounted
Cleoles, but thei fonde his lifte arme broken in the falle that
he hadde, and ther-fore were his men sory and wrorth, and
a-noon lete bere hym to the harneys; and whan thei hadde
leyde hym on a cowche, he preide his men for goddes love to
go to the bateile, and thei so dide full Irouse, and in talent to
avenge theire lorde, and thei slough at that enuaye two kynges
of the saisnes wher-of that oon was cleped Brangore, and the
tother Margounces.  This Margounces was cosin germayn to
Aungis the saisne, and than thei be-gonne to do so well in
armes that moche were thei preised and comended, and be-holde
for grete merveile of the saisnes and of the cristin; and also

<PB REF="" N="601" ID="pb.601"/>

on that other side faught the kynge Ban, and the kynge
Bohors, and the kynge Ventres, and the kynge Vrien; and on
a-nother side of the bateile faught the kynge Tradilyuaunt of
north walys, and the kynge de Cent Chiualers, and the kynge
Clarion of Northumbirlonde, and the Duke Escam of Cambenyk;
and on that other side of the hoste faught the kynge Belynans,
and the kynge of Strangore, and the kynge of Scotlonde, and
the kynge of Cornewaile, and Mynoras the senescall of the
kynge lak, and of the kynge Euadain that were brethern to the
kynge Clamedien, and Galegnynans the Senescall of Galehaut,
the sone of the Geaunt, and the Duke Belyas of loseres, and
Margondes, the senescall of Sorloys, that alle were come for the
love of oure lorde;   <MILESTONE N="214a" UNIT="folio"/>and on that other side Gosenges, the sone
of kynge Amant, and Nabunall his Senescall, and Cleodalis the
Senescall of kynge leodogan of Carmelide; and on a-nother part
of the hoste was the kynge Arthur, and the kynge looth, and
sir Gawein, and his brethern, and sir Ewein, and Segramor,
and kay the stiwarde that bar the baner, and the bateile was
so well be-gonne on euery parte that it was merveile; and
Merlin wente from o bateile to a-nother, and satte vpon a
courser, and cried lowde, "Now lete se now gentill knyghtes,
now is come the day and the houre that youre prowesse shall
be shewed;" and whan the kynge and the princes herde
Merlin crie, thei constreyned hem-self to shewe the grettest
force that thei hadden; and whan thei of the town saugh the
bateile so mortall and so dolerouse, and thei saugh the cristin
and the saisnes throwen to grounde so thikke, that oon fill on
a-nother.  And thei saugh the signes of the reade crosse in the
white baners, and thei thought wele it was socour that god
hadde hem sent, and made the yates to be opened and issed
oute of the town alle armed and smote in to the bateile full
vigerously, and be-gonne to do full well in armes, and so dide
alle the other.  But a-monge the saisnes thei fonde grete
diffence.  But the barouns and the saisnes that herde Merlin
crye that the day was come of the grete nede, and than eche
of hem shewed his grettest force, and be-gonne to do so well on


<PB REF="" N="602" ID="pb.602"/>

euery side that the saisnes were sore atte the werse.  But who
dide wele or who nought in that iourney, hem alle dide Arthur
surmounte, and sir Gawein, and his brethren, and sir Ewein,
and Segramor, and Elizer, and the kynge Ban, and the kinge
Bohors.  These shewed wonderfull merveiles with theire bodyes,
ffor a-gein theire strokes hadde no knyght power to a-bide in his
sadell, ne no steill hem with-stode; and dide so well be the
grete hardynesse of theire bodyes that the saisnes were putte
to discounfiture, ffor thei toke no rewarde to sle the pore saisnes,
but turned the heedes of theire horse thider as thei saugh the
richeste apparence of armes and stedes; and dide so well that
of alle the kynges that the kynge Hardogobran hadde brought,
ne ascaped but he and v kynges, and of hem oon was the
kynge Orienx, and the seconde the kynge Sorbar, and the
thridde the kynge Cornycans, and the fourthe was the
Admyrall Napin, and the v<HI REND="sup">th</HI> was the kynge Murgalans de trebahan;
these v kynges ascaped with the kynge Hardogobran, and hadde
well in her companye xxx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> saisnes, that alle departed from the
bateile mate and discounfited be strengthe of the swyftnesse of
horse, and fledde to theire navie, and the cristin hem chaced
to the see, and hilde hem so shorte in the entringe to the shippes
that ther were of hem slain and drowned the haluendell or
more; and thei that were in the shippes ascaped wroth and
sorowfull for the losse that thei hadden, and thei hadde but
litill while gon whan thei saugh the shippe of kynge Gondofles,
and lanor   <MILESTONE N="214b" UNIT="folio"/>that were fledde fro the discounfiture, and eche of
hem knewe well other, and made full grete sorowe for theire
grete losse, and in this maner thei went sailinge thourgh the
see.  But of hem at this tyme speketh not the storie, but
turneth to speke of the kynge Arthur, and of his companye.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.30">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXX. 
<LB/>DEPARTURE OF BAN AND BOHORS, AND THEIR VISIT TO AGRAVADAIN.

</HEAD>
<P>  Whan the kynge Arthur hadde discounfited the saisnes, he
and his baronye repeired gladde and ioyfull in to the

<PB REF="" N="603" ID="pb.603"/>

felde ther as the bateile hadde I-be, and thanked our lorde
hertily of the honour and victorie that he hadde graunted hem
for to haue, and of the grete wynnynge of clothes of silke and
golde, and siluer, and riche pavelouns, and goode stedes, and
armures; and the kynge Arthur hem departed by comon assent
of alle the Barouns after thei were of astate or degre, and
with-hilde not to hym-self the valew of a ferthinge; and than the
princes entred in to the town gladde and ioyfull, and dide
entere the deed corps, and hem that were wounded serched
theire sores, and hadde good leches, and soiourned ther v dayes;
and the tidinges ran thourgh the londe how the saisnes were
discounfited, and chaced from the town of Clarence oute of the
londe, and distroied and slain; and than alle the saisnes that
were thourgh the londe, whiche hadde not be at the bateile,
thei returned in to Saxoyne sory and wroth, for theire frendes
that thei hadde loste; and whan the kynge Arthur hadde
a-biden in the town of Clarence v dayes with grete feste and
ioye, than departed the princes fro hym, and eueriche of hem
wente in to his owne contrey, and thus thei departed fro hym
with grete love, and hilden of hym theire fees and honours;
and the straunge princes that for love of oure lorde were come
to that iourney returned home in to theire contreyes; and the
kynge Arthur, and the kynge Ban of Benoyk, and the kynge
Bohors of Gannes, and the kynge looth of Orcanye, and sir
Gawein, and his brethren, and theire companye, and theire
meyne were resceyued with grete ioye at Cameloth of the Quene
Gonnore, and of alle the peple; and than com Merlin to the
kynge Arthur, and seide, "Sir, thanke be god ye haue the
londe delyuered of the euell peple at this tyme, and ther-fore
ye owe to haue grete ioye and all cristin peple, ffor now be
thei sure all the peple of this londe; and ther-fore now may
wele the kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors repeire hom in to
theire contrey, ffor longe tyme is it past that thei saugh not
theire wiffes ne theire meyne, and thei haue a full felon
neighbour that gladly wolde hem annoyen, and that is the
kynge Claudas de la desert, and therfore shull thei passe the

<PB REF="" N="604" ID="pb.604"/>

see and take kepe to theire londes, and of that thei haue for to
do;" and whan the kynge Arthur this vndirstode, he ansuerde
full debonerly.</P>
<P>  "Feire frende, Merlin," seide the kynge, "the princes
shull do theire volunte, and ye shall yours.  But
moche more I love to haue youre companye than youre
departynge; ffor the companye of so worthy men as thei ben ne
ought annoy to no prince.  But seth it pleseth yow, and that
ye will it be so I moste it nede suffre and do youre volunte."
"Sir," seide Merlin, "it be-houeth to be so at this tyme,
ffor ye haue now no myster of theire a-bidinge;" and in this
maner departed the two kynges and ride towarde the see in
grete ioye, and Merlin that moche hem loved hem conveyed;
and fill that the firste nyght that thei departed from Cameloth
that thei come to a Castell that stode in a maresse, so wele and
so feire sittinge, and so cloos that it douted noon assaute, and
this Castell was closed rounde with   <MILESTONE N="215a" UNIT="folio"/>vij walles thikke and
high, and feire enbateiled, and right deffensable; and with-ynne
the bailie were v. toures that were high and streight all rounde,
and foure were mene, and the fifthe was gret and high, and
well hurdeysed a-boute with-ynne and with-oute, and grete
diches, and depe full of water, and the dongeon that stode in
the myddill was grete and high, and all a-boute the walles of
the Castell was marasse that dured two myle so full of myre
and water that noon myght come ther-to, but he were
drowned.  In to this castell was but oon entree, and that was so streite
that two horse myght not ther-on mete, oon be-side a-nother;
and a-bove this marasse was a chauchie fro place to place of the
breede of a spere lengthe made of chalke and sande stronge
and thikke and wele made, and this cauchie was of lengthe
a stones caste, and the remenaunt was made of plankes and of
tymbir, so that noon ne myght passe ouer yef the plankes hadde
be take a-wey, and at the ende of the cauchie was a grete water,
but ther-to com no shippes, but it was right feire and plesaunt,
and good fisshinge; be-fore the foot of this cauchie was a pyne
tre a litill fro the water in a medowe of the space of an acre
<PB REF="" N="605" ID="pb.605"/>

londe or more, where-ynne the grasse was feire and high, and
the pyne tre was right feire and full of bowes, so that oon
braunche passed not a-nother of height, and vpon a braunche of
this pyne was hanged by a cheyne of siluer, an horne of yvorie
as white as snowe, ffor that thei sholde it sowne that com for
to be herberowed in the castell, or elles who that passed forth
by that wolde aske Iustinge.  Of these two thinges serued the
horne that ther was hanged.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and her
companye come to the pyne, and saugh the horne
that ther did hange, thei seide that for nought was it not sette,
and a-noon thei supposed it was for to aske passage of the foorde
or elles to aske Iustes.  But thei saugh the Castell so fer fro
thens that thei trowed not the sounde of the horne myght not
thider ben herde, and on that other side thei saugh the Castell
so feire and so riche and well??sette, that thei hadde neuer seyn
noon soche of the grettenesse, and saugh the cauchie and the
entre so stronge, and so streite, that thei were alle merveiled;
and the two kynges seide to Merlin, and asked yef he knewe
what the castell was cleped that was so feire and well closed;
and Merlin seide it was the castell of marasse, and was longinge
to a knyght that was of grete puyssaunce, and of grete renon,
and ther-to he was bolde and hardy at armes, and his name is
Agrauadain ly noire.  "Certes," seide the kynge, "of Agrauadain
haue I herde well speke in many a place, and so helpe me
god he ought wele to be a noble man that is here so well
herberowed; ffor a-bove alle the Castelles that euer I sigh is
this the feirest, and gladly wolde I lye ther-in to-nyght."
"To that shull ye well come," quod Merlin; "but no straunge
<CHOICE><CORR>knyght</CORR><SIC>knygh</SIC></CHOICE> cometh to this castell er he haue sowned this horne, ne
noon dar very ouer the water er he haue blowe this horne, ffor
than shall he not passe with-oute bateile."  "I will sowne
the horne," seide the kynge Ban, "yef ye   <MILESTONE N="215b" UNIT="folio"/>will yeve me leve."
"In feith," seide Merlyn, "ther-in is no pereile, but other to
aske a Iustinge or elles the feriage."  "In feith," seide the
kynge Ban, "and though ther were more pereile I shall it


<PB REF="" N="606" ID="pb.606"/>

sowne, seth that ye graunte me ther-to leve."  "And I will
well it so be," quod Merlin; "ffor yef god will, ther-of shall
come noon euell."  A-noon wente the kynge Ban to the horne,
and sette it to his mouthe, and blew it so high and so cler as
he that I-nough hadde of force and powere and breth, that all
the marasse ther-of resowned, and the sowne of the water and
the marasse bare the sownde in to the castell, that the lorde of
the place it herde, and a-noon he asked his armes, for so was
his custome; and the kynge be-gan to blowe a-gein thries
to-geder lightly, for the Castell was so fer that the kynge wende
the noyse myght not haue come thider.</P>
<P>  Whan the lorde of the Castell herde hym blowe so harde,
and that he was so hasty, he hilde ther-of grete
dispite, and for anger lepte on a grete stede in haste with shelde
a-boute his nekke, and his spere in honde, and a-noon the yate
was open; and he rode oute a grete raundon, and com to the
foorde, and whan he saugh the peple on the tother side, he
cried and asked what peple thei were; and the kynge Ban
ansuerde, "Sir, we be knyghtes, that requere herberowe this
nyght yef it plese yow, and feriage for oure horse at this
foorde."  "With whom be ye," guod Agrauadain.  "Sir,"
quod Merlin, that was nigh; "we be of this other contrey of
the partyes of Gaule."  "And of what parties of Gaule," quod
Agrauadain.  "Sir," seide Merlin, "thei holde theire londes
of god and of kynge Arthur."  "In godis name," seide
Agrauadain, "thei haue a gode lorde, ffor of the kynge Arthur may
thei not empeire, for he is a noble kynge, and a good knyght,
and he is my lorde, and for his love shull ye haue hostell
at youre volunte."  "Gramercy, sir," seide the kynge; than
a-noon right Agrauadain hym turned, and badde the knyghtes
hym sewe, and seide thei were alle welcome; and thei wente
a-noon after hym oon after a-nother ouer the bregge to the
gates of the castell, and entred in after that the lorde of the
place was entred, ffor ther was no space to turne on his horse
er he were entred and paste the yate; and than the lorde
hym-self condited hem in to the castell, and a-noon lepen oute squyres

<PB REF="" N="607" ID="pb.607"/>

and yomen to make hem a-light, and the lorde toke the two
knyghtes be the hande, for that hym semed thei were princes
and lordes of the othere, and ledde hem in to a chambir of the
tour hem to vn-arme, and hym-self dide helpe for to vn-arme,
and ther-while entred in thre maydenes of right grete bewte,
wher-of tweyne were neces vn-to agrauadain; and the thridde
was his doughter, and thei brought thre mantels furred with
ermyn, and the cloth was scarlet, and thei caste hem vpon the
two kynges; and the thridde vpon Agrauadain, and the kynge
Ban that was a lusty knyght be-hilde the maydenys, and liked
well theire companye, and countenaunce that were right feire
and of grete bewte, that it was wonder to be-holde, and alle
thre were of feire age, ffor the eldest was but xiiij yere, but
a-bove alle the other was the lordes doughter the feirest; and
Merlin be-hilde hir with grete anguyssh, and thought in his
herte that   <MILESTONE N="216a" UNIT="folio"/>well were he that with soche a creature myght ly,
"and ne were the grete love that I haue," quod he "to
Nimyane, my love, I sholde haue hir this nyght in myn armes, and
seth I may not hir haue, I shall lete hir be knowe with the
kynge Ban;" and than he made a coniorison softly, and a-noon
as he hadde it made the kynge Ban loved the mayden, and
she hym also right sore.</P>
<P>  Whan these two knyghtes were araide with these two
mantels that the maydenys hadde brought, than
Agrauadain, the lorde of the castell, sette hym down by hem, and
loked on these two kynges, and knewe hem a-noon; and than
he made hem gretter chere than he hadde do be-forn, and dide
hem more reverence; and whan it was tyme to go to soper,
the clothes were spradde vpon the tables thourgh the paleys
that was grete and large, and the two kynges that were
brethren satte down at the high table, and made agrauadain
sitte down by hem and his wif that was a feire yonge lady of
xviij yere of age, and the knyghtes were sette at other tables
thourgh the halle, and the thre maydenys that were so feire
and auenaunt were stondinge be-fore the two kynges, and be-fore
Agrauadain; and Merlin that was with hem transformed in to


<PB REF="" N="608" ID="pb.608"/>

the semblaunce of a yonge knyght of xv yere age, and was
clothed in a short garnement party read and white, and was
girt with a bawdrike of silke of brede of a spanne wele and
richely harnysshed with golde and stones, and ther-on hinge
a gipser or purpill samyte bete with golde, and hadde a peire
of gloues hanginge hym be-hynde, and his heed was yelow
and curle, and his iyen grey and grete in his heed, and kerved
be-fore the kynge Ban knelinge, and he was moche be-holden
of oon and other, ffor ther was noon that hym knewe saf the
two kynges, ffor tho that were her meyne wende he hadde be
with the lorde of the place, and for his grete bewte the
maydenys be-hilde hym often ententifly.  But the doughter of
Agrauadain hadde sette hir iyen moste vpon the kynge Ban
more than on eny othir thinge, for the coniurison that Merlin
hadde made, and putte hir to grete affray; and she liked hym
so well that it made hir to chaunge colour ofte sithes, and longe
her thought er the clothes were taken vp, ffor fain wolde she
haue leyn be-twene his armes, and she cowde not wite how
that volunte to hir com.  But so moche she hath ther-on sette
her thought, that to noon othir thinge she toke no tent but to
thenke of hym.</P>
<P>  In this thought and this anguyssh was the mayden by the
coniurison of Merlin; and on that other side was the
kynge Ban so a-raied that he left pley and laughinge at the
table, and cowde not wite how it was to hym come, and he
was sory and wroth of that he hadde his love so turned, ffor he
hadde to wif a yonge lady of grete bewte, to whom he ne
wolden not false his feith; and on that other side he thought
how he was herberowed ther-ynne, and the lorde of the place
was a noble man and a curteyse, and hadde hym don grete
honoure, and hym semed it were vntrouthe and treson, and to
grete vilonye sholde it to hym turne yef he required hir of
shame or dishoneste.  Ne no gretter shame myght he hym do
than diffoule his doughter in soche maner; and   <MILESTONE N="216b" UNIT="folio"/>ther-with he
wax so euell at ese that he wiste not what to do, and alwey he
seide in his corage that he wolde neuer hir requyre of no soche


<PB REF="" N="609" ID="pb.609"/>

thinge.  But Merlin thought wele in his herte that so sholde
it not go, ffor he thought it hadde be grete harme yef thei
hadde not come to-geder, ffor soche fruyte sholde come be-twene
hem wher-of all the londe of Breteigne sholde be honoured by
the grete prowesse that he sholde haue.</P>
<P>  All thus seide Merlin to hym-self; and whan the clothes
were drawen, and thei hadde waisshe theire handes
thei yede to the wyndowes, and be-helde the marasse; and on
that othir side thei saugh the foreste and the forteresses that
were ther a-boute, and the erable londe and the feire fisshinge,
and saugh the vynes and the contrey so feire that merveile it
was to be-holden; and ther thei stode till it was tyme to go
to bedde, and entred in to a chambre by the halle where the
maydenys hadde made redy two beddes soche as apertend to
two soche princes, and thei were brought to bedde with grete
ioye and feste; and whan the two kynges were brought to
bedde, the lorde of the place wente to bedde with his wif, and
the thre maydenys lay in a-nother chamber next by the chamber
of Agrauadain, so that noon myght entre but thourgh his
chamber; and a-noon as thei were a-bedde, Merlin be-gan an
enchauntement, and made hem to slepe alle that were
with-ynne the Castell saf only the kynge Ban and the
mayden.  These tweyne were so surprised that oon vpon that other, that
thei myght nother slepe ne reste, and Merlin, that wolde acheive
that he hadde be-gonne, com in to the chamber ther the mayden
lay, and toke hir softly by the hande and seide, "Now, feire
lady, a-rise, and come to hym that so moche yow desireth;" and
she that so sore was enchaunted myght not with-sey his volunte,
but a-noon a-roos vp oute of hir bedde naked saf, she first dide
on hir smok, and Merlin her ledde by her fader beddes side,
and by the beddes of other knyghtes ther-ynne; but thei were
so stronge a-slepe, that thei myght not a-wake.  Thus wente
Merlin and the mayden till thei com in to the chamber ther
the two kynges lay, wher-ynne was light I-nough, and fond the
kynge Bohors sore a-slepe, as he that was in the power of
Merlin, and thei com streight to the kynge Ban that was at

<PB REF="" N="610" ID="pb.610"/>

moche mysese, and seide, "Sir, lo here the gode <SUPPLIED>and</SUPPLIED> the feire
whiche shall bringe forth the feire and the good, of whom the
grete renomede shall renne thourgh all Breteigne."</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge saugh the mayden, and he hadde
vndirstonde Merlin, a-noon he spradde his armes, and hir
resceived gladde and myry, as he that moste do the
comaundement of Merlin, and he hadde no power it to with-stonde, for
the enchauntement wher-with he was so surprised that he
myght it not forsake in no maner; ffor yef it were in poste he
wolde it not haue do for all the reme of grete Breteigne, for
sore he dredde oure lorde; and satte vp and resceyved the
mayden in his armes, and she dide of hir smok, and leide hir
down by hym, and her toke in his armes and she dide hym,
and eche of hem made feire chere and right good semblaunt, as
thei hadde be to-geder xx yere, for noon of hem was a-shamed
ne dismayed of other, and all this hadde Merlin it
ordeyned.  In this manere   <MILESTONE N="217a" UNIT="folio"/>was the kynge and the damesell till day, and
than com Merlin to the kynge Ban, and seide that it were tyme
that the damesell yede a-gein, and she dide on hir smok and
hir kirtill; and the kynge toke a ringe of his fynger, and side,
"Swete love, kepe this ringe for my love;" and the damesell
it toke and sette it on hir finger, and so thei departed; and
Merlin brought hir a-gein in to hir bedde, and made hir to ly
down all naked that hadde conceyved a sone, of whom launcelot
after hadde grete ioye and honour for the bounte and Chiualrie
that was in hym.  Whan Merlin hadde brought the damesell in
hir bedde, he wente to his owne bedde and lay down, and than
brake the enchauntement, and alle that were in the castell
a-woke, and it was than feire day; and than a-rise knyghtes and
squyres, and alle seruauntes, and made redy theire armures,
and sadeled theire horse, and trussed coufres and males, and
Merlin com to the kynge that was a-slepe, ffor the
enchauntement of the love of the damesell was cessed, and he wiste well
that he hadde by hir leyen, but he knewe not in what maner
ne how he hadde hir in his bedde, saf he supposed it was by
Merlin; and Merlin com to hym, and seide it was sone tyme


<PB REF="" N="611" ID="pb.611"/>

to ride; and whan the two kinges were vp, and alle tho that
were ther-ynne; than com the lorde and the thre damesselles to
the two kynges and salued, and thei hem grete a-gein godely;
and whan the kynge Ban saugh the doughter of Agrauadain
that al nyght hadde leyn with hym he be-heilde hir full
ententifly, and she hym full swetly bowinge down with the
heed as she that was shamefaste, that she hadde be so prevy
with hym, and that she hadde be so-bolde; and but yef the
force and the enchauntement hadde not cessed, she ne hadde
ther-of be nothinge a-baisshed for hym, and ther was neuer
hour after but she hym loved more than eny other man, and
that shewed well, for neuer after that wolde she neuer haue
a-do with no man, but seide to hir-self that a woman that
hadde ben so with a kynge ne ought neuer be so famyler with
noon other man of lower degre.  Ne neuer after wolde she be
maried; and the kynge Ban toke hir be the hande, and seide,
"Damesell, I moste nede departe at this tyme, but
wher-so-euer I be I am youre knyght as trewly as eny man may be,
and I praye yow haue in mynde to kepe youre body, ffor ye
be conceyved with a sone, and that I do yow verily to wite of
whom ye shull haue ioye and honour;" and of this Merlin
hadde do hym to vndirstonde that knewe a partye of thinges
that were to come; and the damesell ansuerde in baas voyce
sore syghinge, and seide, "Sir, yef it so be god to his pleiser
sende me more ioye ther-of than I haue of youre departinge,
ffor neuer here be-forn was love so soone departed, and seth
yow be-hove nede for to go, I shall conforte my-self the beste
wise I may with this that I am with conceyved; now god sende
me grace that I be a gladde moder, ffor yef I lyve so longe that
I may it se, hit shall be to me a myrour and confort in
remembraunce of yow;" with that worde the kynge toke hir in his
armes, and with sighinge comaunded hir to god; and the
damesell returned to hir chamber with the maydenes   <MILESTONE N="217b" UNIT="folio"/>and
the two kynges; and Merlin comaunded the lady to god, and
thanked hir for the grete curtesie and chere that thei hadde
founden; and after thei toke theire horse and departed oute


<PB REF="" N="612" ID="pb.612"/>

of the Castell, and rode forth the cauchie oon after a-nother, and
Agrauadain hem conveyed to the pyne tre, and than returned;
and the two kynges rode forth to the see, and founden shippes,
and passed ouer; and whan thei were landed thei ride forth
till thei come to Benoyk, where thei were resceived with grete
ioye; but a-bove alle other were the two sustres, the Quenes
gladde and ioyfull, and so the two kynges soiourned viij dayes
in Benoyk with theire two wifes, and with hem also Merlin;
and the ix<HI REND="sup">the</HI> day he toke leve of the two kynges and the
Quenes, and of the other barouns, and repeired to Nimiane, his
owne love, that made hym grete chire, and of hym was gladde
and ioyfull, ffor moche she hym loved for the grete debonerte
that she hadde in hym founden, and he loved nothinge so wele
as he dide hir, and wele it shewed, ffor he taught hir that he
wolde not teche to noon other, and so he a-bode with hir viij
dayes, and than departed and com to Blase, his maister, that
so moche desired hym to se; and Merlin hym tolde the assemble
on the playn of Salisbery, and how thei rescewed the Quene of
Garlot, and the pray, and tolde hym alle thinges that were
be-fallen seth he fro hym departed, and he hem wrote in his
boke.  But now shull we returne to speke of the kynge Arthur.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.31">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXXI. 
<LB/> ARTHUR'S GREAT FEAST AT CAMELOT; THE BATTLE BEFORE TORAISE, AND DEFEAT OF KING RION.</HEAD>
<P>Whan the kynge Ban, and the kynge Bohors, and Merlin
were departed from the kynge Arthur for to go in to
theire owne contrey, the kynge a-bode stille at Cameloth, gladde
and myri with the Quene Gonnore that moche hym loved, and
he hir, and so thei a-bide in ioye and myrthe longe tyme, till
it drough nygh the myddill of Auguste; and than seide the
kynge to sir Gawein, his nevew, that at the feste of assumpcion
he wolde holde court roiall, and that all sholde be sent fore

<PB REF="" N="613" ID="pb.613"/>

that were of hym holdinge londe or feo; ffor he seide he saugh
neuer his hool power to-geder at no feeste that he hadde holden
be-fore; "and therfore," quod he, "I will that alle be sent fore
bothe fer and nygh bothe prive and straunge, and also I will
that eche bringe with hym his wif or his love that my court
may be the more honoured;" and sir Gawein seide that he
hadde well devised, and that of gentell herte meved this purpos,
"and ther-fore I be-seke yow that this be so don that it be to
youre honour;" and the kynge seide, "Certes, feire nevew,
I desire to do so that I haue ther-of honour, and that all the
worlde ther-of may speke."  Than sir Gawein lete write lettres
and writtes, and sente hem to the Barouns, and to knyghtes of
the londe, and comaunded hem alle as dere as thei hym loved
that thei be on the assumpcion even at Cameloth, ffor than
wolde he holden court grete and roiall, and euery man to bringe
with hym his wif or his love; and the messagers wente to the
princes and Barouns, and shewed hem theire lettres, and dide
theire message thourgh the contrey; and the princes and the
barouns made hem redy in   <MILESTONE N="218a" UNIT="folio"/>the moste roiall wise and com to
the court as the kynge hadde comaunded, and euery man
brought with hym his wife, and he that hadde no wife brought
with hym his love; and than ther com thider so many that
merveile it was to be-holde the nombre, ffor ther ne myght not
the tenthe part in to the Citee of Cameloth, but loigged
withoute in the feire medowes in tentes and in Pavelouns; and the
kynge hem resceived with grete ioye and grete honoure, and
the quene Gonnore, that was the wisest lady of the worlde,
resceyved the quenes, and the ladyes, and the maydenes, and
damesels with grete honoure eueriche of hem by hem-self as she
that hadde more witte and curtesie than eny lady in hir dayes,
and yaf to hem riche yeftes of golde and siluer, and clothes of
silke eueriche after theire astate; and she demened hir so well
that thei seide ther was not soche a-nother lady in all the worlde
as was she; and the kynge departed to knyghtes robes and
armes, and horse, and dide hem so moche worshippe that day
and curtesie, that thei loved hym the better as longe as theire


<PB REF="" N="614" ID="pb.614"/>

life endured; and that shewed well after in many a stour, and
in many a nede, as ye shull heren her-after.</P>
<P>  Grete was the feeste that the kynge hilde on the euen of
the assumpcion to the riche baronye that to hym were
come.  Whan the kynge and the barouns hadde herde euesonge
at the mynster of seint Stephene, the tables were sette in teintes
and Pavelons, ffor thei myght not alle in to the town; and
on that othir side was the Quene Gonnore, and the ladyes and
damesels with soche ioye that merveile it were to reherse, ffor
in all the londe of Breteigne, ne in all the power of kynge
Arthur, ne lefte mynstrall ne iogeloure ne oon ne other, but alle
were come to that feeste; and at that soper were thei served
so well as was convenient to so myghty a prince as was the
kynge Arthure, and thus endured thei in ioye and myrthe till
tyme was to go to reste till on the morowe.  And on the morowe
a-roos the kynge Arthure, and the riche barouns, and the Quene,
and wente to hire masse at the mynster of Seint Stephene, and
the servise was honorably seide in the worship and reuerence
of that high feste, and grete and riche was the offrande; and
the kynge Arthur and alle other kynges and Quenes that day
bar crownes in worship of the day, and so ther were lx crownes,
what of kynges and quenes; and whan the masse was seide, and
the seruise ended the kynge Arthur lepe on his palfrey, and
alle the other kynges after hym I-crowned, and so dide the
quene Gonnore and alle the other quenes, and eueryche of hem
a crowne of golde on theire heedes; and the kinge Arthur satte
at the high deyse, and made alle the xij kynges sitte at his
table downwarde a renge; and also in honour of the high feste
of oure lady, he made the Quene Gonnore sitte by hym
crowned, and so dide alle the other xij quenes by-fore theire
lordes; and at other tables satte other princes, Dukes, and
Erles, and othir knyghtes were sette richely thourgh the
medowes in tentes and Pavelouns with grete ioy and melodye
that neuer was seyn gretter in no Court.</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="218b" UNIT="folio"/>    And as thei were in this ioye, and in this feste, and kay
the stiward that brought the firste mese be-fore the


<PB REF="" N="615" ID="pb.615"/>

kynge, ther com in the feirest forme of man that euer hadde
thei seyn be-fore, and he was clothed in samyte, and girte with
a bawdrike of silke harnysshed with golde and preciouse stones,
that all the paleys flamed of the light, and the heir of his
hede was yelowe and crispe with a crowne of golde ther-on as
he hadde ben a kynge, and his hosen of fin scarlet, and his
shone of white cordewan orfraied, and bokeled with fin golde;
and hadde an harpe a-bowte his nekke of siluer richely wrought,
and the stringes were-of fin golde wire, and the harpe was
sette with preciouse stones; and the man that it bar was so
feire of body and of visage that neuer hadde thei sein noon
so feire a creature; but this a-peired moche his bewte and his
visage for that he was blinde, and yet were the iyen in his
heed feire and clier; and he hadde a litill cheyne of siluer
tacched to his arme, and to that cheyne a litill spayne was
bounde as white as snowe, and a litill coler a-boute his nekke
of silke harneysed with golde; and this spaynell ledde hym
streight be-fore the kynge Arthur, and he harped a lay of
Breteigne full swetely that wonder was to here, and the refraite
of his laye salewed the kynge Arthur, and the Quene Gonnore,
and alle the other after; and kay the stiward that brought
the firste cours taried a-while in the settinge down to be-holde
the harpur ententifly.  But now we moste cesse of hem a-while,
and speke of the kynge Rion.</P>
<P>  In this partie the storie seith that whan the kynge Ryon
was discounfited of the kynge Arthur, and of the kynge
leodogan of Carmelide, he departed from that stour sory and
wroth, as he that all hadde loste in that bateile, and <CHOICE><CORR>repeired</CORR><SIC>repired</SIC></CHOICE>
hom in to his contrey triste and sorowfull, and swor his oth
that neuer sholde he haue ioye ne reste till he hadde distroied
the kynge leodogan, and chaced hym oute of his londe, and
sente writtes and letteres to alle the lordes and knyghtes of his
reame in lengthe and in brede, and to alle the reames that he
hadde conquered, and that were ix by a count, and assembled
so moche peple that it was merveile to se; the first kynge
that com at the comaundement of kynge Rion was the kynge

<PB REF="" N="616" ID="pb.616"/>

Palerens, and hadde in his companye xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that were bolde
and hardy; after com the kynge Tasurs with xij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men; and
the kynge Brinans brought xiiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men wele horsed and a-raied
for to helpe theire lorde, and the kynge Argans brought xi<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
men; and the kynge Taurus brought xi<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men whiche hadde
grete corage to a-venge the shame of kynge Rion; after that
com the kynge Arade de galoire with xv<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men in his
companye; and the kynge Solimas brought xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men wele horsed;
and the kynge Kahadins brought x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; and the kynge Alipantius
of the londe des pastures brought xx<HI REND="sup">MI</HI> men; whan thei were
come and assembled at the comaundement of the kynge Rion,
and he hem saugh alle be-fore hym he made his complaynt
and his clamoure heringe hem alle, and seide to hem full
sympilly, "Lordinges, ye be alle my liege men, and of me
ye holde youre londes and youre fees, and   <MILESTONE N="219a" UNIT="folio"/>ther-fore ye owe
to bere me feith a-gein alle men; and for I knowe youre hertes
fin and trewe, and that ye wolde in nothinge a-gein me not
erre, and therfore I yow pray and require that ye me helpe to
a-venge my shame, nought only myn but alle youres; ffor he
that doth to me shame or vylonye, he doth it not only to me,
but to yow alle in generall, and therfore I pray yow and require
be the oth that ye haue made to me that ye be with-ynne this
two monethes be-fore Torayse a-gein the kynge leodogan of
Carmelide that by his force hath me discounfited and chaced
oute of the feilde, and therfore I require yow that ther on be
take vengaunce;" and thei ansuerde alle with oo voice, and
seide, "Of that it nedeth vs neuer to preyen, for this shall be
don at youre plesier."  With that thei departed and wente
hom in to theire contrey, and made hem redy, and com at the
day that was named with grete force be-fore the castell of
Torayse; and the kynge Rion com with all his peple, and
be-seged town all a-boute, and gadered the prayes in her
comynge.  But Cleodalis the stiward of Carmelide that was a
noble knyght, and a trewe to his lorde chalenged it full fiercely
of the forreyours, ffor he com out with xx<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men that he hadde
with-holden to kepe the marches, and faught with hem fiercely,


<PB REF="" N="617" ID="pb.617"/>

and rescowed the pray, and brought it in to the Castell and
made shette the yates; and the kynge Rion and his peple logged
a-boute the castell, and sette vp teintes and Pavelons, and
rested the firste nyght, and on the morowe thei assailed the
town and the castell; and the kynge leodogan and Cleodales
cam oute by a posterne that opened a-gein the river, euen
right a-geins the teinte of kynge Solymas that was gon to the
assaute of a yate, and the kynge leodogan drofe thourgh the
teintes and Pavelouns, and with hym Cleodales, and caste
down to the erthe all that vp-right dide stonde, and toke golde
and siluer, and vesselles of golde and other Iuwelles, and
brought in to the town, and in to the Castell by
strengthe.  Than were thei of the hoste full sory and wroth; and the kynge
Rion seide all that sholde nought hem a-vaile, ffor he wolde
neuer departe from the castell till he hadde it taken, and the
kinge leodogan putte in his mercy; and than thei with-drough
hem from the assaute, and so a-bide fyve dayes with-outen
shotte or other dedes, and while that the kynge Rion lay thus
at soiour, hit was tolde how the kynge Arthur hadde
discounfited the saisnes, and chaced hem oute of the londe, and that
at the assumpcion he sholde holde court roiall in the towon of
Cameloth; and whan the kynge Rion herde thus, he seide,
"Now lete hym feesten, ffor as soone as I haue the kynge
leodogan in my bailly, I shall go vpon hym with so moche
peple that he shall it not endure; and neuertheles yef the
kynge Arthur come to me to aske mercy er I come vpon hym
with myn hoste I will haue of hym pite, and suffre hym to
regne, and of me holde his londe."  "Sir," seide his men,
"sende hym a message, and do hym to wite that it were better
to hym to be-come youre man than to be distroied and his
londe waste."  "So will I do," quod the kynge Rion;" and
than he lete write a letter, and it dide ensele with his seell,
and than he cleped to hym a knyght in whom he moche trusted,
and made   <MILESTONE N="219b" UNIT="folio"/>hym for to swere that he sholde take this letter to
kynge Arthur in his owne hande, and he swor that in the
same maner it sholde be do; and than the kynge Rion delyuered


<PB REF="" N="618" ID="pb.618"/>

hym this lettere, and a-noon he departed and rode forth the
nexte wey toward Camelot, and with hym but a squyer; and
the kynge Rion a-bode stille be-fore Torayse, and comaunded
his peple to armen hem, and to assaile the castell, ffor he hadde
grete dispite that soche a place with so fewe peple sholde a-geins
hym holde day or houre, ffor hym semed he hadde mo knyghtes
in his hoste than ther were men, and women, and childeren in
the town, "and therefore it is grete shame to ley the sege, ffor
we myght haue taken it at oure first comynge by force, and
therfore shull we be the lesse preised in other contreis, and
turne vs to reprof and cowardise, and thei that we shull werre
vpon here-after shull haue of vs the lesse drede."</P>
<P>  Whan the princes and the Barouns herde the kynge thus
speke, thei were somdell a-shamed, for thei dredde
leste he sholde holde hem cowardes, and ronne to theire armes
in all haste, and be-gonne to assaile the castell strongly; and
thei that were with-ynne hem deffended manly and casten out
stones, and sharpe speres and dartes, and slough of hem I-nowe
in the diches; and the kynge leodogan, and Cloedalis, and
Guyomar his cosin, and hervy de rivell, and Males le bruns
issed out armed vpon horse of prise couered with still, and
smote a-monge the peple of kynge Rion that by force hadde
take a barbican, and ledde a-wey xv sergauntes that were bolde
and hardy, and of that harme hem thought shame; and
Cleodalis smot the kynge Margant with a spere that neither shelde
ne hauberk myght hym a-vaile, for the spere shaft shewed
thourgh his bakke be-hynde, and he blussht down deed to
grounde; and whan his men saugh hym falle, thei lefte the
prisoners and ronne thider; and whan thei founde hym deed,
than be-gan the cry and the noyse, and lefte the assaute, and
Cleodalis and his companye rescowed the xv men, and brought
hem in to the Castell, and closed the yates, and thei of the hoste
also with-drough theire peple, and bar the deed kynge in to the
tente of kynge Rion, that was therfore sorowfull and wroth.  But
now shull we leve hem makynge theire doell, and speke of the
message that kynge Rion sente to kynge Arthur to Cameloth.

<PB REF="" N="619" ID="pb.619"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan this messager was departed from his lorde, he and
his squyer rode forth till thei com to Cameloth on
the day of the assumpcion, and a-light down of his horse, and
com in to the halle as kay hadde sette the firste cours be-fore
the kynge Arthur.  This knyght saugh these kynges and these
quenes that satte at the high deyse alle crowned for the high
feeste, and saugh the harpoure crowned with golde, he was all
a-stonyed, and for the dogge that hym ledde thourgh the paleis;
and he asked of kay that served whiche was the kynge Arthur,
and kay hym shewed a-noon right; and the knyght, that was
wise, and well cowde speke, com be-fore the kynge, and seide
so lowde that alle myght it vndirstonde, "Kynge Arthur,
I grete the nought,   <MILESTONE N="220a" UNIT="folio"/>ffor I am not ther-to comaunded by hym
that hath me to the I-sente.  But I shall do the to vndirstonde
what he doth to the sende; and whan thow hast herde his
comaundement do as thow art a-vised, and yef thow do his
will thow shalt finde ther-in profite, and yef thow wilt it
nought do the by-hoveth to forsake thi londe, and fle in exile;"
and whan the kynge this herde he be-gan to smyle, and seide,
"Full sobirly a-vise the of thi message, ffor of all that thow art
comaunded thou mayst say boldly all thy will with-oute eny
encombraunce of me or of eny other;" and than he seide,</P>
<P>  "Kynge Arthur to the sente me the kynge of alle cristin
that is the kynge Rion of the yles, whiche is at sege
be-fore Toraise in Carmelide, and with hym ix kynges that
alle ben his liege men, and holde of hym theire londes and
theire fees in honour, ffor he hath made hem alle enclyne to
hym by his prowesse, and of alle the kynges that he hat
conquered wher-of ther be ix, he hath flayn of theire
beerdes.  Now my lorde sendeth the comaundement that thou be-come
his man; and that shall be to the grete honoure to be-come liege
man to so puyssaunt a kynge as my lorde, ffor he is lorde from
the east in to the west of all the londe;" and whan the knyght
hadde thus seide he drough oute the letter of kynge Rion, that
was seled with x seles roiall, and seide to the kynge Arthur,
"Sir, do rede this letter that my lorde hath the sente, and


<PB REF="" N="620" ID="pb.620"/>

than shalt thou heren his wille and his corage;" and ther-with
he delyuered hym the letter, and the kynge hit toke to the
archebisshoppe, that was come thider, to vndirstonde the message,
and he it vnfolded and be-gan to rede a-lowde that thei myght
it wele vndirstonde that were in the halle.</P>
<P>  "I the kynge Rion, that am lorde of all the west, do hem
alle to wite that these letteres shull seen, that I
am at sege be-fore Toraise in Carmelide, and with me be ix
kynges of my meyne, and alle theire peple of theire londes
that armes may bere, and of alle the kynges that I conquere I
haue theire suerdes be my prowesse, and also I haue made a
mantell of reade samyte furred with the beerdes of these kynges,
and this mantell is nygh all redy of all that ther-to longeth,
saf only tasselles, and for the tassels faile I haue herde tidinges
of thy grete renoun that is spredde <CHOICE><CORR>thourgh</CORR><SIC>though</SIC></CHOICE> the worlde, I will
that it be honoured more than eny of the other kinges, and
therfore I comaunde the that thow sende me thy beerde with
all the skynne, and I shall hit sette on the tassels of my mantell
for the love of the, ffor neuer be-fore this mantell be tasselled
shall it not hange a-boute my nekke.  Ne I will of noon other
haue it made but of thy beerde, ffor a-boute the handes and
the nekke ought euery prince sette the moste honorable thinges,
and for thow art the most puyssaunt kynge as the renoun of
the recordeth, I will that thow sende me thy beerde by oon or
tweyne of thy frendes, and after come thou to me and be-come
my liege man and holde of me thy londes in goode pees; and
yef thou wilt nought thus don I comaunde the that thou go
exiled and forsake thi londe, ffor as soone as I haue conquered
the kynge leodogan I   <MILESTONE N="220b" UNIT="folio"/>shall come vpon the with all myn hoste,
and make thy beerde be flayn, and drawe from thy chyn
boustously, and that thou shalt knowe verily."</P>
<P>  Whan the archebisshop hadde redde this letter be-fore
the kynge Arthur, and be-fore alle the Barouns he
delyuered the letter a-gein to the kynge that was full wroth
and angry with this comaundement; and the messager seide,
"Kynge Arthur, do that my lorde the comaundeth that I may


<PB REF="" N="621" ID="pb.621"/>

returne;" and the kynge seide he myght wele returne
whanso-euer he wolde, and telle his lorde that his beerd sholde he
neuer haue while he myght it diffende; and the knyght
departed and com to his horse and rode forth, he and his squyer,
till thei come to Toraise, in Carmelide, where he fonde the
kynge Rion that assailede the Castell full fiercely; and thei
with-ynne diffended hem full harde, that thei with-oute loste
moche of theire peple, and therfore was the kynge Rion full
wroth; and whan the knyght was come be-fore the kynge
Rion, and tolde his ansuere from the kynge Arthur, he seide
he sholde not so soone haue take the kynge leodogan, but a-noon
he wolde come vpon hym with so grete power that he sholde
not hem sustene ne endure, and now shull we speke of the
kynge Arthur, and of his Barouns.</P>
<P>  Whan the knyght that hadde brought this message from
the kynge Rion was departed, the kynge Arthur lefte
stille sittinge at mete in myrthe and in ioye; and the harpoure
wente from oon place to a-nother, and harped myrily, so that
thei be-hilde hym for a merveile bothe oon and other, and hem
liked more the melodye of this harpour than eny thinge that
this other mynstralles diden; and the kynge Arthur hadde grete
merveile fro whens this man myght come, and yet he ought
hym well to knowe, for many tymes hadde he hym seyn in
other maner and in othere semblaunces; and whan thei hadde
eten and the clothes were taken up, the harpour com be-fore
the kynge, and seide, "Sir, yef it plese yow graunte me reward
for my servise."  "Certes, frende," seide the kynge, "it is reson,
and ye shull it haue with goode will, and ther-fore sey youre
will, for ye shull not faile yef it be soche thinge as I may yeve,
savinge myn honour and my reame."  "Sir," seide the
harpour, "ye shull neuer haue ther-in but honour, yef god
will."  "Than sey youre volunte," seide the kynge boldely.  Than
seide the harpour, "I aske yow, and require to bere youre
chief baner in the firste bataile that ye shall go to."  "Ffeire
frende," seide the kynge, "sholde that be worship to me and
my reame; oure lorde hath sette yow in his prison; how myght

<PB REF="" N="622" ID="pb.622"/>

ye youre-self guyde that may nought se to bere a baner in
bateile of a kynge that ought to be refute and counfort to alle
the hoste."  "Haa, sir," quod the harpour, "God that is the
very guyde, me shall condite and lede that in many perilouse
places me hath ledde, and wite ye well it shall be for youre
prowe;" and whan the barouns it vndirstode thei hadde
merveile; than be-hilde hym the kynge Ban, and remembred hym
of Merlin that in the Castell of the marasse hym served in
disgise of a yonge knyght of xv yere age, and thought it sholde
ben he, and seide a-noon to the kynge, "Sir, graunte hym his
request, for he semeth to be   <MILESTONE N="221a" UNIT="folio"/>soche a man that his desire ne
ought not to be refused."  "Why," seide Arthur, "trowe ye
it sholde be to oure profite and oure honour that a mynstrall
sholde bere oure baner in bateile, whiche may not lede
hymself, though I hit with-sey I do nothinge a-gein right, for it
is a thinge that I sholde not graunte lightly, but I knewe
right well the persone that it sholde bere;" and a-noon as this
worde was seide, the harpoure vanysshed a-monge hem that noon
wiste where he be com.  Than Arthur be-thought hym on
Merlin, and was sory and wroth that he ne hadde it hym graunted,
and alle that were ther-ynne were a-baisshed, for that he was
loste so sodeinly; and the kynge Ban of Benoyk that well
a-parceived it was Merlin seide to the kynge Arthur, "Certes,
sir," quod he, "ye ought hym wele for to knowen."  "Trewly,"
seide Arthur, "ye sey full trewe, but for that he hath made a
whelpe hym for to lede that hath take a-wey fro me the
knowinge."  "Sir," seide Gawein, "what is he than?"  "Nevew,"
quod the kynge, "it is Merlin oure frende."  "Yee," seide
Gawein; "so helpe me god, I trowe yow wele that it be he,
ffor often hath he be disgised be-fore youre Baronye, and this
hath he don to make yow solas and counfort."  And as thei
stode spekinge here-of, in the halle com in a litill childe, that
semed of viij yere of age, and he was all naked and brecheles,
and bar a staf in his honde and com be-fore the kynge, and
seide, "Sir, appareile yow for to go a-gein the kynge Rion in
bateile, and delyuer me youre baner for to bere;" and whan


<PB REF="" N="623" ID="pb.623"/>

thei that were in the paleys saugh hym in that aray, thei
begonne to laugh harde; and the kynge ansuerde all in laughinge,
as <SUPPLIED>he</SUPPLIED> that soposed well it was Merlin, "So helpe me god, ye
owe it well to bere, and I it yow graunte."  Gramercy, sir,"
seide the childe, "ffor in me it shall be wele employde;" and
with that he comaunded hem alle to god, and wente oute of
the paleis, and than a-noon he toke his owne semblaunce soche
as he was wonte to haue, and seide to hym-self that now hym
be-hoveth to somown the kynges hoste, and wente toward the
see and passed ouer and com to Gannes, to Pharien, and to
leonces of paierne, and badde hem to assemble theire power of
all that thei myght bringe oute of the londe and come to
Cameloth, and thei seide thei wolde do hys comaundement; and
Merlin com to the see, and passed ouer and wente to the londe
of kynge Vrien, and by the londe of kynge looth, and seid to
the Barouns, and to other princes, that thei be with-ynne xv
dayes afte oure lady day, the Natiuite in September be-fore
Cameloth, and thei hym graunted alle; and than he departed
from them, and com a-gein to the court er euesonge were all
seide vpon the same day of the assumpcion, and the kinge of
hym made grete ioye, and asked why he hadde hym so kept
oute of sight; and he ansuerde that he ought hym wele to
knowen.  "Ye certes," seide the kynge, "yef in me were
eny witte."  Thus thei a-bide in feeste and ioye all that day.</P>
<P>  On the morowe the kynge made alle his princes to assemble
in his paleis, and ther also was Merlin; and the kynge
Arthur seide how hem be-houeth to somowne all the power
  <MILESTONE N="221b" UNIT="folio"/>that thei myght assemble, for he wolde socour the kynge
leodogan that was <CHOICE><CORR>fader</CORR><SIC>fade</SIC></CHOICE> to the Queene Gonnore; and Merlin
seide how thei were alle somowned bothe at Gannes and at
Benoyk, and thourgh alle the londes of the other barouns; and
the kynge Arthur hym asked whan that was don, and he seide,
"Seth yesterday after mete;" and whan the kynge and the
other princes this vndirstode that he hadde this don, thei hadde
grete wonder, and were ther in ioye and in feste till all here
peple was assembled, and than meved the kynge Arthur and


<PB REF="" N="624" ID="pb.624"/>

his baronye, and rode towarde the reame of Carmelide; and
the kynge graunted his baner to Merlin as he hadde promysed
be-fore, and sped theire iournyes till thei come a litill iourney
fro Toraise, where the kynge Rion had be-sege the kynge
leodogan; and whan thei were nygh the hoste, Merlin seide
to Gawein, and to sir Ewein, and to Segramor, "Loke ye
be euer nygh a-boute me;" and thei seide thei wolde don his
pleiser.  "Now than," quod Merlin, "sueth after me softely,
and alle thei of the hoste till we be in bateile, and ye shull
smyte vpon hem of that other partye with-oute rennynge of
youre bateile, and thinke euer to come nygh after my baner
what wey that euer ye se me turne;" and thei ansuerde that
so thei wolde with goode will, and so he seide to Arthur and to
alle the othere princes, and wente forth till thei com in to the
hoste of kynge Rion, and Merlin be-fore hem all so harde as his
horse myght renne with the dragon in his hande that caste
thourgh his mouthe fire and flame, that alle thei ther-of were
a-baisshed; and Gawein that folowed hym next mette with
the kynge Pharaon that with all his bateile com hym a-geins;
and as soone as he saugh hem approche, Sir Gawein hym smote
so, that shelde ne hauberk myght hym warante, but bar hym
thourgh the body deed to the erthe; and than he seide in game,
"He this is sworn to pees, for by hym shall neuer the kynge
Arthur lese acre of his londe ne his beerd be flayn from his
chyn;" with that assembled bothe hostes that oon a-gein that
other, and grete was the noyse, and the fray of the people of kynge
Rion, and of the peple of kynge Arthur; and ther dide Gawein,
and Ewein, and Segramor, and Gaheries, and the knyghtes of
the rounde table merveiles with theire handes; ffor whan bothe
hostes were mette, ye myght haue sein many oon leide to
grounde of oo party and of other, ffor thei were bold and hardy
on bothe sides; and Merlin that bar the dragon drof in to the
prees, and sir Gawein and his companye after, and smote hem
so harde that thei metten that thei neded no salve, and the
speres fly in peces; and that was a thinge that discounforted
the kynge Rion and his peple, ffor thei wende verily that fendes

<PB REF="" N="625" ID="pb.625"/>

were fallen a-monge the hoste.  But thei were so bolde and so
chiualrouse that ther-fore thei wolde not be discounfited, but
hilde bateile grete and merveilouse a-gein the peple of kynge
Arthur, and made hem resorte bakke at hir first comynge, and
therfore was sir Gawein and his companye full of dolour; and
Merlin that rode be-fore hem cried, "What lordinges, what
shall this be-mene, be ye now a-rested? sueth me yef ye will
  <MILESTONE N="222a" UNIT="folio"/>youre loos encrese and your pris."  Than these felowes smyten
in a-monge hem of Irelonde that well hem resceyued with
trenchaunt wepenes.  But sir Gawein and his companye dide
so well in armes that thei pressed thourgh the peple of kynge
Rion, but first was ther many a hevy stroke yoven and resceived,
and many a knyght straught deed to the erthe; and the kynge
Arthur, and the kynge looth of Orcanye, and the kynge Ban,
and the kynge Bohors were smyte in to the bateile on a-nother
side, where thei dide merveiles a-monge theire enmyes, ffor
a-gein theire strokes endured noon armure.  But the peple of
kynge Rion mette hem so fiercely, that thei smote down the
kynge looth and the kynge Bohors from theire horse a-mydde
the presse, and so thei myght soone haue hadde grete damage
ne hadde ben the grete prowesse that was in hem bothe, for
thei lept on foot full vigerousely with theire swerdes drawen,
and be-gonne to smyte down horse and men so crewelly that
ther ne was noon that hem saugh, but he hilde it for a
merveile; and the kynge Arthur and the kynge Ban pressed that
wey hem to remounte, and Merlin com drivinge with the baner
in his hande that thourgh his throte caste fire and flame, and
smote in to the grettest presse; and whan the peple of kynge
Rion saugh the grete merveile of the dragon that so caste fire,
thei hadden grete drede and forsoke place, and the two kynges
on whom thei dide a-bide, and Merlin com to them and
delyvered to euerich of theym a good horse and a swifte, for I-nowe
ther were a-stray thourgh the felde, and thei a-noon lept vpon
horse, and rode in to the bateile, and be-gonne to do so well
in armes, and so dide alle theire companye.  But the force of
kynge Rion was so grete that thei of the reame of grete Breteigne 


<PB REF="" N="626" ID="pb.626"/>

myght it not endure, but sholde alle haue be discounfited
as to my felinge, ne hadde be the prowesse of sir Gawein and
his companye, and the knyghtes of the rounde table, for these
shewed merveiles wher thei com, ffor thei smyte down men and
horse, bothe that alle that hem with-stode semed it were feendes.</P>
<P>  On a-nother side of the bateile was the kynge Ventres, and
the kynge Tradilyuans, and the kynge Vrien, and the
kynge de Cent Chiualers that full fiercely faught a-gein the
peple of the yles that kept hem short; ffor of the yles was many
a vailaunt knyght, and bolde in armes, and hadde smyte down
the kynge Tradilyuans of <CHOICE><CORR>North</CORR><SIC>Noth</SIC></CHOICE> wales, and hilde hym by the
helme; and Merlin com to Gawein, and seide, "Now lete se
what ye will do, ffor we haue loste the kynge Tradilyuans, but
he <SUPPLIED>have</SUPPLIED> hastely socour; sewe me."  Than wente Merlin that
wey, and sir Gawein and his felowes folowinge till thei com to
the kynge Tradilyuans that was in grete auenture of deth, and
than be-gonne thei so harde bateile that wonder was to
be-holde, so that thei that hilde the kinge Tradilyuans that were
bolde, and hardy, and durable in bateile were all a-baisshed; but
yet dide thei grete peyne hym to with-holde, and thei of the
rounde table haue hym rescowed, and sette on horse, and were
full wroth and angry, and be-gonne a-gein the bateile, and the
medle that hidiouse was to haue seyn, ffor oon fill deed vpon
a-nother, so that ther were grete mountayns of deed cors
  <MILESTONE N="222b" UNIT="folio"/>thourgh the feelde ther as the bataile was; ffor sir Gawein
hadde so many slain with his swerde, that bothe swerde and
arme were all be-soiled with blode and brayn.</P>
<P>  Than the kynge leodogan saugh the bateile so crewell and
so fell ther as he stode lenynge out at a wyndowe, and
saugh the dragon that Merlin bar that caste fier thourgh his
mouthe, so that the heyr was all reade; and he knewe it well,
for he hadde it sein be-fore tymes, and knew well it was the
signe of kynge Arthur; and than he called vpon his knyghtes
and cried, "As armes, for my sone the kynge Arthur fighteth
with oure enmyes, and is come me for to socour, god quyte
hym;" and whan thei this vndirstode, thei ronne alle to armes


<PB REF="" N="627" ID="pb.627"/>

thourgh the castell, and com oute at the yate I-armed x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and
moo of bolde men, and hardy, and smyten in to the hoste of
the kynges of the yles full fiercely, and thei hem resceived,
for thei were of grete hardynesse; and Cleodalis the stiward,
and hervy de rivell, and her other felowes be-gonne to do
merveiles of armes; and the bateile was so grete and so thikke on
alle sides of the hoste of kynge Rion, that it was merveile so
many ther were deed of oo parte and of other; and whan the
kyng Rion saugh the grete mortalite and slaughtur of his
peple, and also of the peple of kynge Arthur, his herte wax
tender, and hadde ther-of pitee, and seide to hym-self that that
mortalite wolde he no lenger suffre, and than he toke a braunche
of sicamor in his hande, and wente be-fore the hoste to disseuer
the bateiles, and wente forth till he fonde the kynge Arthur,
and spake so high that he myght wele ben herde, "Kynge
Arthur, wher-fore doost thow suffre thi peple to be slayn and
distroied, and also myn; do thow now well yef ther be so
moche worthinesse in the as the worlde recorded delyuer thy
peple fro deth, and I shall deliuer also tho of myn, and we
shull make oure peple with-drawe on bothe parties a-rowme,
and thow and I shull fight to-geder body for body by soche
covenaunt, that yef thow may me conquere, I shall returne
to my contrey with the peple that is me be left on lyve, and
yef I may the conquere thow shalt holde thi londe of me, and
be my soget as ben these other kynges that I haue conquered,
and I shall haue thy berde with all the skyn to make the
tasselles of my mantell."  "In the name of god," quod the
kynge Arthur, "thow sholdest so haue the better part of the
pley, whan thow sholdest repeire in to thy contrey all hooll
yef I the conquered, and ne sholdest not be-come my man, and
thow desirest that I sholde be thy man yef thow myght me
conquere.  But I will fight with the in this maner as thow
hast seide that yef I the conquere, thow shalt be my liege man,
and in the same wise I graunte it the yef thow me
conquere."  "Sir," seide the kynge Rion, that was so stronge that he
douted no man body for body, and he hadde conquered so ix

<PB REF="" N="628" ID="pb.628"/>

kynges that alle were his liege men, "and I it yow graunte like
as ye haue seide."  Than thei sured theire feithes be-twene
hem two to holde these covenauntes, and made departe the
bateiles that were so horible; and the Barouns drough a-side
that were wroth and angry with these couenauntes; and sir
Gawein that was wrother than eny other come to the kynge,
his vncle, and seide, "Sir, yef it plese yow graunte me   <MILESTONE N="223a" UNIT="folio"/>this
bateile."  "Now ther-of, require ye no more," quod the
kynge Arthur, "nother ye, ne noon other; ffor noon other than
I shall sette ther-to noon hande, ffor I shall do the bateile with
the helpe of god, seith he hath me ther-to requireth."</P>
<P>  Than bothe hostes were drawen a-side on that oon part and
on that other, and the two kynges were armed full
richely all that nedeth to a noble prince, and eche of hem toke
a spere stronge and rude; and than rode eche of hem from
other more than two but lengthe, and than smote the horse with
spores and mette to-geder as tempest, ffor well ran bothe horse,
and were of grete force, and the two kynges were fierce and
hardy, and mette with so grete raundon with speres that were
grete and shorte, and the heedes sharp I-grounden vpon the
sheldes that thei perced; but the hauberkes were so harde,
that thei fauced no mayle, and the horse were of grete force,
and the knyghtes of grete prowesse, that the speres splindered
in splyntes; and than thei leide hande to theire swerdes that
weren of grete bounte, and smyten grete strokes vpon helmes,
that thei breke the serkeles of golde and stones which weren of
grete vertu, and to hewen the sheldes and hauberkes, and in
the flessh so depe that the blood stremed after, and in short
tyme eche of hem so a-raied other that ther ne was nother of
hem but he hadde nede of a leche; and theire sheldes weren
slitte and hewen that ther was <SUPPLIED>not</SUPPLIED> left of theym so moche
that thei myght with hem couer; and than thei caste the
renenaunt to grounde, and caught the swerdes in bothe hondes,
and smyte pesaunt strokes at discouert, so that thei to slitte
helmes and to-rente hauberkes, so that the flessh shewed all
bare, and ther ne was noon of hem bothe, but he was wery for


<PB REF="" N="629" ID="pb.629"/>

traveile of yevinge of strokes and receivinge; and that was oon
thinge that lengest hem hilde, ffor yef thei hadde ben fressh
and newe to that thei weren with-outen sheldes, and theire
hauberkes to-rente, and theire helmes to-quasshed, thei myght
not haue endured, neuertheles ther ne was noon of hem bothe
but he was sore hurt and wounded.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Rion that was bolde and hardy a-bove
alle thoo of the londe, saugh the kynge Arthur hym
contene a-geins hym he hadde ther-of grete merveile, ffor he
wende that he sholde not a-gein hym haue endured, and seide
to hym-self that neuer be forn hadde he seyn so goode a knyght,
and than he douted hym sore, and seide, "Kynge Arthur! hit
is grete harme of the, ffor thow art the beste knyght that I
faught with euer be-forn, and I se well and knowe verily that
thy grete herte that thow hast shall make the to dye, ffor it
will not suffre the to come to my mercy; and I knowe well
that thow haddest leuer dye than be conquered, and that is
grete damage, and therfore I wolde pray the and requyre for
the grete prowesse that is in the that thou haue pitee on
thyself, and yelde the for outraied for to saue thi lif, thourgh the
couenauntes that ben be-twene vs, so that my mantell were
parformed in my live; ffor better I love thi lif than thi deth,
and thow art come to thi fin that knowest thow well, and so
don alle these barouns   <MILESTONE N="223b" UNIT="folio"/>here a-boute that here ben."  Whan
the kynge Arthur vndirstode the wordes of the kynge Rion he
hadde grete shame, for so many a vailante prince hadde it
vndirstonde; and than he ran vpon hym with his swerde in bothe
handes as he that was full wroth and full of maltalente, and
wende to smyte hym on the helme, but the kynge Rion blenched
that saugh the stroke comynge with so grete ravyne, and
neuertheles he a-raught hym vpon the helme, and kutte of the
nasell, and the stroke descended and smote the stedes nekke
a-sounder, and the kynge Rion fill to the erthe; and as he
wende to haue rise, Arthur smote hym on the lifte shuldre in
to the flesshe two large ynche, and the kynge Rion stombeled
ther-with and fill a-gein to the erthe; and whan the kynge


<PB REF="" N="630" ID="pb.630"/>

Arthur saugh the kynge Rion falle a-gein to grounde, a-noon he
a-light to grounde, and ran to hym lightly, and caught hym by
the helme, and drough it to hym with so grete force, that the
laces brast a-sonder, and he it raced from his heed, and than
lifte vp the swerde, and seide he was but deed, but he wolde
yelde hym outerly; and he seide that wolde he ne neuer, for he
hadde leuer dye than live recreaunt; and whan Arthur saugh
that he myght hym not ther-to bringe to holde hym for
outraied, he smote of the heed in sight of alle that were in the
feelde, and than ronne to the princes on alle parties, and made
grete ioye, and sette hym on a horse, and brought hym in to
the castell of Toraise, and hym vn-armed, and serched his
woundes; and the baronye of kynge Rion com to hym and
resceived of hym theire londes, and theire fees, and dide hym
homage, and than returned in to theire contrey, and with hem
bar the body of kynge Rion; and it biried with grete
lamentacion and wepinge; and the kynge Arthur was at Toraise gladde
and ioyfull of the victorie that godde hym hadde yoven, and
soiourned in the castell till he was warisshed of his woundes
that he hadde in the bateile; and whan he was all hool, he
departed fro Toraise with grete ioye and feste; and the kynge
leodogan conveyed hym on his wey, and after returned; and
the kynge Arthur and his companye ride till thei come to
Cameloth, where-as the Quene Gonnore and the other quenes
were a-bidinge that of theire comynge made grete ioye; and
ther soiourned the princes iiij dayes, and on the fifte day thei
departed, any euery man repeired to his owne contrey, and
ledde with hem theire wyves thei that eny hadden; and the
kynge Arthur com a-gein in to the Citee of logres, and soiourned
ther longe tyme with the quene, and with hym was sir Gawein,
and the companye of the rounde table, and Merlin that dide
hem grete solas and grete companye, and he com to kynge
Arthur, and seide that from hens-forth he myght hym wele
for-beren, ffor he hadde somdell a-pesed his londe, and sette it in
reste, and ther-fore he wolde go take his disporte where hym
liked.

<PB REF="" N="631" ID="pb.631"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge this vndirstode he was pensif and sory, for
he loved hym entirly, and fain wolde he that he a-bood
stille yef it myght be; and whan he saugh he myght hym not
with-holde, he praied hym dierly that he wolde come to hym
a-gein in short   <MILESTONE N="224a" UNIT="folio"/>tyme, and Merlin seide he sholde come a-gein
all be tyme er he hadde nede.  "Certes," seide the kynge,
"euery day and euery hour haue I to yow nede and myster,
ffor with-oute yow I can nought, and ther-fore I wolde we
sholde neuer departe companye;" and Merlin seide, "I shall
come a-nother tyme to youre nede, and I shall not faile day ne
hour."  And the kynge was stille a longe while, and be-gan
to stodie sore; and whan he hadde be longe in this thought, he
seide all sighinge, "Ha, Merlin feire swete frende in what nede
shull ye me helpe, I pray yow telle me to sette myn herte in
more ese."  "Sir," seide Merlin, "and I shall yow telle, and
after I shall go my wey.  The lyon that is the sone of the
Bere, and was be-geten of a leopart, shall renne by the reame
of the grete Breteigne, and that is the nede that ye shall
haue."  With that Merlin departed, and the kynge be lefte in grete
myssese, and sore a-baisshed of this thinge; ffor he knewe not
to what it myght turne.  But ther-of shull we cesse at this
tyme, and returne to speke of Merlin.


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.32">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXXII.  
<LB/>MERLIN'S INTERPRETATION OF THE DREAM OF FLUALIS, AND HIS VISIT TO NIMIANE; THE KNIGHTING OF THE DWARF; THE EMBASSY FROM THE EMPEROR OF ROME; ARTHUR'S FIGHT WITH THE GIANT; THE BATTLE WITH THE ROMANS.</HEAD>
<P>In this partie, seith the storye, as soone as Merlin was
departed from the kynge Arthur, as ye haue herde, he
departed from the Cite of logres so faste, that in all the worlde
was noon so swyfte a horse that myght hym haue sewed, so


<PB REF="" N="632" ID="pb.632"/>

that alle that euer hym saugh wende he hadde ben oute of his
witte; and a-noon he drof in to the foreste that was grete and
depe, and come to the see, and passed ouer that no tyme wolde
a-bide be see ne be londe till he come to the parties of
Iherusalen, where ther was a kynge of grete puyssaunce that was
named fflualis; he was a goode man of grete renoun as of his
lawe, ffor he was a sarazin, and he hadde assembled alle the wise
men of his londe, and of other londes as many as he myght
gete; and whan thei were come all to the assemble be-fore
hym in his paleys, he seide to hem so high that thei myght
hym wele here and vndirstonde: "Lordinges," quod he, "I
haue sente for yow, and ye ben come at my comaundement,
and ther-fore I thanke yow, but ye knowe not the cause why,
but yef I do yow to vndirstonde, hit be-fill that I slepte this
other day in my paleys, and hilde the quene that is here in
myn armes as me semed; and as I was in this a-vision com to
me two serpentes, where-of eche of hem hadde two heedes, foule
and hidouse, and of eche of hem com a grete flawme of fire
wher-of all my contrey was light, and that oon of the serpentz
caught me be-twene his feet by the flankes, and that other
toke the quene be-twene myn armes, and bar vs bothe an high
vpon the roof of my paleys that is so high; and whan thei
hadde brought vs thider, thei rente of oure armes and legges
from oure bodyes, and caste hem down oon here a-nother there;
and whan thei hadde thus vs dismembred, ther com viij smale
serpentes a-noon, and eche of hem toke a membre, and wente
vp in to the heir a-bove the temple of Diane, and ther thei
rente a-sondre oure membres in to smale pecis, and the two
serpentes that hadde rente oure membres from oure bodyes
  <MILESTONE N="224b" UNIT="folio"/>lifte vs an high a-bove the paleys, and sette fire on the paleis
with-ynne, and brent vp oure bodyes in to aisshes; and the
wynde a-roos, and gadered the powder and bar it ouer all the
londe a this half the see, ne ther ne was no goode town, but
ther-ynne lefte moche or litill.  Soche was the a-vision that I saugh
in my slepe, that me-semed was right perilouse and grevous;
and ther-fore I haue yow hider somowned and assembled, and


<PB REF="" N="633" ID="pb.633"/>

therfore I pray yow and requyre in all seruises and guerdons
yef ther be eny of yow that can telle the significacon of these
thinges lete me wite, and here be-fore yow alle I graunte
trewly to hym that telleth me ther-of the verite, that he shall
haue my doughter to his wif, and all my reame after my deth,
or yef he be maried he shall be lorde of me and all my londe
alle the dayes of my life."</P>
<P>  Whan the wise men herde the promyse and the wordes
of the kynge, and thei hadde herde the a-vision, thei
hadde merveile what it myght be-tokene, and oon seide othinge,
and some seide a-nother, eche after that hym semed beste; and
Merlin that was in soche semblaunce that noon cowde hym
knowe ne sen, spake whan alle other hadden seide so high that
alle that were ther with-ynne myght it here clerly, and seide,
"Vndirstonde to me, and I shall telle the thy dreme;" and
whan he hadde seide thus, thei loked aboute hem to se hym
that hadde this spoken, and so dide all thei that weren in the
paleis, but nothinge thei saugh, and yet hem semed it was
a-myd monge hem that seide, "Vndirstonde to me kynge
fflualis, and here the be-tokenynge of thyn a-vision.  The two
serpentes that thow saughest be-fore the in thi slepe that hadde
iiij hedes, and of alle foure heedes casten oute fier and flame,
thei ben foure cristin kynges that to the marchen, and shull
sette all thi contre in fier and flame; and that the serpentes
bar the and the quene in to the highest part of thi paleis,
signifieth that thei shull haue all thi londe in bailly, euen to
the yates of thi chife fortresse.  Of that the serpentes raced
a-wey the membres of the and thi wif, be-tokeneth that thow
shalt forsake the euell lawe that is roted in thyn herte, and
shalt caste it oute from the to come to the be-leve of Ihesu
crist.  Of that the viij smale serpentes toke the membres of thi body,
and of the quene, and bar it a-bove the temple of Diane whider as
thi men shull fle for socour; of that thei rente thi membres, and
the membres of the quene thi wif, signifieth that thi cheldren
that shull be thy membres, and thi flessh shull be slain
with-ynne the temple of Diane; of that the serpentes lefte the on

<PB REF="" N="634" ID="pb.634"/>

high on thi paleis, and the quene also with the sooll be
youre-self signifieth that thourgh the and hir shall cristin feith be
encreced and strengthed; of that the serpentes brente the paleis
vndir the signifieth that the shall not be lefte the valew of a
peny of thinges that thow hast of this euell lawe; of that thow
and the quene were brent in to aisshes signifieth that thow
shall be purged clene of all thy synne by the water of baptyme;
of that the powder of the fly ouer all the londe a this side the
see signifieth that thow shalt haue   <MILESTONE N="225a" UNIT="folio"/>children in thi good creaunce
that shull be bolde knyghtes, and hardy, and shull be worshiped
thourgh alle the londes of the worlde.  Now hast thow herde
thyn a-vision that thow haste sein in thi slepinge, and shall
be-falle the like as I haue the tolde."</P>
<P>  With that departed merlin; and the kynge a-boode pensif
of the voice that he hadde herde, and nothinge ther-of
hadde sein; and Merlin wente a grete spede, that neuer he
stinte, till he com to the reame of Benoyk, and yede to Nimiane
his love that sore desired hym for to seen, ffor yet cowde not
she of his art of that she desired for to knowe, and she made
hym the grettest ioye that she myght, and ete and dranke, and
lay in oon bedde; but so moche cowde she of his connynge that
whan he hadde will to ly with hire she hadde enchaunted and
coniured a pelow that she kepte in hir armes, and than fill
Merlin a-slepe; and the storie maketh no mencion that euer
Merlin hadde flesshly to do with no woman, and yet loved he
nothinge in this worlde so wele as woman, and that shewed
well, ffor so moche he taught hir oo tyme and other, that at
laste he myght holde hym-self a fooll, and thus dide he
soiourney with his love longe tyme; and euer she enquired of
his connynge, and of his maistries, ech thinge by hit-self, and
he lete her all knowe, and she it wrote all that he seide as she
that was well lerned in clergie, and lerned it lightly all that
Merlin hir taught; and whan he hadde soiourned with hir
longe tyme, he toke his leve, and seide that he sholde come
a-gein at the yeres ende, and so eche of theym comaunded
other to god full tendirly; and than com Merlin to Blase his


<PB REF="" N="635" ID="pb.635"/>

maister, that gladde was of his comynge, and sore he longed
hym for to se, and he hym also; and Merlin tolde hym alle
the a-uentures that were be-falle seth he fro hym departed, and
how he hadde be with Nimiane his love, and how he hadde
hir taught of his enchauntmentz; and Blase wrote all in his
boke.  Whan Merlin hadde tolde to Blase his maister alle
thinges as were be-fallen oon after a-nother, he soiourned with
hym as longe as hym liked, and than toke his leve of hym
and com streight in to the Cite of logres, where-as the kynge
Arthur and Gonnore his wif, and resceyved Merlin with grete
ioye, and a-noon as he was come.  Ther com in a maiden to
the halle dore, and a-light down from a mule, and hadde
brought be-fore hir on hir sadell a dwerf, the moste contirfet
and foulest that eny hadde sein, ffor he was <SUPPLIED>deformed</SUPPLIED>,
and his browes reade and rowe, and his berde reade and longe,
that henge down to his breste, and his heeir was grete and
blakke, and foule medled, and his sholdres high and courbe,
and a grete bonche on his bakke be-hinde and a-nother be-fore
a-gein the breste, and his handes were grete, and his fyngres
short, and his legges short, and his chyne longe and sharpe, and
the mayden was yonge and of grete bewte, and thei were sore
loked on of oon and other; and a-noon as she was a-light she
toke hir dwerf in hir armes, and toke hym down of the horse
swetly, and brought hym in to the halle be-fore the kynge
Arthur that was sette atte mete at the high deyse, and than she
salued the kynge right curteisely as she that was connynge and
wele taught, and the kynge greete hir a-gein full debonerly, and
than seide the mayden,</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="225b" UNIT="folio"/>  "Sir, I am come to yow from fer contrey, for the grete
renomede that of yow renneth thourgh the worlde;
ffor to aske and require of yow a yefte, ffor as the grete renoun
of yow recordeth that no mayden shall faile of no request that
she yow demaunded, and for that ye be holde the worthiest
kynge of the worlde.  I haue trauailed for to come to youre
court for to aske of yow a request, and ther-fore loke ye graunte
me nothinge but ye will it me parforme."  "Damesell," seide


<PB REF="" N="636" ID="pb.636"/>

the kynge, "aske what yow liketh, for I am redy it to
parforme, yef it be soche thinge that I may it do savinge myn
honour and my reame."  "Of that," quod she, "that I will
yow require shull ye haue but honour."  "Damesell," than
seide the kynge, "sey your volunte."  "Sir," seide the maiden,
"I am come to pray yow, and require that ye of my love that
is here, this gentill yonge lorde that I holde by the honde, make
hym knyght, for he is ther-to digne and right worthi; ffor he is
bolde and hardly, and come of grete lynage, and longe
here-to forn sholde haue ben knyght yef he wolde of the kynge Pelles
of lytenoys that is a full noble kynge, and a trewe; but my
leife here will not, but hath made his oth that he shall neuer be
knyght, but of youre hande, and ther-fore I pray yow, and
require that ye make hym knyght;" and than alle thei that
were in the paleis be-gonne to laugh bothe oon and other; and
kay the stiwarde, that was an euell spekere, and scornfull of
wordes, seide all smylinge, "Kepe well youre leef, and holde
hym nygh yow that he be not take from yow of the quenes
maydenes, for soone myght thei do yow that forfet for the
grete bewte that is in hym."  "Sir," seide the mayden, "the
kynge is so good a man, and so right-full, that he wolde it not
suffre, yef god will, that noon sholde do me that
wronge."  "Certes, damesell," seide the kynge, "ther-of be ye sure, and
I it yow graunte well."  "Sir," seide the mayden,
"Gramercy.  Now do than that I haue yow required."  "Damesell," seide
the kynge, "at youre plesier."  With this worde entred in to
the court two squyres vpon two rounsies stronge and swyfte
amblinge, of which that oon bar a shelde with thre leopartes of
golde crowned of azure, and the champ of the shelde was sable,
and the gige orfrayed of golde harnysshed, and a swerde hanged
at his sadill, and the tother brought a stede in his right hande
that was feire shapen, and the bridill and the harneys of silke
and golde, and the two squires drof be-fore hem a somer with
two cofers, and thei a-light a-noon vnder the pyne tre, and
tacched theire horse, and vn-lokked the cofres, and toke oute
an hauberk as white as snowe, for it was all of fin siluer and

<PB REF="" N="637" ID="pb.637"/>

doble maile, and hosen of the same werk, and an helme of siluer
and golde, and com in to the halle where the kynge and the
Barouns were be-fore the maiden; and whan she saugh thei
were come, than she seide to the kynge, "Sir, I aske of yow
my request, for I a-bide here longe, ffor here is althinge redy
that longeth to a knyght, ffor with these armes that ye se
here shall my leef be a-dubbed."  "Ffeire love," quod the
kynge, "I shall do youre plesier and your volunte with goode
will, but cometh to youre mete;" and she seide that she wolde
neuer ete mete er hir lief were a knyght.  Thus was the
damesell in the paleis be-for the kynge, and euer hilde hir lief
by the right hande; and whan the kynge hadde eten, and the
clothes   <MILESTONE N="226a" UNIT="folio"/>weren vp, the damesell drough oute of an awmenere a
peire of spores of golde that weere wounden in a cloth of silke,
and seide to the kynge, "Sir, delyuer me, for I haue ben here
longe."  With that lepte forth kay the stiwarde, and wolde
haue sette on his right spore; and the damesell hym sesed by the
hande, and seide, "What is that," quod she, "sir knyght, that
ye purpose to do."  Quod kay, "I will sette on his right spore,
and also make hym knyght with myn owne hande."  "Of
youre hande," seide the maiden, "shall it neuer be-falle, yef god
will, for noon ther-to shall sette hande saf only the kynge
Arthur, ffor he hath me graunted in couenaunt, and I truste
that he will me not faile, yef it be his plesier, ffor so myght he
me bringe to the deth and me be-traye.  Ne noon ne ought
to touche so high a persone as is my lief, but he be kynge or
worthy prince."  "So helpe me god," seide the kynge, "ye
haue right, and I shall do all youre volunte."  Than the kynge
toke his right spore of the damesell, and sette it on the right
hele, and the damesell sette on the lifte; and whan the kynge
hadde don on his hauberk vpon the dwerf, the kynge girt hym
with his swerde, ffor the maiden wolde not suffre noon to touche
hym saf only the kynge; and whan he was all appareiled of
all that longeth to a knyght, the kynge yaf hym the a-colee, and
seide, "God make hym a good knyght;" and than the mayden
asked yef he sholde do eny more.  "Damesell," seide the


<PB REF="" N="638" ID="pb.638"/>

kynge, "I haue don that to me aperteneth."  "Sir," quod
she, "than now pray hym that he be my knyght;" and the
kynge hym preide; and than wente thei oute of the halle, and
com vnder the pyne tre; and the maiden made the dwerf to
lepe vpon his stede that was so feire, and she hir-self henge
the shelde a-boute his nekke that was of soche coloure as ye haue
herde, and than she toke hir mule and than made the two
squyres to take theire horse, and sente hem bothe home in to
theire contrei, and she and hir knyght yede another wey in to
the foreste that was grete and merveilouse; and the kynge
Arthur a-bode stille in his paleis, he and Merlin, and sir Gawein,
and his companye; and I-nough thei lough of the maiden that
so hadde yoven hir love to the duerf.  "Certes," seide the
quene, "I haue grete merveile, fro whens this thought myght
hir be-falle, for so foule a thinge, and so lothly ne saugh I
neuer; and the damesell is full of grete bewte, that in foure
remes sholde not be founden hir pareile, and I trowe verily
that it be som fende or of feire that thus hath hir
disceived."  "Madame," seide Merlin, "she is not disceived, but for the
grete lothlynesse that is in hym; ffor neuer in youre lif saugh
ye so hardy a pece of flesshe as is this duerf, and he is bothe
kynges sone and quenes."  "Sir," seide the quene, "the
damesell semeth well to be of high lynage, for she is right feire,
and hir lief right lothly."  "Madame," quod Merlin, "the
grete bounte of hym shall a-bate the grete lothlynesse that ye
se in hym, and that shall ye knowe hastely more
verily."  "Ffeire frende, Merlin," seide the kynge, "what is the
damesell; know ye   <MILESTONE N="226b" UNIT="folio"/>hir eny thinge?"  "Sir," seide Merlin, "I telle
yow in trouthe that I saugh hir neuer be-fore, and yet I knowe
well what she is, and what is hir name, and that she shall
telle yow hir-self with-ynne short tyme, and so shall she be
better be-leved than sholde I, and by the duerf hym-self shall
ye knowe what he is soner than ye wene, and ther-of shull
ye haue bothe ioye and sorowe."  "Ye," seide the kynge,
"therof I praye yow to telle me the verite."  "Sir," seide
Merlin, "it falleth not at this tyme that I sholde it sey, ffor


<PB REF="" N="639" ID="pb.639"/>

ye shull right soone haue other weyes to vndirstonde, ffor Luce
the Emperour of Rome hath sent yow his messages, and thei
be at the grees of the halle."</P>
<P>  And as Merlin spake to the kynge Arthur, ther com vp
xij princes full richely be-seyn, and clothed in riche
clothes of silke, and com two and two holdinge eche other be
the handes, and eche of theym bar a braunche of Olyve in his
hande, and that was a signe that thei were messagiers; and in
this maner thei com be-fore the kynge Arthur that satte at the
high table in the paleis, and his barouns <CHOICE><CORR>hym</CORR><SIC>hym hym</SIC></CHOICE>   be-forn; and the
messagiers com in and made no salutacion to noon that ther
was, and than spake oon that was maister of hem alle, and
seide, "Kynge Arthur, we be xij princes of Rome that be sente
to the from Luce the Emperour."  Than he drough oute a letter
that was wrapped in a cloth of silke, and straught it to the
kynge, and bad hym do rede the letter, and the kynge toke
the letter and delyuered it to the Archebisshoppe that satte hym
be-side, and comaunded hym to rede, and the archebisshop
be-gan in this maner:</P>
<P>  "I Luce, Emperour of Rome, that haue the powste, and
the signiourie of the Romayns, sende to myn enmy the
kynge Arthur in-as-moche only as he hath agein me deserued;
and agein the power of rome, and it merveileth me sore,
and I haue ther-of grete disdeyn, that he thourgh his grete
pride leste to a-rise a-gein Rome as longe as he knoweth me on
lyve, and this formednesse is come to the by fole hardynesse,
and of malencolie whan thow durst euer a-rise a-gein Rome that
hath the power and signiourie ouer all the worlde as thou thy-self
hast well seyn and knowen, and yet shalt thou knowe and se
a-pertly that thow hast don as a fooll that Rome durst wrathe,
thou hast trespassed a-gein rightwisnesse whan thow hast
withholde the seruise and the trewage of Rome, and takest oure
rentes and oure londes that thow knowest aperteneth to the
power of Rome; wher-fore dost thou that, or what right


<PB REF="" N="640" ID="pb.640"/>

hast thou ther-to, wite thow right wele yef thow holde it
longe thow shalt be as wery ther-of as the lambe is of the
wolf, ffor thow art a-gein vs as fooll hardy as the shepe
a-gein the shepherd; ffor Iulius cesar oure auncestre toke it
be force, and by his hardynesse toke bateile in the Breteigne, and
trwys was hym yolden, and so it was of alle the yles ther
a-boute; and thow woldest it vs be-reve thourgh thy folie, and
thi grete pride, and the grete outrage that is in the; and I
the comaunde as Emperour that thow do right, and with-ynne
the day of the holy Natiuite that thow be by-fore vs for to
a-mende that thow hast mysdon; and yef thou wilt not this
do, I shall take from the all Breteigne, and all the londe that
thou hast in bailly, and I shall passe mongin this first somer
with so grete force of peple that thou shalt haue no hardynesse
me to a-bide.  Ne thou shalt not knowe   <MILESTONE N="227a" UNIT="folio"/>whider to fle, but I
shall the sewe, and I shall take the, and bynde and caste the
in my prison."</P>
<P>  Whan the archebisshoppe hadde redde this letter in this
maner as ye haue herde, in the paleis was grete
murmur and noyse of hem that this hadde vndirstonde, and
swor and seide thei sholde dishonour the messagiers that these
lettres hadde brought, and a-noon thei sholde hem haue don
shame I-nough, but as the kynge seide to hem full debonerly,
"Ffeire lordes, lete hem be, thei be but massengiers, and be
sent by comaundement of theire lorde; and ther-fore thei owe
to sey that thei were with charged, and thei sholde ther-fore
haue no doute of no man."  Than the kynge cleped his princes
and his barouns, and entred in to a chambre to counseile; and
than spake a knyght that was bolde and hardy, and his name
was Cador, and seide that "longe haue we be idill and in slouthe
in deduyt a-monge ladyes and damesels in Iolite and wast;
but on this day we be a-waked by these Romayns that come to
chalenge oure londes an oure contrey; and yef thei do as the
lettres speke thei haue grete prowesse and hardynesse that be
in so fer contreyes."  "Certes," seide Gawein, "full good is it
to haue pees after the werre, for the londe is the bettere and


<PB REF="" N="641" ID="pb.641"/>

the more sure, and full good is the game and pley a-monge
ladies and maydenes, ffor the druweries of ladies and damesels
make knyghtes to vndirtake the hardynesse of armes that thei
don."  Than the kynge comaunded hem alle to sitte, and thei
dide his comaundement, and he himself a-bode stondinge, and
seide, "My frendes and my felowes in my prosperite, and in
myn honour and traueile that ye haue me mayntened in grete
bateiles, and in werres that I haue hadde seth I com to haue
londe, and yow haue I ledde in many a grete nede bothe be
see and by londe, and ye haue me helped, god quite yow, to
conquere the londes that I haue wonne, that by youre helpinges
beth alle to me obeysaunt, and ye haue herde the maundement
that the Romayns haue sent that I-nough haue vs
contraried.  But yef oure lorde kepe me and yow thei shull nought haue
ours but it be dere bought at the departinge, ye se here the
message of the Emperoure, and ther-fore yeve me counseile in
what manere I may hem ansuere moste auenauntly by honour
and by reson; ffor oon ought to purveye er the stroke falle
ther as is pereile, for he that seeth the arow comynge he ought
to blenche that he be not smyten; ye se how the Romayns
will a-rise a-gein vs, and therfore we ought vs so to appareile
that thei vs not greve ne annoyen.  Thei wolde haue trewage
of Bretaigne, and of other yles that of me beth holdinge; and
sein that Cezar hem conquered by force, and that the Bretouns
ne myght hem not diffende a-geins hem but paide hem trewage,
and force is no right, but it is pride and oute of reson, and he
holdeth not of right that holdeth of force.  Thei haue vs
reproved by the shames and damages that thei haue vs don, and
the traueiles, and the annoyes that thei haue do to oure
  <MILESTONE N="227b" UNIT="folio"/>auncestres, in that thei a-vaunte hem how thei haue hem
venquysshed, and that thei paide hem trewage, and so moche the
more ought we to hate hem and to greve, and the more thei
haue to restore, ffor we moste hate hem that haten vs, and for
thei hadde trewage of hem thei wolde it haue of vs by heritage
and by auncestrie; and by soche reson may we chalenge Rome,
ffor Belyns that was kynge of Breteigne, and Brenne his brother,


<PB REF="" N="642" ID="pb.642"/>

conquered Rome and henge xiiij of her ostages in sight of her
frendes, and after hem com Constantynus that was kynge of
Bretaigne, and was Emperour of Rome; and also maximian
was lorde of Bretaigne, and was lorde of Rome, alle these were
oure auncestres, and were kynges of Bretouns, and eche of
theym was Emperour and lorde of the Romayns, and therby
may we knowe that I owe to haue Rome by heritage as I
haue Bretaigne.  Romayns haue hadde trewage of vs, and my
parentes haue hadde trewage of theym.  Thei clayme Bretaigne
for theiers, and I clayme Rome for myn; and so this is the
ende of my counseile that he haue the londe, and the rente
that may it gete; ffor in this I se noon other rightwisnesse,
but who that all may gete, all shall haue, ffor as for my part
I will noon other-wise do but as I haue yow seide."</P>
<P>  Whan the princes and the Barons herde the kynge thus
speke, thei ansuerde with oon voice that he hadde well
seide, and counseiled to sende for his peple fer and nygh, and
assemble all his power, and go a-gein the Emperour of Rome,
that thourgh his grete pride hadde sente outrage of crewelte
and felonye, "and put the signiourie of Rome in youre powste,
and remembre yow of the signiourie and prophesie of Sibile,
that seide ther sholde thre Bretouns come oute of Bretaige that
Rome sholde conquere be force, and ther hath ben tweyne that
Rome hath conquered.  The first was Belyn that was kynge of
Bretouns, and the seconde was Constantinus, and thow shalt be the
thridde that shall it conquere by force, and so shall the prophesie
be fulfilled.  Now a-vaunce yow to resceyve the honoure that
god hath yow ordeyned."  With these wordes the kynge com oute
of the chamber, and the barouns and the knyghtes com in to
the paleis, where as the massagiers that were xij princes were
a-bydinge, and than spake the kynge, and badde hem returne to
theire Emperoure, and telle hym that his ancestres of Bretaige
hadde Rome in her bailly, "and therfore in-as-moche as myn
auncestres dide it conquere, and were ther-of Emperours, and
ther-of hadde trewage, I will hit haue of auncestrie and
heritage, ffor that thei haue not done that thei ought do a-gein

<PB REF="" N="643" ID="pb.643"/>

me of right;" and with this ansuere they departed, and the
kynge hem yaf riche yeftes and presentes at theire departinge,
as he that was the moste curteise prince of the worlde, and full
of largesse, and therfore he wolde not that thei sholde speke
eny euell of hym ne vilonye; and thei returned in to theire
contreye as soone as thei myght, and tolde Luce the Emperour
the ansuere of kynge Arthur, and ther-of was the Emperour
wroth and angry, and somowned his peple, and assembled his
power, and passed the mountaynes of mongin, and com in to
Burgoyne nygh a Cite that is cleped Oston, and sesed the londe
in lengthe and brede.  But   <MILESTONE N="228a" UNIT="folio"/>a-while we shull reste of hym,
and speke of the kynge Arthur.</P>
<P>  Now seith the storie than whan the xij Massagiers were
departed from the kynge Arthur, the kynge and his
baronye a-bide stille full wroth and angry, for the maundement
of Luce the Emperour; and Merlin seide, "Sir, sende for youre
peple hastely, for the Emperour appareileth hym right
faste."  "Merlin, frende," seide the kynge, "I shall mete with hym
sonner than he wolde."  "He shall you mete," seide Merlin,
"to his damage; and a-bide here in ioy, for I go of make the
message to the Barouns."  With that he vanysshed, that Arthur
ne wiste where he be-come; and Merlin wente first in to Orcanye
and dide the message to the kynge looth, that with xv dayes
he sholde be at logres with all his power; and he seide he
wolde so with good will, and than Merlin departed, wher-for
sholde I make yow longe tale, he warned alle the princes and
barons that of the kynge arthur were holdinge to be the xv
day at logres, saf only the kynge Ban of Benoyk, and the kynge
Bohors of Gannes; and after that he returned a-gein, and fonde
the kynge Arthur in his chambre, and seide, "Your message
is don to alle the Barouns, and thei shull be redy her fro hens
xv dayes."  Whan the kynge this vndirstode he was gladde
and ioyfull, and soiourned at logres till his baronye was come,
and thider come the kynge looth first, and his companye with
vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the kynge Vrien with iij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the kynge
Carados foure Ml men, and the kynge de Cent Chiualers iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>,


<PB REF="" N="644" ID="pb.644"/>

and the kynge ventres foure Ml, and the kynge Tradilyuans
iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the kynge Belynans iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the kynge Clarion
iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the Duke Escam ij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and Gosenges and Nabunall his
senescall iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the kynge ydier iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and the kynge
Aguysans iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>; and whan thei were alle assembled in the
medowes be-fore logres, the kynge Arthur was gladde, and
thanked hem hertely, and tolde hem the outrage that the
Emperour hadde hym sente, and thei hym counseiled to haste
that he were a-venged of the shame.  Than was the navie
appereiled and entred in to shippes; and Merlyn was be-fore,
and stinte neuer till he com to Gannes, and fonde the kynge
Ban and the kynge Bohors, and he badde hem thei sholde hem
appereile, for the kynge Arthur is entred in to the see for to
go vpon the Romayns, and thei seide thei wolde be redy hym
to mete; and Merlin returned and com to the port er the kynge
Arthur were londed, and whan he hym saugh he asked whens
he com; and he seide he hadde ben at Gannes for to somowne
bothe two kynges that shull be redy with yow to mete with
grete companye of peple; of this thanked hym Arthur, and
than thei issed oute of the shippes, and logged a litill from the
port vpon the river in tentes, and in pavilouns for to take theire
reste of traueile that thei hadde in the see, and slept that
nyght; and as the kynge Arthur slepte hym com a vision, that
a grete bere was on a grete mountayne, and as hym semed ther
com a-gein hym a grete dragon from the Clowdes of the orient,
and caste fire and flame thourgh his throte so merveilouse that
all the contrey ther-a-boute ther-of was light, and this dragon
assailed the bere full fiercely, and the bere hym diffended full
wele;   <MILESTONE N="228b" UNIT="folio"/>but the dragon enbraced the bere as hym semed, and
cast hym to the erthe, and hym slough.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge a-woke he merveiled sore of his dreme,
and made Merlyn come be-fore hym, and praied hym
dierly to tell hym the significacion of his dreme, and than he
tolde hym all worde for worde to Merlin as he hadde seyn in
slepinge; and than seide Merlin, "Sir, I shall sey you the
<CHOICE><CORR>tokeninge</CORR><SIC>tokenige</SIC></CHOICE> the bere, the bere that ye saugh signifieth a grete


<PB REF="" N="645" ID="pb.645"/>

monstre, a grete Geaunt that is here nygh in a mountaigne that
is come oute of the ontrey of spayne in to this londe, and here he
a-bideth, and doth the contrey shame from day to day ne noman
dar hym a-bide for the grete force that is in hym; the dragon
that ye saugh in youre a-vision that caste thourgh his throte
fire and flame so grete that all the londe ther-of was light
signifieth youre-self by the fire of youre hardinesse that is
clier and feire shyninge by grace, and the dragon that assailed
the bere so vigerously signifieth that ye shall assaute the Geaunte,
of that the dragon enbrased hym and caste to the erthe
signifieth that the Geaunte shall enbrace yow, but in the ende ye
shull hym sle, of that be ye nothinge in doute."  With that
<CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> trussed tentes and pavilons, and ride forth on theire wey,
but thei hadde not longe gon whan tidinges com to the kynge
Arthur of the Geaunte that distroied the londe and the contrey,
so that ther-ynne duelled nother man ne woman, but fledde
thourgh the feldes as bestes disolate for drede of the Geaunte,
and hadde born by force a mayden of the contrey that was
nyece to a lorde of the contrey that was a grete gentilman,
and he hadde born hir with hym vp to a mounteigne,
where-as he repeired that was all closed with the see, and
that monteigne is yet cleped the mounte seint Michel, but
at that tyme ther was nother mynster ne chapell, ne ther
was no man so hardy ne so myghty that durst fight with the
Geaunte; and whan the peple of the contrey dide hym assaile,
thei myght not a-gein hym endure neither on londe ne on se,
for he slough hem with the roches, and made theire shippes to
sinke; and the peple of the contrey fledde thourgh the wodes
and forestes, and mounteynes with theire children in theire
armes, and so thei lefte theire londes and theire richesses.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur herde how the Geaunte distroied so the
londe, he cleped kay the stiward, and Bedyuer, and
badde hem make hem redy armed a-boute mydnyght, and thei
dide his comaundement, and com to-geder thei thre and two
squyres only, and no mo, and rode till thei com vpon the
mounte, and saugh a grete fire bright shynynge on that o side;

<PB REF="" N="646" ID="pb.646"/>

and on that othir side was a-nother mounte that was not so
grete as that, and ther-on was a fire merveilouse grete, and thei
wiste not to whiche thei sholde gon; than he cleped Bediuer,
and bad hym go loke on whiche mounte the Geaunte was.  Than
Bediuer wente in to a bote that was full of the flos of the see,
and whan he was come to the next monteyn he wente vp
hastily on the roche, and herde grete wepinge; and whan he
that herde he hadde doute, ffor he wende the Geaunte hadde
be there, but he toke vpon hym hardynesse, and drough his
swerde, and wente forth and hoped for   <MILESTONE N="229a" UNIT="folio"/>to fight with hym as
he that for no drede of deth ne wolde be founde no cowarde,
and in this thought he clymbed vpon the mountein; and whan
he was come vp he saugh the fier that was clier brennynge, and
saugh a tombe faste by that was newly made, and be-side that
tombe satte an olde woman discheueled, and all to-rente hir
heir, and wepte and sighed full sore; and whan she saugh the
knyght, she seide, "Haa, gentilman, what art thow, what
dolour hath brought the in to this place, ffor with grete dolour
thou shalt ende thy life, yef the Geaunte the finde, ffle hens
hastely as faste as thow maist, for thou art to vn-happy yef thow
a-bide till that this deuell come that hath no pite of nothinge, fle
hens as fer as thou maist, yef thou wilt thi lif saue."</P>
<P>  Whan Bediuer saugh the woman so wepe, and so pitously
regrated helayn sighinge, and bad hym to fle but
yef he wolde dye, and he seide, "Good woman, lete be thy
wepinge, and telle me what thou art, and why thou makest so
grete sorowe, and why thou art vpon this mounte by this tombe,
and telle me all the occasion of thy sorowe, and who lith here
in this sepulture."  "I am," quod she, "a dolerouse caitif
that wepe and make waymentacion, for a mayden that was
nyece to Hoell of nauntes that I norished and yaf souke with
my mylk, and she lith vnder this tombe, and it was me
comaunded hir to norish and to kepe.  Now is ther a deuell that
hir hath taken a-wey and brought hider her and me, and wolde
haue leyn by the childe that <SUPPLIED>was</SUPPLIED> yonge and tender.  But she
myght hym not svffre ne endure, for he was moche and hidiouse,


<PB REF="" N="647" ID="pb.647"/>

and lothly, and so he made the soule departe from the body, and
thus he be-rafte my doughter falsly and be treson, and ther
I haue hir biried, and for hir wepe bothe day and
nyght."  "And wherfore," quod Bediuer, "gost thou not hens seth thou
art left here a-lone, and hast hir loste seth that ther is noon
recouer."  "Sir," quod she, "I knowe well ther is no recouer,
but for that I se ye be a gentilman, and ther-to so curteise I will kepe nothinge from youre knowinge, but I will telle yow
the trouthe, whan that my dere doughter was entered, for whos
love I wende wele haue loste my witte, and dyed for doel, the
Geaunte made me to a-bide stille to haue his foule lecherouse
lust vpon me, and he hath me diffouled by his strengthe that
I moste suffre his wille whedir I wolde or noon, for I haue
no myght a-gein hym, and I take oure lorde god to recorde
it was neuer my will, and ner ther with he hadde me slain,
ffor with hym haue I suffred grete peyne and gret anguyssh,
ffor he is vn-mesurable grete, and he cometh hider to fulfille
his lecherie vpon me, and thou art but deed, and maist in no
maner ascape, for he cometh a-noon right, for he is ther a-bove
in that mountayn where thou seist that fier, and ther-fore I
pray the go hens thy wey, and lef me here to compleyne, and
make my mone for my doughter."</P>
<P>  Grete pite hadde Bediuer of the woman, and moche he hir
counforted, and seth he com a-gein to the kynge, and
tolde that he hadde sein, and seide how the geaunte was vpon
the high hill ther he saugh the grete fier and smoke.  Than
the kynge made   <MILESTONE N="229b" UNIT="folio"/>his felowes go with hym vpon the mounteyne,
and thei were come vpon the hill; than the kynge comaunded
his felowes to abide, and seide that hym-self alone wolde go
fight with the Geante, "neuertheles," seide the kynge, "loke
that ye waite well vpon me, and yef it be myster cometh me
to helpe," and thei seide thei wolde with good will, and thei
a-bide; and the kynge wente toward the Geaunte that satte
be-fore the fire, and rosted flessh on a spite, and kut of the side
that moste <SUPPLIED>was</SUPPLIED> I-nough, and ete it; and the kynge wente
to-ward hym with swerde in honde drawen a softe pas gripinge his


<PB REF="" N="648" ID="pb.648"/>

shelde, for he wende hym to haue supprised.  But the Geaunte
that was full false and maliciouse be-helde, and saugh the kynge
come and lept up, ffor the kynge hadde his swerde in his hande,
and the Geaunte stert to a grette clobbe that stode by hym
that was grete and hidiouse of a plante of an oke that was a
grete birthon for a myghty man, and caught it from the fire,
and leide it on his nekke, and com fiercely a-gein the kynge
as he that was of grete force, and seide to the kynge that a
grete fooll was he to come ther, and reised the batte for to
smyte the kynge on the heed, but he was wight and delyuer,
and lept a-side, so that he of hym failed, and ther-with the
kynge smote at hym and wende to smyte hym on tho heed;
but the Geaunte that was bolde and hardy kept it on his clobbe,
or elles hadde he be deed, neuertheles somdel he touched hym
with Marmyadoise his good swerde, that he conquered of the
kynge Rion, and touched hym be-twene the two browes that
he wax all blinde, for the blode that ran ouer his yen, and
that was a thinge that sore hym greved, for he myght not se
where to smyte, and be-gan to scarmyshe and to grope a-boute
hym with his staffe as a wood devell and sore a-baisshed, and
the kynge hasted hym full harde but a-reche hym myght not,
ffor the Geaunte caste a-boute hym grete strokes that yef he
hadde hym smyten he hadde ben all to-brosed, and thus thei
foughten longe, that the oon ne touched not that other, and
therfore thei were sore anoyed; and than the Geaunte wente
tastinge here and there that he sesed the kynge by the arme;
and whan he hadde hym caught, he was gladde and ioyfull,
ffor a-noon he wende hym to haue threst to deth, and so he
hadde, but that the kynge was wight and delyuer, and wrast
out of his gripinge with grele peyne, and than he ran vpon
hym with his swerde, and smote hym on the heed and on the
lifte sholdre that all the arme fremysshed, and so harde was the
hide of the serpent that in the flessh myght it not atame; and
the Geaunte myght hym not se, ffor his iyen were all couered
with blode, and than he saugh the shadowe of the kynge, and
than he ran that wey; but the kynge that wiste he was of

<PB REF="" N="649" ID="pb.649"/>

grete force durste not come in his handes, and so hath he gon
vp and down that he stombeled on his clubbe, and it sesed and
ran ther as he wende to finde the kynge.  But the kynge
blenched so that he myght hym not a-reche, and ther-fore hadde
he grete sorow in herte, and than he caste a-wey his clubbe and
tasted to chacche the kynge in his armes, and so he wente
gropinge and frotinge his iyen till he saugh   <MILESTONE N="230a" UNIT="folio"/>the light and the
shadowe of the kynge; and than he spronge to hym and caught
hym by the flankes with bothe his armes that nygh he hadde
with his gripes brosten his chyne, than he be-gan to craspe
after his arme, for to take from hym his swerde out of his
honde.  But the kynge it well perceyved and threwe down the swerde,
that in the fallinge he myght here it ringe cler; and than he
griped the kynge with that oon hande, and stouped down to
take the swerde with that other hande, and in the stoupinge
the kynge smote hym with his kne that he fill in swowne, and
than he lept to the swerde and hente it vp, and stert to the
Geaunte ther he lay, and lifte vp the serpentes skyn, and rof
hym thourgh the body with the swerde, and so was the Geaunte
slain; and kay the stiwarde, and Bediuer made grete ioye of the
kynge, and be-helde the Geaunte that so grete was that wonder
was to be-holden, and thanked oure lorde of the honour and
the victorie that he hadde yove the kynge, ffor neuer hadde
thei seyn so grete a feende; and the kynge bad Bediuer smyte
of the heed that it myght be born in to the hoste to se the
grete merveile of the gretnesse of hym, and he dide his
comaundement, and than com down of the mounteyne, and lepe
on theire horse, and the flode was come a-gein that gretly hem
disesed, and with grete peyne thei passed the greves and com
a-gein to the hoste; and the Barons were sore a-baisshed for
the taryinge of the kynge, for that thei wiste not whider he
was wente, and thei were meved hym for to seche in diuerse
parties, ne hadde ben Merlin that bad hem be nothinge dismayed,
for he sholde come hastely.</P>
<P>  While the princes and the barouns were in this afray, for
the kynge Arthur, he and the stiwarde and Bediuer


<PB REF="" N="650" ID="pb.650"/>

com down in to his teinte, and hadde the heed of the Geaunte
trussed at Bediuers sadell by the heir, and thider com alle the
Barouns whan he was a-light, and asked fro when she com,
for he hadde put hem in grete afray; and he seide he com fro
thens ther he hadde foughten with the Geaunte that distroied
so the londe and the contrey ther-aboute and how he hadde hym
slayn thourgh the grace of oure lorde; and than he shewed hem
the heed that Bediuer hadde trussed, and whan the barons it
saugh thei blessed hem for the wonder ther-of, and seide that
neuer in all theire lif had thei not seyn so grete an heed, and
alle that were in the hoste preised god for the kynges victorie,
and than thei dide vn-arme the kynge with grete ioye and
gladnesse, and rested ther all that day, till on the morowe that thei
trussed teintes and Pavilouns and ride forth the streight wey
towarde Burgoyne, and spedde hem so in her iourneyes till thei
com vpon the river of <SUPPLIED>Aube</SUPPLIED><NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.48">There is a blank in the MS.; the French MS. (fol. 206, col. 2) has "la riuiere daube."</NOTE>   and ther thei herde tidinges of
Luce the Emperour was com a-gein hem, and than was the
kynge Arthur gladde that he hadde founde hym so nygh, and
sory for that he hadde so distroyed and wasted the contrey,
and loigge his hoste by the river; and the same day com the
kynge Ban and the kynge Bohors in to the hoste with vi<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>
  <MILESTONE N="230b" UNIT="folio"/>knyghtes and good men of werre.  But Grascien and Pharien
ne leonce of paierne were nought there, but dide a-bide to kepe
and to diffende the londe a-gein the kynge Claudas de la desert,
yef it were myster, and a-noon as the two kynges were come
in to the hoste thei dide picche theire teintes be-fore the kynge
looth, and he made hem grete cheir and feste, for he loved hem
hertely, and ther thei a-bide till the kynge Arthur hadde
fortefied a Castell that thei myght repeire to yef thei hadde
mysteir; and than sente the kynge his messages to the
Emperour Luce by the counseile of his barouns, and sente hym to sey
that he was folily come vpon his londe, and but he wolde come
to a-mendement he wolde hym chace oute of Rome; and on the
message he sente sir Gawein, and Segramor, and sir Ewein,


<PB REF="" N="651" ID="pb.651"/>

ffor that thei were curteise and well I-taught, and ther-to
hadden grete hardynesse and high prowesse; and the kynge
seide to sir Gawein, "Ffeire nevew, ye shull go to the Emperour
on my message, and bidde hym returne hom a-gein, and leve
the londe, for it is myn, and yef he will not so, lete hym come
to bateile, and prove whiche of vs hath right, ffor while I Live
I shall it diffende a-gein the Romaynes, and conquered it by
bateile, and prove it a-gein hym body for body, whiche of vs two
shall it haue of right."  Whan the kynge Arthur hadde seide
these wordes the messagiers hem turned wele I-armed in stiell
with sheldes hanginge at theire nekke, and girde theire goode
swerdes, and in theire handes grete speres; and his felowes that
were yonge and lusty bachelers counselled sir Gawein to do
soche thinge er thei returned agein, that it myght be spoken
of euer after, and that men myght sey the werre was well
begonne "wherewith the Romaynes haue vs manased;" and thus
thei ride till thei com nygh the hoste; and whan thei saugh the
messagiers comynge thei lepe oute of theire teintes on all partes
to se hem and be-holde and for to wite what thei were com to
seche and asked what thei were, and fro whens thei com.  But
thei hilde with hem no ple ne wolde not stinte till thei com to
the <CHOICE><CORR>Emperours</CORR><SIC>Emperous</SIC></CHOICE> teinte and ther thei a-light and made theire
horse to be holde with-outen.  And than thei come be-fore the
Emperoure, and tolde hym theire message that thei brought
from the kynge Arthur.</P>
<P>  "Sir," quod Gawein, "the kynge Arthur sente the to
vndirstonde that thow voide his londe and his contrey for
it is all his quytely and he defendeth the to be so hardy to
sette ther-ynne foot, and yef thou wilt ought chalenge be bateile
he shall it diffende, ffor Romaynes had it conquered be-fore
tyme be bateile and be bateile shall he it conquere.  Now lete it
be proved by bateile whiche oweth to haue the signiourie and
the poweste, and com forth to-morowe yef thow wilt the contre
chalenge or elles go bak a-gein for here hast thow nought to do;
ffor we haue take the londe, and thow hast it loste, and ther-fore
yef thow be wise do after my counseile."

<PB REF="" N="652" ID="pb.652"/>
</P>
<P>  Whan the Emperour herde sir Gawein speke in this maner
he ansuerde with-oute more a-bidinge full sory and full
wroth, and seide, returne wolde he not, for the londe and the
contrey was his, and therfore he wolde holde his wey forth, and
he was well plesed with   <MILESTONE N="231a" UNIT="folio"/>soche maundementes, and yef he hadde
his londe loste he wolde it recouer whan he myght, and that he
trowed sholde be hastely.  A knyght ther was that satte by the
Emperour that Tutillius was cleped, and was the <CHOICE><CORR>Emperours</CORR><SIC>Emperous</SIC></CHOICE>
suster sone, he ansuerde full felliche, and seide that Bretou
ns
coude well manece but at the dedes thei were but esy, and
therfore ought thei to haue the more reprof.  But sir Gawein
ther-with wrathed and drough his swerde, and lept to hym and
smote of his heed, and than he bad his felowes go to theire
horse lightly, and a-noon thei dide his comaundement, and
Gawein lepte on his horse also with-oute other leve-takinge
nother of the Emperour ne of the romayns, and than was all
the court trouble and full of romur, ffor the Emperour cried,
"Take hem and lete hem not ascape."  Than thei cried, "Ore
as armes."  Ther sholde ye haue seyn peple arme hem in euery
side and lepe to horse, and prike after the messengiers, and
thei ride forth a grete randon, and the Romayns com after hem
on euery side by the weyes thourgh the feldes here v, here iiij,
here vj or vij.  Oo knyght ther was that richely was horsed
and passed alle his felowes, and cried to the massegers full
fiercely, "Parde ye shull a-bide, for I shall delyuer yow to the
Emperour."  Whan sir Gawein this herde, he griped his shelde,
and turned his horse and hym hitte so harde that he bar hym
deed to the erthe; and than he seide, "Now is it werse for
the that thyn horse was so swifte, for thou hadest ben better
haue be a myle be-hynde, or a-biden stille in the hoste;" and
Segramor lete renne to a knyght that com shovinge after hym,
and he smote hym thourgh the throte that he fill deed vp-right;
and than he seide, "Sir knyght, with soche morsels I can yow
fede and myn other enmyes.  Now be stille ther and a-bide hem
that come after, and telle hem that this wey gon the messagiers
of the kynge Arthur, that is theire rightfull lorde."


<PB REF="" N="653" ID="pb.653"/>
</P>
<P>  After hym com a knyght that was born in Rome, and come
of high lynage, and was cleped Marcell, he satte on a
stronge horse, and a swyfte, and hadde no spere for grete haste;
he ouer-toke sir Gawein, and seide he sholde hym yelde to the
Emperour, and Gawein loked and saugh hym come costinge his
wey, and turned his horse at the passinge forth, and Gawein
hym smote so harde in to the brain so depe that the swerde
entred to the teth, and Gawein that seide, "Thow haddest to
moche haste, thou myght better haue come be-hynde."  Than
thei turned alle thre, and smote down thre romayns deed.  A
knyght ther was that was cosin to Marcell, and satte on a
stronge horse that was swyfte, and was sory for his nevew that
he saugh ly deed, and be-gan to prike ouerthwert the felde, and
sir Ewein it saugh and ran that wey, and smote hym so harde
that he hadde no leiser to turne a-gein, for ther he loste his
heed, and thre romayns brake theire speres vpon sir Ewein, and
he smote of the heed of that oon, and the arme of the seconde,
and smote the thirde vpon the helme that he fill from his horse
to the erthe, and than he wente forth after his felowes, and the
romains hem chaced till thei com to a wode that was nygh the
castell that kynge Arthur hadde fortefied.  But now we shull
stinte a while of the messengers, and speke of the kynge Arthur.</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="231b" UNIT="folio"/>    Whan Arthur hadde sente his message to Luce the
Emperour he sent after hem vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men by the counseile
of Merlin for to socour hem, yef it were myster, and thei rode
till thei com to the wode, and ther thei a-bide on horsbak till
thei saugh hem comynge, and after hem all the feilde couered
with <CHOICE><CORR>knygthes</CORR><SIC>knythes</SIC></CHOICE> and horsemen that chaced the knyghtes that were
messagiers, and whan thei saugh this thei spronge oute of the
wode hem a-geins, and the romayns resorte a-noon right as thei
saugh hem come, and many of hem were wroth that thei hadde
chaced hem so fer, ffor the bretons than hem chaced full crewelly,
and ther was many of hem taken and many slain.  A knyght
ther was of grette renoun, whos name was Petrius, ffor in Rome
was not his pareill of prowesse and of hardynesse, and herde
speke of this a-wayte that the Bretouns hadde made, and a-noon


<PB REF="" N="654" ID="pb.654"/>

he rode thider with vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men of armes, and as soone as he was
come in to the stour, he made the bretons be fin force entre in to
the wode, for thei myght not hym and his peple endure, but
turned to flight, and the chace dured to the wode, and ther
thei stode at diffence, and Petrius hem assailed full vigerously,
but many he loste of his men, ffor the Bretouns slough of hem
grete plente, and many ther were deed on bothe sides.</P>
<P>  Whan Arthur saugh the messangiers taried so longe, he
eleped ydier the sone of Vunde and comaunded hym
to go after hem till he hadde hem founden, and he dide his
comaundement and rode forth till he fonde bothe hostes that
fought to-geder, and sir Gawein and his felowes dide merveiles
and wele, and ydiers and his companye spronge in vpon the
Romayns fiercely, and than com alle the bretouns oute of the
wode, and haue recouered the felde; and Petrius that was a noble
knyght, and bolde and hardy, relied his peple a-boute hym, and
cowde well fle and returne at a vauntage, and well fight with
his enmyes, and who that will mete an hardy knyght lete hym
go to hym, ffor whom that he smote died hym be-houed, and
the bretouns pressed to the bateile as thei that were desirous to
Iuste and covetouse to do chiualrie, so that thei rought not how
it yede so the werre were be-gonne; and on that other side was
Petrius full dolent, and kepte his felowes clos a-boute hym, and
Segramor of Costantinnoble wente thourgh the bateile smytinge
down knyghtes and horse, and was war of Petrius that threwe
down bretouns, and maymed and slough, and saugh wele by the
merveiles that he dide that soone myght the bretouns have grete
losse, but yef Petrius were deed or taken quyk, ffor by his
prowesse all only a-boode alle the Romayns, and Gawein toke
counseile of the beste of his frendes, and seide, "We haue
be-gonne this stour with-oute the leve of kynge Arthur, and yef
it happen vs wele he will conne vs thanke.  And yef it
myshappe we shull haue magre, and therfore it be-houeth vs to
sle Petrius or take hym quyk and yelde hym to kynge Arthur,
ffor otherwyse may we not departe with-oute losse, and therfore
I pray yow do as I shall do, and foloweth me;" and thei


<PB REF="" N="655" ID="pb.655"/>

seide thei wolde with good will; and whan Segramor this herde
he was gladde,   <MILESTONE N="232a" UNIT="folio"/>ffor he hadde well sein and parceyved whiche
was Petrius.</P>
<P>  Than Segramor shof that wey as he saugh Petrius, and alle
his felowes after that neuer thei stinte till thei come in
to the place ther Petrius gouerned his meyne, and Segramor
spored his horse so nygh, that he caught hym in his armes that
thei bothe fill to the erthe as he that trusted wele vpon his
felowes, and he lay at the erthe, and griped him sore in his
armes; and Petrius peyned hym sore to a-rise and turned
wraste-linge; but all that availed not, ffor Segramor helde hym faste so
that he hadde no power to meve; and whan the Romayns saugh
hym falle thei pressed hym for to rescowe, and ther was harde
stour and rough medle, and Gawein com thourgh the presse
makinge wey with the trenchaunt suerde, wherwith he slough
down right all that stode in his wey, so that ther was no
romayn so hardy ne so myghty but he made hym wey; and
ydiers the sone of vut made grete lardure of Romayns; and sir
Ewein the sone of kynge Vrien so peyned hym to perce the
presse, that eche of hem laboured for other so vigerously that
thei haue remounted Segramor by force, and sette hym on horse,
and take Petrius that sore was beten, and diffouled, and haue
hym drawen oute of the presse be fin force, and delyuered hym
to goode wardeynes, and returned a-gein in to the stour, and
the Romayns that hadde no gouernour hadde loste theire diffence
whan he was gon that hem dide condite; and the bretuons hem
slough and caste to grounde so thikke that thei passed ouer
grete hilles of deed bodyes to pursue hem that fledde, and thei
slough many in the chace, and toke prisoners and hem bounden
and presented the kynge Arthur, and the kynge hem thanked
hertely; and than thei counseiled hym to sende hem in to the
reame of Benoyk, and sette hem ther in prison till the Romayns
hadde don his plesier, ffor yef he kept hem in the hoste thei
myght hem wele ascape.  Than the kynge cleped Borell, and
Richer, and Cador, and Bediuer, that were gode knyghtes and
hardy, and of grete perage, and comaunded hem to a-rise erly on


<PB REF="" N="656" ID="pb.656"/>

the morowe, and conveye the prisoners till thei were in saf warde;
and here shull we reste of the prisoners, and of hem that shull
hem conveye, and speke of the Emperour.</P>
<P>  Whan the Emperour wiste of the damage that his men
hadde resceived, he was full of dolour and wrath, and
than com asspies that seide how the prisoners sholde on the
morowe be ledde in to the londe of Benoyk; whan the
Emperour herde this, he made x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men lepe to horse, and traueile
all nyght for to come be-fore ther the prisoners sholde passe,
and hem to rescowe yef it myght be; and than the Emperour
cleped Gestoire that was lorde of lybee, and the kynge of
Surre that Euander was cleped, and Calidus of Rome, and
Maus, and Cathenois.  These v cowde skile of bateile, and
moche thei knewe of werre, and the Emperour hem comaunded
to condite these x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI>, and than departed these v princes with
alle these x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and rode till thei come in to the wey ther as
these prisoners sholde passe,   <MILESTONE N="232b" UNIT="folio"/>and ther thei a-bode stille in a
delitable place that thei fonde nygh the wey.  And on the morowe
a-roos the meyne of kynge Arthur as thei were comaunded, and
ledde the prisoners, and rode in two parties for doute of peple,
and hem condited Bretell, and Richer, and Cador, and the
companye ther the prisoners were made hem be ledde with
theire handes bounden be-hynde at theire bakke, and theire
feet vndir the horse belyes; and thei that wente be-fore blusht
vpon the wacche of the Romayns; and the Romains spronge out
hem a-geins so harde that the erthe trembled, and the bretouns
hem diffended as peple of grete vertu; and whan Bediuer that
com be-hynde herde the strokes resounde he made lede the
prisoners in to a sure place, and comaunded the squyres hem to
kepe, and than smote theire horse with the spores, and wolde
not stinte till thei com to here felowes, and hem diffended with
grete force and vigour; and the romains shof here and there,
and hadde not so grete entente to disconfite the bretouns as for
to rescowe the prisoners and hem to seche; and whan the
bretouns saugh hem thus demended, thei departed in foure
bateiles, and Cador hadde in his companye the peple of Cornewaile, 


<PB REF="" N="657" ID="pb.657"/>

and Bediuer the peple of bediers, and Richer hadde a
companye of his owne peple, and Bretell hadde hem of Galvoye;
whan the kynge Evander saugh his peple turne to disconfiture,
and that theire force be-gan to amenuse, he gadered hem a-boute
hym clos; and whan thei saugh the bretons recouer, thei ronne
vpon hem in ordre, and than be-gonne a stour right grete; and
than hadde the bretons moche the werse, for thei loste grete
plente of theire knyghtes, and ydiers le fitz vut was mette so
sore with the kynge Euander, that he fill deed to the erthe, and
ther-fore were the bretons sore dismayed, for thei loste moche
peple at that shoofte, and alle thei hadde be deed or taken;
but as Cleodalis the Senescall of Carmelide com with v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men
that the kynge Arthur hadde sent by the counseile of Merlin;
and whan Bedyuer hem perceived, he seide to his companye,
"Holde stille now, and fle not, lo here cometh socour;" and
than thei cried the signe of kynge Arthur so high, that Cleodalis
com with v<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men, and the Romayns entended to take the
bretouns, and toke no tent to hem of Carmelide till thei were
falle, euen vpon hem, and in theire comynge thei ouerthrewe
a hundred of romayns that neuer rise after.  And than the
romayns were alle a-baisshed, ffor thei wende it hadde be the
kynge Arthur, and his power; and so thei were dismayed that
thei fledde toward theire herberges, for thei coueited noon other
garison, and these hem chaced that cowde hem not love, and
in that chace was slayn the kynge Euander, and Chachelos, and
of other moo than two thousande, and many ther were taken
prisoners; and than thei repeired in to the feelde of the bateile,
and toke the erle bourell and other deed cors that lay thourgh
the felde, and hem biried, and bar a-wey hem that were wounded;
and these that the kynge hadden comaunded to kepe and conveie
the prisoners thei ledde hem forth, and other that thei hadde
taken in the bateile newly, and bounde hem streite, and sent
hem thider as thei were comaunded; and Cleodalis and his
companye returned to the kynge Arthur, and tolde hym how
thei hadde spedde.  But here a-while we shull reste of hem,
and speke of the Emperour luce.

<PB REF="" N="658" ID="pb.658"/>
</P>
<P>    <MILESTONE N="233a" UNIT="folio"/>Full of sorowe was the Emperour whan he knewe the
discounfiture, and the grete losse of his peple, and
wepte full tendirly for the kynge Euander, and for other that
were deed and taken, and saugh well the myschef, and that
dismayed hym sore, and was in doute whedir he sholde fight
with the kynge Arthur, or he sholde a-bide his rere-warde that
sholde come after; and than he hym be-thought and made his
peple lepe to horse and come to logres with all his hoste, and
loigge hym in the vales vnder the Citee; and whan the kynge
Arthur wiste that, he wiste well that he wolde not fight, though
he hadde more peple, and so wolde not he suffre hym soiourne
ne sitte nygh hym, and made prevely his peple lepe to horse,
and rode on the right side of the Cite be-twene the town and
the hoste of the Emperour, and lefte the hoste on the left side,
and that was to disavaunce the Emperour, and by-reve hym the
wey to Oston, and laboured all the nyght till on the morowe,
and com in to a valeye that was cleped Toroise, and that was
the streight wey fro Oston to logres; and ther the kynge made
to arme his companye lest the romayns com vpon hem, and that
thei myght lightly put hem bakke; and the cariage, and the
mene peple that hadde no myster of bateile, the kynge made
hem to a-bide by an hill, and made a mustre of armed peple that
yef the romayns hem saugh thei sholde be dismayed for the
grete multitude of peple; after that the kynge sette in a wode
vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> kynghtes vij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> lxvj, and comaunded hem to the Erle of
Gloucester to lede, whiche was bothe Duke and Castelein, and
the kynge hem comaunded that thei sholde not meve thens in no
maner till thei saugh the nede.  "And yef I haue myster," seide
the kynge, "I shall turne to yow, and yef the Romayns turne to
discounfiture, loke ye hem not spare;" and thei hym ansuerde
that so thei wolde do with good chere, and than tolde the kynge
a-nother companye of knyghtes that were well appareile, and
sette hem in a place, and hym-self was constable; and ther was
his prevy meyne that he hadde norisshed, and made his dragon
to be holde in myd wey for a signe; and than departed his peple
in viij parties, and putte in each Partye ij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> knyghtes, and the


<PB REF="" N="659" ID="pb.659"/>

half were on foote, and half on horse-bak, and tolde to eche
partie in what maner thei sholde hem contene, and also he putt
to so moche peple, that in eche partie was viij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and v<HI REND="sup">C</HI>, and so
hadde the kynge Aguysans the first bateile, and that other
ledde the Duke Escam of Cambenyk, and Belcys the Danoys
kynge, and the kynge Looth of Orcanye ledde a-nother.  And the
kynge Tradilyuans of North walis, and sir Gawein was with
the kynge Looth as he that was a kynge of grete pris; after these
iiij firste bateiles that wente be-fore come iiij other after wele
a-raied, of whiche the kynge Vrien ledde the firste, and with hym
was sir Ewein his sone, and Ewein a-voutres, and the kynge
Belynans, and the kynge Ventres, and hadde in her companye
the peple of her companye and contrey.  The seconde bateile of
these foure ledde the kynge de Cent chiualers, and the kynge
Clarion of Northumbirlonde, and the kynge Carados, and in
theire companye the peple of theire contreyes.  The thridde
bateile ledde the kynge Bohors, and thei of his contre, and
Cleodalis the Senescall of Carmelide, and thei that he brought
oute of his contrey; the fourthe of these iiij, and the laste
  <MILESTONE N="233b" UNIT="folio"/>ledde the kynge Ban of Benoyk, and hadde with hym alle the
sergeauntes, and arblastiers, and iiij<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> men wele horsed; and
whan the kynge hadde stablisshed his peple and his bateiles
devised, he seide to his barons and to his people, "Lordes, now
it shall be sene how wele ye will do; ffor all that euer ye haue
don in all youre lif is loste, but ye do well at this tyme a-gein
these Romayns;" and the princes hym ansuerde a-noon with oo
voice that lever hadde thei to die in the felde, but he hadde the
honoure and the victorie; and whan the kynge Arthur herde this
he was gladde and ioyfull.  But now shull we returne to speke
of the Emperour.</P>
<P>  Here seith the book, that whan the Emperour was loiged
in the vale vnder logres, he and his Baronye that were
noble knyghtes and sure, that ther he lay that nyght, and on
the morowe he departed from logres, and wende to go to Oston,
and than com tidinges how the kynge Arthur hadde leide a-waite
a-gein hym, and so he saugh wele that he moste nede fight or


<PB REF="" N="660" ID="pb.660"/>

elles returne, and that wolde he not do in no maner, ffor that
sholde be holde cowardise, and yef he fledde his enmyes wolde
hym chace on euery side, and do hym anoy and damage, and the
two thinges myght not oon do lightly bothe to fle and to
fight.  Than he made his princes come be-fore hym, wher-of he hadde
two hundred of hem that were of his counseile; and than he
spake to hem and seide, "Gentill knyghtes, good conquerours,
the sones of good auncestrie, that the grete honours and londes
conquered, by theire grete prowesse and hardynesse is Rome
the heed of the worlde; and yef this Empire falle in youre
tyme it were shame to yow, ffor bolde and hardy were youre
auncestres, and by reson of gentill fader ought come gentill
issue, youre fadres vailaunt and worthi, and eueriche of yow
ought to enforce hym to resemble his fader, ffor grete shame
oueth he to haue that leseth the heritage of his fader, and that
for slouthe lete falle that his fader conquered, not that ye be
euell ne a-peired.  Thei were bolde and profitable, and so I
holde yow the same; and the bretons haue be-rafte vs the wey
toward Oston, that we may not passe but by bateile; take youre
armes and a-dubbe yow, and yef thei vs a-bide loke that thei be
well beten, and yef thei fle we shull hem pursue by force, and
peyne vs to a-bate theire pride, and distroie theire powestee."</P>
<P>  Than the romayns ordeyned theire bateiles, and theire
sheltrons renged, and many a paynym medled a-monge
the cristein peple that were come to deserue theire fees and
theire londes that thei hilde of Rome, and many of hem on
foote, and many on horse, and sette some on the hill, and some
in the valey.  Than sholde ye haue herde grete sown of hornes
and trumpes, and mules and Olyfauntes, and thei ride forth clos
holdinge till <CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> fill on the wacche of kynge Arthur, and than
sholde ye haue sey shotte of arowes and quarelles fle so thikke
that noon durste discouer his heed, and after that com thei to
brekinge of speres vpon the sheldes; and whan the speres were
spent thei gripe the axes, and gleves, and swerdes, and smyte
sore vpon helmes and hauberkes, ffor ther was stour merveilous
and sore fight; ther was no nede of foles ne of   <MILESTONE N="234a" UNIT="folio"/>cowardes, for


<PB REF="" N="661" ID="pb.661"/>

longe thei foughten to-geder and hurteled, that neuer the
Romayns ne rused ne the bretons myght nought recouer vpon
hem, ne noon wiste whiche hadde the better ne the victorie, till
that the warde of kinge Vrien and kynge Ventre, and kynge
Belynans frusshed a-monge the Romayns with all theire peple
where thei saugh the thikkest presse, and the thre princes
smyten in wonderfully, and kay the stiward that was in theire
companye dide as a noble knyght; ffor the thre Princes seide,
"Mercy god whiche a stiward is this;" and the same thei
seide of Bediuer the constable, and ther was many a knyght
leide to grounde, and many deed, and many grete strokes yoven
and resceived, and kay and Bediuer dide merveiles, for thei
trusted in theire prowesse, and hilde hem to-geder, and a-vaunced
to fer forth, and mette a bateile that the kynge of mede dide
bringe, and his name was Boclus, a paynym of grete prowesse,
and thei medled with hem and her peple, and many thei slough;
and whan the kynge boclus saugh the two knyghtes that dide
hym so grete damage of his peple, he was sory, and hilde a
grete short spere, and ran to Bediuer, and smote hym with so
grete ire, that the stele heed passed thourgh the bouke; and
yef he hadde touched hym a litill lower, deed hadde ben for euer,
and neuertheles he bar hym down to the erthe out of his sadill
all in swowne; whan kay saugh hym falle, he hadde grete
sorowe at his herte, ffor he wende verily he hadde be deed, and
com toward hym with as moche people as he myght, and made
theym of mede resorten, and com to Bedyuer, and clipte hym in
his armes, and wolde haue born hym oute of the presse from
the horse feet for the grete love that was hem be-twene, and the
kynge of Mede hym turned and smote kay with his suerde vpon
the helme that he yaf hym a grete wounde on the heed so that
he be-houed to lete Bedyuer ly stille, and bothe hadde thei
soone haue be slain ne hadde be theire meyne that full stifly
hem diffended; and a knyght spronge in to the presse that was
cleped Segras, and was nevew to Bediuer; and whan he saugh
his vncle so ly at erthe, he wende he hadde be deed, and he
assembled his kyn and frendes that were well thre hundred,

<PB REF="" N="662" ID="pb.662"/>

and seide, "Seweth after me, and lete vs a-venge the deth of
myn vncle."  Than he lefte the Romayns, and a-spide the kynge
of mede, and turned that wey, and cried the signe of kynge
Arthur as a wood man oute of witte for angre to a-venge the
deth of his vncle, and his felowes sewed after hym with sharp
grounden speres wher-with was slain many a paynym; and
whan Segars saugh the kynge Boclus that hadde smyte down
his vncle, he smote hym on the helme with so grete ire, that he
cleft hym to the teth that he fill deed to grounde, and than he
light down and caught hym vp, and hym lede on his horse and
brought hym ther as his vncle lay, and ther he hewe hym in to
smale peces; and than he seide to his peple, "Sle these hethen
houndes, that in oure lorde haue no creaunce;" and with that
he herde his oncle sighe, and than was he gladde in herte, and
toke hym vp softely, and bar hym oute of the presse to the
harneys,   <MILESTONE N="234b" UNIT="folio"/>and than returned to the bateile that was full crewell
and fell; and the kynge Ventres mette the kynge Alipatin, and
the kynge Ventres was wounded thourgh the body, ffor the
Romayns were of so grete powere that the bretouns be-hoved to
rusen of fin force; and whan sir Gawein and hoell of the litill
Bretayne saugh hem resorte, thei were wroth and sory.  Than
thei smote in a-monge hem, and the peple of the litill Bretayne
hem slough euer nygh theire lorde, so that no presse myght hem
with-stonde, and so wele thei dide that thei made them turne
theire bakkes to hem and fledde, and ther was many slain and
throwe to grounde; and in this wise thei hem demened till thei
com to the maister Gawfanon of the Egle of golde, and ther was
the Emperour, and the myghtiest men of the worlde, and the
grettest gentles of Rome.</P>
<P>  Ther sholde ye haue seyn stiffe stour and fell, and crewell
bateile, and hermans that was Erle of Tripill was in
companye of sir Gawein and hauell, but a knaue hym slough
with a gauelok, and the peple of the Emperour smyte so on the
bretouns that thei slough of hem two thousande in the self place
wher-of was grete damage and pite, for thei were full worthi
men and many noble knyghtes, and whan sir Gawein saugh his


<PB REF="" N="663" ID="pb.663"/>

companye thus dye, he spronge in a-monge the Romayns as a
wood lyon a-monge wilde bestes, and he was of noble high
prowesse, and was not wery to smyte grete strokes vpon eyther
side till he com nygh the Emperour; and whan he saugh the
Emperour he knewe hym wele, and he hym also, and a-noon that
oon lete renne to that other, and smyten to-geder with grete
myght, but thei dide not falle, for bothe were thei of grete force;
and the Emperour was right stronge and hardy, and was gladde
that he was mette with Gawein, for he knewe hym by his armes
that men hym hadde devised, and the signes, and seide to
hymself, yef I may ascape a-lyve, I may ther-of a-vaunte me at
Rome.  Than he griped his swerde, and couered hym with his
shelde, and faught with sir Gawein full fiercly, and sir Gawein
hym smote with Calibourne his good suerde, that he slitte his
helme, and his heed down to the teth; and whan the romayns
saugh the Emperour deed, thei ronne vpon the bretouns and
yaf hem a dispitouse shour and crewell, and smyte down in her
comynge moo than thre hundred; whan Arthur saugh the
romayns recouer, and his peple so demene, he cried with an high
voyce, "What lordinges, what do ye holde stille youre grounde,
and lete noon of hem ascape, for I am the kynge Arthur, that
for no man will forsake the felde; sewe me, and loke ye be not
recreaunt, and remembre you of youre noble prowesses that so
many remes haue conquered, ffor ther shall noon passe quyk
oute of this felde, but I haue the victorie vpon these romayns,
ffor this day shall I lyve or dye;" with that he spronge in
a-monge the romains, and be-gan to smyte down knyghtes, and
horse and men, that whom so he a-raught be-houed to dye, ffor
he smote no stroke with his swerde, but he slough other man or
horse, and in his wey he mette hestor the kynge lubye, and he
smote hym so that his heed fill to grounde; and than he seide,
"Cursed be thow that euer thou hider com to do vs soche
damage to my men;" and after he smote Polibetes, the kynge of
mede, that he fonde in his wey, that he fill deed to grounde;
whan the barouns saugh the kynge Arthur do so wele, thei
assailed the romayns, and the romayns hem vigerously, that

<PB REF="" N="664" ID="pb.664"/>

grete   <MILESTONE N="235a" UNIT="folio"/>damage dide to the bretons, and yef the Emperour ne
hadde be slain, the bretouns ne myght not a-gein hem endured,
for that discounforted hem alle; neuertheles thei contened hem so
wele, that noon wiste who sholde haue the better.  Than the
vj<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> and vj<HI REND="sup">C</HI> lxvj com down of the montaigne to whom the
kynge Arthur sholde haue recovered yef he hadde myster, and
thei com in to the hoste in soche manere, that the romayns were
not war; and thei smyte on hem be-hynde so harde, that thei
slitte the bateile in two parties, and so thei wente diffoulinge
hem vnder horse feet and slough hem with theire suerdes; and
after these were come myght the romayns not endure, but turned
to flight, for sore were thei discounforted, for the Emperour that
was slain, and the Romains and the sarazins fledde discounfited,
and the bretouns hem enchaced, and slough of hem as many as
thei hadde talant.</P>
<P>  Full gladde was the kynge Arthur of the discounfiture of
the Romains, and of the victorie that god hadde hym
yoven, and than com in to the feelde ther the bateile hadde be
and biryed the deed bodies in chirches and abbeyes of the
contrey; and the wounded lete hem be ledde to townes, and
serched theire sores, and after made take the body of the
Emperour, and sente it to Rome on a beere, and sente worde to the
romains that it was the trewage of Bretaigne, that he sent to
Rome, and yef thei wolde aske eny more he wolde hem sende
soche a-nother in the same wise; and whan he hadde don thus,
he toke counseile wheder he sholde holde forth his wey, or
turne a-gein in to Gaule, and the princes seide he sholde take
counseile of Merlin.  Than the kynge called Merlin, and seide,
"Dere frende, how pleseth it you that I shall do."  "Sir," seide
Merlin, "ye shull not come at Rome, ne ye shull not yet
returne, but holde forth youre wey, ffor ther be peple that haue
grete nede of youre helpe."  "How so," seide the kynge, "is
ther werre in this contrey."  "Sir," seide Merlin,
"ye!  beyonde the lak de losane, for ther repeireth, a devell an enmy so
that ther dar nother a-bide man ne woman, for he distroieth the
contrey, and sleth all that he may gete."  "How so," seide the


<PB REF="" N="665" ID="pb.665"/>

kynge, "may ther no man hym endure, than is he no man as
other ben."  "No," quod Merlin, "it is a catte, full of the
devell that is so grete and ougly, that it is an horible sight on to
loke."  "Ihesu mercy," seide the kynge to Merlin, "whens
myght soche a beeste come?"  "Sir," seide Merlin, "that can
I telle yow."


</P>
</DIV1>

<DIV1 TYPE="chapter" ID="DIV1.33">
<HEAD> CHAPTER XXXIII. 
<LB/> ARTHUR'S FIGHT WITH THE GREAT CAT; THE SEARCH FOR MERLIN, AND HIS IMPRISONMENT; THE TRANSFORMATION OF GAWEIN INTO A DWARF, AND RETURN TO HIS PROPER FORM; THE BIRTH OF LANCELOT.</HEAD>
<P>"Hit be-fill at the assencion hens a-foure yere, that a fissher
of the contrey com to the lak de losane with his nettes
and his engynes; and whan he was redy to caste his nette in to
the water, he promysed to oure lorde, the firste fissh that he
sholde take; and whan he drough vp his nette, he toke a fissh
that was worth xxxs.; and whan he saugh the fissh so feire and
grete, he seide to hym-self softly be-twene his teth, "God shall
not haue this, but he shall haue the next that I take."  Than
he threwe his nett a-gein in to the water, and toke a-nother fissh
that was better than the firste; and whan he saugh it was so
good and so feire, he seide that yet our lorde god myght wele
a-bide of this.  But the thridde sholde he haue with-oute eny
doute; and than he caste his nett in to the water, and drough
oute a litill kyton as blakke as eny cool.  And whan the
  <MILESTONE N="235b" UNIT="folio"/>fissher it saugh, he seide that he hadde nede ther-of in his
house for rattes and mees, and he it norisshed and kept vp in
his house till it strangeled hym, and his wif and his children,
and after fledde in to a mountayn that is be-yonde the lak, that
I haue to you of spoken, and hath be there in to this tyme, and
distroieth and sleth all that he may se and a-reche; and he is
grete and horible that it is merveile hym to se; and we shull
go that wey, for it is the right wey toward Rome, and yef god


<PB REF="" N="666" ID="pb.666"/>

will, ye shull sette the peple in reste that be fledde in to
straunge londes."  Whan the barons undirstode these wordes
thei gonne to blesse hem for the grete merveile that thei hadden,
and seiden that it was vengeaunce of oure lorde, and a tokne
that he was wroth, for the synne that the fissher hadde broken
his promys, and ther-fore thei trowed oure lorde were wroth
with hym, for that he hadde falsed his couenaunt.  Than the
kynge comaunded to trusse and to make hym redy to ride; and
thei dide his comaundement, and toke theire wey toward the
lak de losane, and fonde the contrei wasted and voide of peple,
that nother man ne woman durste ther-ynne enhabite.  And
thei laboured so till that thei com vnder the mounte, wher-as
this devell dide a-bide; and loiged hem in a valey a myle fro the
mountein; and the kynge Looth toke his armes, and sir Gawein,
and Gaheries, and the kynge Ban, and Merlin, for to go with
the kynge Arthur, and seide thei wolde go se this feende that so
grete damage and harme hadde don in the contrey; and thei
clymbe vpon the mountein as Merlin hem ledde, that well knewe
the wey, for the grete witte that was in hym.  And whan thei
were come vp, than seide Merlin to Arthur, "Sir, in that roche
ther is the Catte;" and shewed hym a grete cave in a medowe
that was right large and depe.  "And how shall the Catte come
oute?" seide the kynge.  "That shull ye se hastely," quod
Merlin, "but loke ye be redy you to diffende, for a-noon he
will yow assaile."  "Than drawe yow alle a-bakke," seide the
kynge Arthur, "for I will preve his power;" and thei dide his
comaundement, and a-noon as thei were with-drawen, Merlin
whistelid lowde; and whan the catte that herde, a-noon he
lept out of the cave, for he wende that it had be som wilde
beste, and he was hungry and fastinge, and ran woodly a-straye
toward the kynge Arthur; and as soone as the kynge saugh hym
comynge he bar a-gein hym a short spere, and wende to smyte
hym thourgh the body.  But the feend caught the steill heed in
his teth so harde, that he made it bende, and in the turnynge
that the kynge made, the shaft to brake faste by the heed that
was in the cattes mowthe; and he be-gan to make a grym noyse

<PB REF="" N="667" ID="pb.667"/>

as he were wood, and the kynge caste down the tronchon of the
spere, and drough his suerde, and caste his shelde hym be-fore;
and the catte lepte to hym a-noon, and wende to sese hym by
the throte, and the kynge lifte the shelde a-gein hym so fiercely,
that the catte fill to grounde; but soone he lepte vpon his feet
and ran vpon the kynge full fiercely, and the kynge lifte vp the
suerde and smote the catte on the heed that he cutte the skyn;
but the heed was so harde that he myght not entre; and
neuertheles he was so astonyed, that he fill to the erthe vp-right,
but er the kynge myght his shelde recouer, the catte sesed hym
at discouert   <MILESTONE N="236a" UNIT="folio"/>be the sholdres so harde that his clawes griped
thourgh his hauberke in to the flesshe, and plukked so harde
that he braste moo than iiij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> mayles, that the reade blode
folowed his clawes, and ther failed but litill that the kynge
hadde falle to the erthe; and whan the kynge saugh his blode,
he was wonder wroth, than he caste his shelde be-fore his
breste, and hilde his swerde in his right hande, and ran to the
catte vigerously, that likked his clawes that were weet of blode;
and whan he saugh the kynge come toward hym, he lepe hym
a-geins, and wende to sese hym as he hadde do be-forn, but the
kynge launched his shelde hym be-fore, and the catte smote
ther in his two feet be-fore with so grete fiersnesse thourgh
the shelde, and breied so harde that the kynge enclyned to the
erthe, so that the gige of the shelde fly from his nekke; but he
griped the shelde so faste by the enarmynge that the catte
myght it not hym be-reve, ne pulle oute his clawes, but henge
in the shelde be the two feet be-fore; and whan the kynge
saugh this, he griped faste the shelde and smote hym with his
swerde vpon bothe legges, that he cutte hem a-sonder by the
knees, and the catte fill to grounde; and the kynge caste a-wey
his shelde, and ran to hym with swerde drawen; and the catte
sterte vpon the hynder-feet, and grenned with his teth, and
coveited the throte of the kynge; and the kynge launched at
hym and wende to smyte hym on the heed, and ther-with the
catte strayned hys hynder feet and lept in his visage, and griped
hym with her hynder feet, and with hir teth in to the flesshe


<PB REF="" N="668" ID="pb.668"/>

that the blode stremed out in many places of breste and sholdres
on high; and whan the kynge felte hym holde so harde, he sette
the point of his swerde to the bely for to launche hym thourgh,
and whan the catte felte the suerde she lefte hir bitinge, and
wolde haue falle to grounde; but the two hynder feet were so
depe ficched in the hauberke, that the heed of the catte hanged
down-warde, and than the kynge smote a-sonder the two hynder
feet, and the body fill to grounde; and as soone as the catte
was fallen she be-gan to whowle and to bray so lowde, that it
was herde thourgh the hoste; and whan she hadde caste this
cry she be-gan to crepe faste down the foreste by the grete
strengthe that was in hir, and drough toward the cave where-as
she com oute; but the kynge wente be-twene hir and the cave,
and ran vpon the catte, and the catte launched toward hym,
and wende to cacche hym with hir teth; but in the launchinge
the kynge smote of hir two legges be-fore, and than Merlin and
the other ronne to hym, and asked how it was with
hym.  "Well," seide the kynge, "blessed be oure lorde, ffor I haue
slain this devell, that grete harme hath don in this contrey, and
wite it verily that I hadde neuer so grete doute of my-self as
I hadde now a-gein this catte, saf only of the Geaunte that I
slough this other day on the mountein, and ther-fore I thanke
oure lorde."  "Sir," seide the barouns,   <MILESTONE N="236b" UNIT="folio"/>"ye haue grete cause."
Than thei loked on the feet that were lefte in the shelde, and
in the hauberk, and thei seide that neuer soche feet hadde thei
sein be-fore, and Gaheries toke the shelde and wente to the
host makinge grete ioye; and whan the princes saugh the feet
and the clawes that were so longe thei were a-baisshed, and
ledde the kynge to his tente and vnarmed hym, and loked on
the cracchinges, and the bitinge of the catte; and the leches
waisshed softly his woundes, and leide ther-to salue and
oynementes to clense the venym, and dight hym in soche maner,
that he letted nothinge to ride; and that day thei soiourned till
on the morowe that thei returned toward Gaule, and the kynge
lete bere the shelde with the cattes feet, and the feet that were
in the hauberk lete put in a cofer, and comaunded to be well


<PB REF="" N="669" ID="pb.669"/>

kept; and the kinge asked Merlin how this mountein was
cleped, and Merlin seide that peple of the contrey cleped it the
mountein de lak, ffor the lak that was in the valey.  "Certes,"
seide the kynge, "I will that this name be taken a-wey, and
I will it be cleped the mountain of the catte, ffor the catte hadde
ther his repeire, and was ther slain;" and after that the name of
that hill neuer chaunged, ne neuer shall while the worlde
dureth; and now a-while cesseth the tale and returneth to hem
that ledde the Prisoners.</P>
<P>  Now seith the storie, that whan the kynge Arthur hadde
comaunded the knyghtes to lede the prisoners of the
romayns that were repeired <CHOICE><CORR>from</CORR><SIC>fom</SIC></CHOICE> the disconfiture of the romayns
that the prisoners wende to haue rescowed, that thei toke the
prisoners that the squyers kepte out of the stour, and wente
toward fraunce, and in euery town that thei com thei toke
condite fro oo town to a-nother, and laboured day and nyght
till thei com nygh a Castell that longe to Claudas de la desert;
and ther com a-gein hem xlv knyghtes of the londe of kynge
Claudas, that by theire esspies wiste that the kynge Arthur
sente prisoners in to fraunce that were knyghtes of the romains,
and yef they myght yelde hem to kynge Claudas he sholde
conne hem grete thanke, ffor he loved the romayns and the
Emperour.  Thei were well horsed and a-raied, and com a-gein
hem that ledde the prisoners that were well CC knyghtes and
squyres, and of hem of the contrey that bar hem companye;
but with-oute faile thei ne were but xl knyghtes, and thei on
that other side were xlvj, and were nygh the castell where-ynne
were I-nowe of squyres and sergeauntes on foote in whom thei
trusted moche.  Thei en-busshed hem in a grove a litill oute
of the wey; and whan thei saugh hem come, thei spronge oute
a-gein hem, and hem assailed that nygh thei haue hem
supprised; but a-noon as thei saugh hem breke, thei ronne hem
a-geins, and mette so harde vpon the sheldes that thei perced
and rente hauberkes, and many ther were smyte thourgh the
bodies, and slain and wounded on bothe parties; and whan thei
that were with the prisoners saugh the knyghtes reuerse, thei

<PB REF="" N="670" ID="pb.670"/>

ronne hem to socour, and for to take the other, and grete was
the afray and the medle, and gretly were a-peired the peple
of kynge Claudas, and yet sholde thei haue hadde more
damage; but as the peple of the Castell hem socoured, be
strengthe that were well an hundred and fifty of horsemen, and
the bateile wax right sharpe and fierce, for the   <MILESTONE N="237a" UNIT="folio"/>bretouns were
stronge and hardy, and Claudas peple were stronge and hardy
in her owne londe, and diffended hem wele; and than com
oute of the castell fifty sergeauntes with bowe and arowes, and
be-gonne to shete at the bretouns, and slough many in her
comynge, and ther-fore were the bretouns sore dismayed, and
of fin force were made resorte to the prisoners that the yomen
on foote dide kepe; and elles hadde the bretouns all loste ne
hadde be oon auenture that hem be-fill, as god wolde, ffor
Pharien of Trebes and leonce of Paierne com that wey for to
prise the Castell, and hadde in her companye vij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> knyghtes wele
horsed and richely armed, and com vpon hem fightinge euen as
the bretouns were at disconfiture; and whan thei of the castell
hem a-perceived, and knewe theire armes thei were sore
dismayed, and lefte the assaute of the bretouns and fledde toward
the castell, and gat in who that myght sonest, that the sone
a-boode not the fader, ne the fader the sone, but so faste cowde
thei not haste, but that leonce, and Pharien, and her companye
slough of hem moo than xxx; and <CHOICE><CORR>thei</CORR><SIC>the</SIC></CHOICE> ronne in to the castell
to garison, and thei vpon the walles lete falle the portcolys vpon
hem and slough of hem two horse; and Pharien and leonce
repeired toward the bretouns that hadde gadered a-gein alle
the prisoners that thei ledde; and Pharien hem asked what thei
were, and thei ansuerde, "We be with the kynge Arthur that
these prisoners sendeth in to ffraunce;" and whan thei
vndirstode this, thei seide thei were welcome.  Than thei wente alle
to-geder to Benoyk, and made the prisoners a-light be-fore the
paleis, and after lete sette hem in prison as the kynge Arthur
hadde comaunded, and after thei hem vn-armed and duelled
ther in ioye and in feste.  And now shull we returne and speke
of the lorde of the marasse and of his dou hter.


<PB REF="" N="671" ID="pb.671"/>
</P>
<P>  A-noon with-ynne xv dayes after the kynge Ban, and the
kynge Bohors, and Merlin were departed from the castell
of the marasse, where thei hadde ley in ioye and feste, a riche
man of the contrey com to the castell on a nyght; and the
lorde of the castell, that was a worthy knyght and a wise, made
hym grete chere, and in reuerence of hym made his doughter
to serue of the cuppe as she that was full wise and wele lerned;
and the knyght that ther-in was herberowed be-helde the
damesell that he liked right wele, and requered her of hir fader,
and seide he wolde hir haue to his wif yef it hym liked, and
the fader hym thonked of the honour that he hym profered,
and was ther-of full gladde, for he was the highest lorde of that
contrey, and seide he wolde speke ther-of to his doughter, and
than yeve hym ansuere; whan thei hadde soped, thei yede to
reste, and on the morowe thei a-rise erly, and agrauadain
a-resoned his doughter of that the knyght hym requered, that
was so myghty a lorde, that by hym myght alle his frendes be
a-vaunced and worshiped; and whan the damesell this herde
she ansuerde hir fader debonerly, and seide, "Sir, it is not yet
tyme for me to be maried, for I am yonge, and ther-fore I
be-seche yow speketh not ther-of, but suffre me a-bide yef it
plese yow."  "Ffeire doughter," quod he, "to leve spekinge
herof I se no profite; ye ought to haue grete ioye in youre
herte, for that so high a lorde deyneth to aske yow in   <MILESTONE N="237b" UNIT="folio"/>mariage;
ffor ye be a woman but of lowe lynage a-gein hym, and
ther-for I pray yow and comaunde to do my will."  "Sir," quod
she, "ye may well yet suffre a-while, for be the feith that I owe
to yow that be my fader, I am not yet in will to be maried."
"How so, feire daughter," quod he, "will ye than refuse my
plesier and my volunte."  "Sir," quod she, "I knowe well
youre will is not for to haue me I-loste."  "I-loste," seide he,
"nay, but I-wonne to grete honour."  "Nay, sir," quod she,
"but I-loste; for I sholde neuer haue ioye at myn herte, yef
I were maried to eny other than to hym that I haue my-self
promysed and graunted, and yet I knowe well that I shall
neuer hym haue, but I shall holde me to hym that he hath me


<PB REF="" N="672" ID="pb.672"/>

lefte, and he is of higher astate and feirer knight than is this."
"Doughter," seide he, "of whom speke ye; tell me more clerly
youre thought and soche thinge I may of yow heren, that I
shall put this thinge in respite."  "Sir," seide the damesell,
"I shall yow telle, seth that ye will it knowe, and I shall of
no worde make yow lesynge."  Than she tolde hym all in
ordore how it was hir be-falle be-twene hir and <CHOICE><CORR>the</CORR><SIC>th</SIC></CHOICE> kynge Ban
of Benoyk, and how she was by hym with childe; "
and he
tolde me that I sholde haue a sone by whom all my lynage
shall be a-vaunced; wher-fore I praye yow be not a-boute to
marye me to noon other but to the kynge, ffor be the feith that
I owe to god and to yow, I shall neuer haue other but hym."</P>
<P>  Whan the fader vndirstode his doughter, he was pensif
and wroth, but chere ne semblaunt durste he noon
make, and ansuerde soberly, "Doughter, seth it is thus, I moste
it suffre, and therfore disconfort yow no-thinge, and I shall go
speke with this lorde, and telle hym youre will and nothinge
myn;" and than he com to the knyght that was in doynge on
his spores, and salued hym curteysly, and seide, "Sir, yef it
plese yow to suffre this two yere, I will do youre volunte;"
and that he seide, for he knewe well he wolde it not graunte
that respite; whan the knyght this vndirstode, he ansuerde
ther-to no worde, but lepe to horse, he and his men, and
departed with-oute leve takinge, and swor that seth he myght
hir not haue with love he wolde hir haue be force, and after
hym sholde haue hir who that wolde; and in this maner he
departed and com in to his contrey and somowned his men, till
he hadde wele viij<HI REND="sup">C</HI> knyghtes, and squyres, and yomen, and
many other sowdiours, and com with an hoste be-fore the
Castell des Maras, and pight his teintes by the pyne tre nygh
the cauchie, and swor his oth that neuer sholde he departe thens
till he hadde hir to his wif; and whan the lorde des Maras
saugh hym-self be-seged, he was full of hevynesse, not for no
drede to be taken by strengthe, ne famyn myght thei not lightly
for all the reme myght hym not take, for I-nough he hadde of
vitaile, for v yere that neuer hym neded to com oute at the

<PB REF="" N="673" ID="pb.673"/>

yate; and he hadde ther-ynne xlij knyghtes that were bolde
and hardy in armes, ffor the lorde des Mares was a noble
knyght; and thus thei were be-fore the Castell viij dayes that
neuer was caste ne shotte,   <MILESTONE N="238a" UNIT="folio"/>and the ix<HI REND="sup">the.</HI> day, a-boute the hour
of prime, be-fill that a knyght of the hoste that was cleped
Maudras com to the horn that ther henge, and sette it to his
mouthe, and blewe thries with grete myght, so that the lorde
of the castell it herde clerly; and than a-noon he armed hym
richely, and lepte vpon a stede with shelde be-fore his breste
and a spere in hande, and the yate was hym opened, and he
rode oute a grete raundon all the cauchie towarde the hoste,
and cried with high voice whiche was he that was so hardy
to blowen his horne with-oute his leve, and in euell tyme hadde
he it be-gonne, yef in hym were so moche hardynesse with
hym to Iuste, and Maudras seide that for noon other cause was it
do, "and I shall Iuste be soche couenaunt that he that falleth
shall yelde hym-self taken prisoner with-oute more doynge."
"And I it graunte," seide Agrauadain, "yef youre lorde will
assent that I haue of hym no doute ne encombraunce ne of noon
saf only of yow."  "In feith," quod he, "ye shull haue no
doute of noon other seth ye be come so fer."  Than Agrauadain
com down of the cauchie, and he a Maudras ronne to-geder;
and the knyghtes were renged rounde a-boute to be-holde the
Iustinge, and the two knyghtes mette with so grete raundon,
that the sheldes perced, Maudras brake his spere, and
Agrauadain shof so sore, that he bar hym to grounde so rudely, that
he brake his lifte arme be-twene the hande and the
elbowe.  Than he straught oute his hand and hente the horse by the
reyne, and sette hym on the cauchie; and than he seide to
Maudras that he sholde hym sewe and holde his couenaunt,
and than he rode forth towarde the Castell, and drof Maudras
horse hym be-fore, and entred in at the yate where he was
resceyved with ioye; and leriador and his knyghtes com to
Maudras, and fonde hym on swowne, and thei wende he hadde
be deed.  And in a while after he yaf a grete sigh, and opened
his iyen, and comaunded that oon sholde bringe hym to the


<PB REF="" N="674" ID="pb.674"/>

castell to a-quyte hym of his oth.  Than leriador lete make a
beere of smale bowes on horsbak, and leide hym ther-ynne,
and couered with a riche cloth of silke and henge this litter
be-twene two horse, and sente hym to the castell.  And
Agrauadain hym resceived, and lete put hym in a feire chambre
where is arme was well dight with salues and
oynementes.  And thei that brought hym thider returned a-gein, and fonde
leriador sori and wroth, and so were all the other.</P>
<P>  On the morowe com a-nother knyght, and blewe the horne;
and agrauadain com and Iusted with hym, and smote
hym down, and toke his feith to be prisoner, and wente with
hym to the castell, and thus Agrauadain wan xj, and therfore
was the lorde sory and angry; and the xij<HI REND="sup">the.</HI> day he blewe the
horne hym-self; and whan Agrauadain was come as he was
wonte to do, than seide Leriador that at this Iustinge sholde be
fynysshed the werre, and the sege departe; ffor yef Agrauadain
hym conquered, he wolde returne a-gein in to his contrey with
all his hoste.  Ne neuer he ne noon of his sholde touche
nothinge of his, "and yef I yow conquere ye shull me yeve youre
doughter to be my wif, for I aske yow no more."  This was
graunted on bothe parties.  And than wente the two knyghtes
to-geder, and mette with grete raundon on the sheldes a-bove
the bokeles   <MILESTONE N="238b" UNIT="folio"/>that thei perced and rente the hauberkes, that the
spere poyntes passed be the sides, so that the blode spronge oute
of bothe parties; than thei hurteled so harde with bodies and
sheldes, that eche bar other to grounde, bothe horse and man,
that bothe were sore astonyed, and lay longe while at the erthe;
but bothe thei lept vpon foot, and drough theire suerdes and
smote grete strokes at discouert, and made grete woundes and
merveilouse, and bothe waxen feble for the blode that thei
bledde; but in the ende leriador be-hoved to come to mercy,
and departed from the sege, and wente hom to his contrie; and
Agrauadain returned to his castell, and leide salue to his
woundes, and sente the prisoners in to her contreyes; and he
a-bode gladde and myrye till his doughter was delyuered of a
sone, that after was of grete renoun in the reame of logres, and


<PB REF="" N="675" ID="pb.675"/>

in many other contreyes, and was cleped by his right name
Estor; and of hym hadde Agrauadain grete ioye, and made hym
be norisshed in his chambre, and delyuered hym thre norices;
and the damesell hir-self yaf hym sowke of hir owne mylke,
ffor ther was nothinge that she loved so moche, ffor he was so
like the kynge Ban as he hadde be portreyed.  But now shull
we cesse of hym a-while, and of his moder, and of Agrauadain,
that helde hym dere, and returne to speke of the kynge fflualis
that longe hath be stille.</P>
<P>  Now whan that Merlin was departed from the kynge fflualis,
to whom he hadde tolde his a-vision; and the kynge
fflualis a-bood sore dismayed of that Merlin hadde seide, and
in short tyme after be-fill like as he hadde tolde, for he saugh
his children in the temple of diane I-slayn, and the temple
caste down and dispoiled, and his londe distroied, and his paleys
brente, and hym-self taken and his wif; but thei that hym
toke ne slough hym not, but shewed hem the poyntes of the
cristin feith, and made hem so to vndirstonde fro day to day,
that thei were baptised and waisshe fro the filthe of synne of
mysbeleve, and was cleped be the same name that he hadde
be-fore, and that was fflualis; but the ladies name was chaunged,
and cleped hir misiane, and hir name was be-fore cleped
Lumble; and after were thei longe to-geder till thei hadde
foure doughtres, that after hadde foure princes that were
cristin, and were full good peple and trewe, and hadde many
children; ffor the elthest hadde x sones, that were alle good
knyghtes by the kynge fflualis lif, and viij doughteres; and the
seconde hadde xij sones and thre doughtres; and the thridde
vj sones and xij doughtres; and the fourthe xv sones and a
doughter, and were alle maryed, and the sones knyghtes while
the kynge was lyvinge, and the quene Misiane, that ther-of
hadde grete ioye and gladnesse, and thonked our lorde.  Whan
the kynge fflualis and the foure princes saugh that thei hadde
liiij children that were alle bretheren and cosins germain, thei
made grete ioye, and seide that oure lorde hadde hem sent to
avaunce the cristin lawe, and seide thei sholde neuer cesse till

<PB REF="" N="676" ID="pb.676"/>

thei hadde made alle paynyms cristin, and obbeye the lawes of
god and holy cherche.</P>
<P>  Than thei somowned and assembled all her power, and ronne
thourgh paynym londes, and toke townes, and slough
many a paynym, and conquered the londes of the straunge
contreyes, and passed   <MILESTONE N="239a" UNIT="folio"/>in to Galys, and in to Spayne, so that
nothinge myght a-gein hem endure, till that the kynge fflualis
was deed in spayne, and ther-fore were the foure princes full
dolent and the nevewes, and was biried in a Cite that tho was
cleped Nadres; and than thei repeired towarde the parties of
Ieshuralem, and set the londes in her handes, and after departed
by diuerse londes, and hem conquered and toke the honours,
that oon hilde Costantynnoble; and that other greece, where he
hadde foure regiouns; and the thridde hilde barbarie; and the
fourthe Cipre; and some come in to the reame <CHOICE><CORR>of</CORR><SIC>of of</SIC></CHOICE>   logres for to
serve the kynge Arthur, for the grete renoome that of hym was
thourgh the worlde, and with hem com foure knightes that
were bolde and hardy in armes, but litill tyme thei lyved, and
that was grete harme to all cristin peple, ffor thei were noble
and trewe, and the tweyne were deed in a bateile that launcelot
made a-gein the kynge Claudas; and the thridde in a bateile
that the kynge Arthur made a-gein Mordred as shall be rehersed
here-after.  But now shull we returne to speke of the kynge
Arthur.</P>
<P>  In this partie, seith the storie, that whan the kynge
Arthur and his companye had disconfited the romayns,
and the kynge hadde slayn the catte, thei returned and rode
till thei com to the castell that the kynge hadde fortefied vpon
the river of Aube, and were there viij dayes; and after thei
departed and rode forth till thei com to Benoyk, ffor it was
tolde hem that there were the prisoners, and Pharien and
Cleodalis hem resceyved with grete ioye; and after thei tolden
how thei hadde rescowed theire peple, and the Prisoners and
all thinge as it was fallen, and how thei of the castell wolde


<PB REF="" N="677" ID="pb.677"/>

haue taken hem be force.  "Be my feith," seide the kynge,
"in euell tyme thei it be-gonne, for dere shall it be bought."
Than the kynge cleped sir Gawein, and bad hym go to the
castell that was cleped the marche, and throwe it down to the
grounde, so that thei of other contreyes be not so hardy eny
more to encombre me ne noon of myn, and sir Gawein made
x<HI REND="sup">Ml</HI> lepe to horse, and rode forth till thei com to the castell
a-boute mydnyght, and enbusshed hem in a wode that was v
bowe draught ffrom the castell, and ther thei a-bide till on the
morowe that thei of the castell sette oute theire beestes, and
a-noon as it was oute sir Gawein sent oute xiiij knyghtes that
passed the pray, and drough toward the yate, and with hem
v arblastres for to shete vp to the barbycans, and to kepe the
yate till he were come, and thei dide as Gawein hem
comaunded; and it was yet so erly that un-ethe oon myght knowe
a-nother, and thei hem dressed toward the yate as soone as the
pray was oute; whan sir Gawein sye the praye come nygh he
wiste well that the other were be-fore; and he sente be-yonde
hem that drof the praye xx knyghtes; and whan thei hem
saugh thei lefte the praye and wolde haue turned a-gein to the
yate, but the knyghtes and the arblastres that sir Gawein had
sente diffended hem the entre till that Gawein was comen, and
smyten in at the yate moo than vj<HI REND="sup">C</HI>.  Than was ther grete crie
and noyse, and thei that were in the tour lete falle the
portcolys, and <CHOICE><CORR>smote</CORR><SIC>smote smote</SIC></CHOICE>   a-sonder two horse be the croupe and the
knyghtes fill with-ynne, with-oute more harme; and than a-ros
the noyse and the crye thourgh the contrey, and thei ronne
to the barbicans and caste   <MILESTONE N="239b" UNIT="folio"/>stones and caliouns; and the v
arblastres shote vpwarde, and the other be-gonne to hewe the
yates a-sonder, and thei that were with-oute entred in; and
thei that were of the castell dide hem yelde to the volunte of
sir Gawein, and he made hem be ledde to Benoyk; and than
he lete beete down the walles and the bretesches, and after
returned to the kynge Arthur that ther-of was gladde and


<PB REF="" N="678" ID="pb.678"/>

ioyfull; and the kynge made the prisoners to swere that thei
sholde neuer be a-gein the kynge Ban, ne the kynge Bohors; and
so made he hem swere that were of Rome that thei sholde neuer
be a-gein the reame of logres; and whan thei were thus sworn,
he sente hem a-gein in to theire contrey, and soiourned all that
day, and on the morowe with the kynge Ban with grete ioye
and grete feeste.  With that com a messagere to the kynge
Arthur that brought tidinges that the kynge leodogan of
Carmelide was deed, and that was the cause he departed so soone
fro the kynge Ban.  On the morowe the kynge Arthur departed
fro the two kynges that were brethern, and after that tyme he
saugh hem neuer more; and that was grete scade that thei
sholde die so soone, as the storie shall declare whan tyme cometh.</P>
<P>  Whan the kynge Arthur was departed fro the two kynges
that were brethern, that so moche honour hadde hym
don, he traueiled so by his iourneyes that he com to the see
and entred in to shippes, and passed ouer and landed at the
port of Dover, and lepe on their horse and ride forth to logres,
and ther thei fonde the Quene Gonnore, that hem resceived with
grete ioye, and tolde how hir fader was passed oute of this
worlde, and he hir counforted in the beste wise he myght; and
after the kynge departed his peple and thei yode hom in to
theire contreyes, and the kynge Arthur a-boode at logres, and
sir Gawein and the knyghtes of the rounde table, and Merlin
soiourned ther longe tyme.  Than he hadde grete talent for to
se Blase his maister, for to telle hym of all that was be-fallen
seth he fro hym departed; and fro thens he wolde go to Nimiane
his love, for the terme drough faste on that was sette; and he
wente to the kynge and seide that hym be-hoved to go; and
the kynge and the quene prayed hym right entierly soone for
to come a-gein, for he dide hem grete solas and counfort of his
companye, ffor the kynge hym <CHOICE><CORR>loved</CORR><SIC>love</SIC></CHOICE> feithfully; for in many
a nede he hadde hym socoured and
 holpen, ffor by hym and by
his counseile was he kynge; and he seide to hym right tenderly,
"Dere frende Merlin, seth ye will go, I dar yow not with-holde
a-gein youre wille a volunte; but I shall neuer be in hertes

<PB REF="" N="679" ID="pb.679"/>

ese till that I may se yow, and therefore I pray you for the
love of oure lorde haste you soone to come a-gein."  "Sir,"
seide Merlin, "this is the laste time, and ther-fore to god I you
comaunde."  Whan the kynge herde how he seide it was the
laste tyme that he sholde hym se, he was sore a-baisshed; and
Merlin departed with-oute moo wordes sore wepinge, and
trauailed till he come to Blase his maister, that grete chere hym
made, and asked how he hadde sped sethen, and he seide wele;
and than he tolde him alle thinges as thei were be-falle of the
kynge Arthur and of the Geaunte that he hadde slayn; and of
the bateile of the Romains; and how he hadde slain the cat;
and tolde hym also of the litill duerfe how the damesell hadde
hym brought to court, and how the kynge hadde made hym
knyght.  "But thus   <MILESTONE N="240a" UNIT="folio"/>moche," seide Merlin, "I shall telle yow,
he is a grete gentilman, and is no duerf by nature, but thus hath
a damesell hym myshapen whan he was xiij yere of age, for
that he wolde not graunte hir his love, and he was than the
feirest creature of the worlde; and for the sorowe that the
damesell hadde a-raied she hym in soche wise that now is the
lothliest creature and of moste dispite; and fro hens ix wikes
shall cesse the terme that the damesell sette, and shall come in
to the age that he ought for to be, for at that day shall he be
xxij yere olde."  Whan Merlin hadde all thinges rehersed,
and Blase hadde hem alle writen oon after a-nother in ordre,
and by his boke haue we the knowinge ther-of; and whan
Merlin hadde be ther viij dayes he toke leve of Blase, and seide,
"This is the laste tyme that I shall speke with yow eny more,
ffor fro hens-forth I shall soiourne with my love, ne neuer
shall I haue power hir for to leve ne to come ne go."</P>
<P>  Whan Blase vndirstode Merlin, he was full of sorowe, and
seide, "Dere frende, seth it is so that ye may not
departe cometh not ther."  "Me be-houeth for to go," qoud
Merlin, "for so haue I made hir couenaunt, and also I am so
supprised with hir love, that I may me not with-drawen; and
I haue her taught and lerned all the witte and connynge that
she can, and yet shall she lerne more, for I may not hir with-sein 


<PB REF="" N="680" ID="pb.680"/>

ne it disturue." Than departed Merlin from Blase, and
in litill space com to his love, that grete ioye of hym made
and he of hir, and dwelled to-geder longe tyme; and euer she
enquered of his craftes, and he hir taught and lerned so moche
that after he was holden a fooll and yet is, and she hem well
vndirstode and put hem in writinge, as she that was well expert
in the vij artes.  Whan that he hadde hir taught all that she
cowde aske, she be-thought hir how she myght hym with-holde
for euer more; than be-gan she to glose Merlin more than euer
she hadde do euer be-forn, and seide, "Sir, yet can I not oon
thinge that I wolde fain lerne, and ther-fore I pray you that
ye wolde me enforme;" and Merlin that well knewe her entent,
seid, "Madame, what thinge is that?"  "Sir," qoud she, "I
wolde fain lerne how I myght oon shet in a tour with-outen
walles, or with-oute eny closure be enchauntement, so that
neuer he sholden go oute with-outen my licence;" and whan
Merlin it herde he bowed down the heed and be-gan to sigh,
and she it a-parceived, she asked whi he sighed.  "Madame,"
seide Merlin, "I shall telle yow; I knowe well what ye thinke,
and that ye will me with-holde, and I am so supprised with
love that me be-houeth to do youre plesier;" and than she caste
hir armes a-boute his nekke and hym kiste, and seide, "that
wele he ought to be hirs seth that she was all his; ye knowe
wele that the grete love that I haue to you hath made me
forsake alle other for to haue yow in myn armes nyght and
day, and ye be my thought and my desire, for with-oute yow
haue I neither ioye ne welthe.  In you haue I sette all my
hope, and I a-bide noon other ioye but of yow, and seth that
I love you, and also ye love me, is not right than that ye do
my volunte and I yours."  "Certes, yesse," seide Merlin, "now
sey than what ye will."  "I will," qoud she, "ye teche me
a place feire and couenable, that I myght enclose by art in
  <MILESTONE N="240b" UNIT="folio"/>soche wise that neuer myght be vn-don, and we shull be
ther, ye and I in ioye and disporte whan that yow
liketh."  "Madame," seide Merlin, "that shall I well do."  "Sir,"
qoud she, "I will not that ye it make, but lerne it to me that


<PB REF="" N="681" ID="pb.681"/>

I may it do, and I shall make it than more at my
volunte."  "Well," seide Merlin, "I will do youre plesire."  Than he
be-gan to devise the crafte vnto hir, and she it wrote all that
he seide; and whan hadde alle devised, the damesell hadde
grete ioye in herte, and he hir loved more and more, and she
shewed hym feirer chere than be-forn; and so thei soiourned
to-geder longe tyme, till it fill on a day that thei wente thourgh
the foreste hande in hande, devisinge and disportinge, and this
was in the foreste of brochelonde, and fonde a bussh that was
feire and high of white hawthorne full of floures, and ther thei
satte in the shadowe; and Merlin leide his heed in the damesels
lappe, and she be-gan to taste softly till he fill on slepe; and
whan she felt that he was on slepe she a-roos softly, and made a
cerne with hir wymple all a-boute the bussh and all a-boute Merlin,
and be-gan hir enchauntementz soche as Merlin hadde hir taught,
and made the cerne ix tymes, and ix tymes hir
enchauntementes; and after that she wente and satte down by hym and
leide his heed in hir lappe, and hilde hym ther till he dide
a-wake; and than he loked a-boute hym, and hym semed he
was in the feirest tour of the worlde, and the moste stronge,
and fonde hym leide in the feirest place that euer he lay be-forn;
and than he seide to the damesell, "Lady, thou hast me
disceived, but yef ye will a-bide with me, for noon but ye may
vn-do this enchauntementes; and she seide, "Feire swete
frende, I shall often tymes go oute, and ye shull haue me in
youre armes, and I yow; and fro hens-forth shull ye do alle youre
plesier;" and she hym hilde wele couenaunt, ffor fewe hours
ther were of the nyght ne of the day but she was with
hym.  Ne neuer after com Merlin oute of that fortresse that she hadde
hym in sette; but she wente in and oute whan she wolde.  But
now moste we reste a-while of Merlin and his love, and
speke of the kynge Arthur.</P>
<P>  The same hour that Merlin was departed fro the kynge
Arthur, and that he hadde seide how it was the laste
tyme that he sholde hym se; the kynge a-boode sore a-baisshed
and full pensif of that worde, and in soche maner he a-boode

<PB REF="" N="682" ID="pb.682"/>

after Merlin vij wikes and more; but whan he saugh that he
com nought he was full pensif and full of hevynesse, aud on a
day sir Gawein asked what hym eiled.  "Certes nevew," seide
the kynge, "I thinke on that I trowe I haue loste Merlin, and
that he will neuer more come to me, ffor now hath he a-biden
lenger than he was wonte, and gretly I am dismayed of the
worde that he seide whan he fro me departed, ffor he seide this
is the last tyme, therfore I am in doute that he sey soth, ffor
he ne made neuer lesinge of nothinge that he seide, ffor so
helpe me god I hadde leuer lese the Cite of logres than hym,
and ther-fore fain wolde I wite yef eny myght hym finde fer
or nygh, and ther-fore I pray you as derely as ye me love that
ye hym seche till ye knowe the verite."  "Sir," seide Gawein,
"I am all redy to do youre volunte, and a-noon ye shull se
me meve fordwarde, and I suere to you be the oth that I made
to you whan ye made me   <MILESTONE N="241a" UNIT="folio"/>knyght, that I shall seche hym a
yere and a day, but with-ynne that space I may knowe trewe
tidinges."  In this same wise swor sir Ewein, and Segramor,
and Agrauain, and Geheret, and Gaheries, and xxv of her
felowes, and that oon was Doo of Cardoell, and Sacren of the
streite Marche, and Taulus le rous, and Blioc de Cassell, and
Caues de lille, and Amadas de la Crespe, and placidas li gais,
and laudalus de la playne, and Aiglins des vaus, and Clealis
lorfenyns, and Grires de lamball, and kehedins li bens, and
Caros de la broche, and Segurades de la forest perilouse, and
Purades de Carmelide, and Carmeduk the blake; alle these swor
the same oth with sir Gawein, and departed fro the Cite of
logres alle to-geder by the volunte of kynge Arthur, and
wente alle in the quest for Merlin; and whan thei were oute
of the Cite thei departed alle at a crosse that thei fonde at
the entre of a foreste where ther mette thre weyes, and ther
thei departed in thre parties.  But of hem shull we reste
a-while, and speke of the damesell that ledde a-wey the duerf
knyght.</P>
<P>  Whan kynge Arthur hadde a-dubbed the duerf by the
preier and request of the damesell, and she hadde hym


<PB REF="" N="683" ID="pb.683"/>

ledde as ye haue herde <CHOICE><CORR>gladde</CORR><SIC>gradde</SIC></CHOICE>   and ioyfull, and returned to hir
contrey, and rode so the firste day till it was nygh the nyght;
and than thei com oute of the foreste and entred in to a feire
launde that was grete and large; and than the damesell loked
be-fore hir and saugh comynge a knyght armed vpon a stede,
and she shewde hym the duerf; and he ansuerde, "Damesell,
dismaye yow nought but ride forth boldly, for ye shull haue
no drede of hym."  "Sir, he will me bere a-wey be force, and
he cometh hider for noon other cause;" and the duerf ansuerde
a-gein, "Damesell, ride forth suerly, and beth not a-ferde;" and
the knyght hym ascried with lowde voys, "Welcome be my
damesell and my love, ffor now haue I founde that I haue longe
sought."  And the duerf that well hym vndirstode, seide
debonerly, "Sir, be not to hasty, for ye may desire hir to moche at
the be-gynnynge, ffor yet ye haue hir not in youre bailly,
wherfore ye sholde make so grete ioye."  "I owe well to make
ioye," quod the knyght; "for I am of hir sure I-nough, ffor
though I haue hir not, yet I shall right soone;" and euer he
com on as faste as he myght ride; and whan the duerf saugh
hym com so faste, he caste his spere in fewtre, and couered hym
with his shelde that nothinge apered saf the shelde only, and
smote the horse with the spores on bothe sides faste by the
skirtes of his sadell, for his legges were so shorte, and the
horse hym bar with so grete raundon that it semed as he hadde
flowen, and cried to the knyght that he sholde hym diffende;
and he that was full fierce and prowde hadde shame to iuste
with so litill a wrecche, and lifte vp his spere, and seide, yef
god will, with soche a disfigure worme sholde he neuer Iuste,
and hilde his spere vp-right, but neuertheles he couered hym
with his shelde; and the duerf hym smote so harde, that he
perced shelde and hauberk, that the spere passed by the side
and hurtled so harde with his shelde, and with the grete myght
of his horse, that to grounde goth the knyght horse and man,
and in the fallinge his sholdre spronge oute of ioynte, and the


<PB REF="" N="684" ID="pb.684"/>

duerf rode ouer his body and hym all to-brosed, so that the
knyght swowned for anguyssh   <MILESTONE N="241b" UNIT="folio"/>that be felte; and whan the
duerf that saugh, he cleped the damesell, and prayed hir to take
hym down, and she toke hym in hir armes, and helped hym
down of his horse, and he drough his swerde and ran to the
knyght and vn-laced his helme, and manaced hym to smyten
of his deed, but he wolde hym yelde vtterly; and the knyght
that was hurt saugh the suerde that he hilde ouer his heed, and
hadde drede of deth, and cride "mercy," and put hym in his
wille of all thinge.  "Than," quod the duerf, "shalt thow go,
yelde the to the Prison of kynge Arthur, and sey hym that the
litill knyght that he dubbed hath sent the to be his prisoner,
and that thou shalt put the only in his mercy;" and the knyght
ensured hym his feith to do in this maner.  Than he badde
hym go to his horse, and he seide he hadde ther-to no power,
for his sholdre bon was oute of Ioynte; "but here I moste
a-bide," quod he, "till I fynde oon that me may beren, but
ye shull go take youre horse and ride to the ende of this launde
in a valey where ye shull finde a place of myn, ffor it is tyme
for you to herberowe, and a-bide ye ther stille, and sende some
of my men that may bere me thider, and haue ye no doute of
nothinge."  And the duerf hym graunted, and com towarde
the Damesell that hilde his stede, and she stouped ouer the
nekke of hir palfrey, and caught hym by the armes, and drough
hym vp with grete peyne till that he myght nyghe his sadell;
and than turned toward the knyghtes recete, and a-geins hem
com vj squyres that were ther-ynne, and toke hym down, and
the damesell and hym vn-armed, and dide hym on a mantell
full riche, and the duerf hem seide how hir lorde was hurt,
and thei toke a biere and brought hym a-gein to his recete,
and hym vn-armed, and sente after leches, and dight hym softly
in the beste wise thei cowden; and after thei asked who hadde
hym thus araied; and he sede a knyght that he nothinge knewe,
ne he durste not sey for shame that the duerf hadde it don;
and than he made his hoste the beste chere that he myght, and
made hem richely be serued at ese in a feire chambre


<PB REF="" N="685" ID="pb.685"/>

where-ynne were two riche beddes, and ther thei slepte till on the
morowe that thei a-rise and made hem redy, and the maiden
armed hir duerf, for she hym loved feithfully, and wolde not
suffre noon to sette on hym eny hande but hir-self; and whan
she hadde hym armed, and a-pareiled saf only of his helme, she
toke hym by the hande and ledde hym in to a chambre ther the
lorde of the place lay, and bad hym good morowe; and he hem
salued right curteisly, and thei be-taught hym to god, and
thanked hym of the honour that he hadde hem don.  Than
wente thei oute of the chambre, and the mayden laced on his
helme, and helped hym on his horse, and delyuered hym his
spere and his shelde; and than the squyres brought the mayden
hir palfrey, and sette hir ther-on; than thei departed fro thens
and toke the wey toward Eastrangore; and the knyght that was
hurt thought to a-quyte hym of his feith, and lete make an
horse litere full riche, and hadde with-ynne a feire bedde, and
the liter couered with a riche cloth of silke, and the knyght
was leide with-ynne; and the liter leide vpon two palfreyes
softe amblinge, and toke the wey streight to Cardoell in walis
where the kynge and the quene soiourned with grete companye
  <MILESTONE N="242a" UNIT="folio"/>of peple; and the kynge satte at dyner in the halle, and the
knyght made hym to be born in to the halle be-fore the kynge,
and seide, "Sir kynge, for to a-quyte me my feith and my
graunte I am I-come to put me in thi prison, and in thy
mercy, as he that is full sore a-shamed of the lothlyest creature
of this worlde, that by his armes me hath conquered;" and
whan he hadde seide thus, he badde his squyers bere hym thens;
and than seide the kynge, "Sir knyght, what is this, thou
seidest thou were come to my prison and my mercy."  "Ye
sir," seide the knyght.  "Than I requyre," quod the kynge,
"that ye as a prisoner you mayntene, and that ye telle me in
whos be-halue ye yelde yow take, and how that ye were
conquered."  "Sir," seide the knyght, "I se well I moste telle
my grete shame and myn annoye, and I shall telle it you seth
I am come ther-to for to parforme youre will and my feith for
to a-quiten.  This is the trouthe that I haue loved a damesell


<PB REF="" N="686" ID="pb.686"/>

of grete bewte, and kynges doughter, and yef ye will knowe
her name it is the feire beaune the doughter of knyge Clamedien
that is riche and puyssaunt, but neuer myght I bringe hir
therto nother for prayer, ne for love, ne for chiualrie, that I
myght do for hir, she ne wolde neuer graunte me hir love, and
I wolde gladly haue hadde hir to my wif, and hir fader wolde
it well also, and ther-of was gladde, for I am kynges sone and
quenes, but she euer for-soke me for the moste vile and lothsom
creature of the worlde, and fill me so that I rode this other
day thourgh a launde all alone I-armed, and mette my
damesell that repeired from youre contre, and hir dide condite the
duerf knyght to whom she is love; and whan I saugh hir
come with so small condite I was right gladde, and thanked
god that thider hir hadde sente, and I wende to haue hir ledde
awey with-oute more with-seyinge.  But the duerf seide that
I come to sone, and that it was folye for me so sore to haste,
for it sholde go all othere wise than I wende, ffor I trowed to
haue my desire with-oute diffence; and ther-fore I seide my
volunte was well a-complisshed, and I rode faste a-gein the
damesell hir to haue taken, and haue ledde hir with me to a
place of myne that was not fer thens; and whan the duerf
knyght saugh me so be-fore he leide his spere in fewtre, and
I wolde no Iuste with hym with my spere, for me thought
it shame and dispite to Iuste with soche a creature, and
ther-fore I wolde not smyte, and he bar me so rudely to grounde,
that in the fall my lifte sholdre yede oute of Ioynte that I
swowned for anguyssh; and he vn-laced myn helme and wolde
haue smyten of myn heed, but yef I hadde hym assured to
yelde me to youre prison, and ther-fore I do me in youre grace."
"Trewly, frende," seide the kynge, "in good prison hath he
you sette that to me hath you sente, ffor I clayme yow quyte;
but ye shall telle me youre name."  "Sir," quod he, "my
name is Tradilyuaunt, and am the kynges godsone of North
walis, that for grete cherite yaf me his name;" with that his
squyres toke hym vp, and bar hym oute of the paleise, and
leyde hym on two palfreyes, and ledde hym a-gein in to his

<PB REF="" N="687" ID="pb.687"/>

contrei; and the kynge Arthur and his barouns spake I-nough
of the duerf, and of the damesell, and seide it were grete ioye
yef the duerf myght come a-gein in to his bewte; and   <MILESTONE N="242b" UNIT="folio"/>preyse
the damesell that in no myschef wolde forsake hir love for no
lothlynesse.  But now at thys tyme cesseth of hem, and
returneth to speke of Segramor that wente in to the quest of
Merlin, and with hym ix knyghtes full profitable bolde and
hardy.</P>
<P>  Whan Segramor was departed fro sir Gawein, he ledde
with hym ix of his felowes of the same enquest, and
rode till the sonne was go to reste; and than of a-uenture thei
loked at the comynge of the foreste at the issue of a roche, and
saugh a celle where-ynne woned an hermyte, and that wey thei
turned ther for to be herberowed, and thei knokked at the yate,
and the hermyte it opened a-noon and herberowed hem that
nyght as wele as he cowde; and on the morowe erly he seide
masse; and than thei departed fro thens, and com to the
entringe of a foreste, and than seide Segramor to his felowes
that thei sholde departe thourgh the foreste, and so thei diden;
and so that oon wente here and a-nother there, as a-uenture hem
ledde, and in that quest be-fill many feire a-uentures wher-of
this storie maketh no mencion, but so thei yede vp and down by
diuerse contrees that thei performed that enquest that neuer
cowde thei lerne no tidinges of that thei were meved for to
seche; and at the yeres ende thei com a-gein and tolde theire
a-uentures, and some ther were that tolde more theire shame
than theire honoure, but trouthe moste thei sey by theire oth
that thei hadden sworn; and in tho dayes gentilmen were so
trewe, that thei wolde rather lese theire lif than be for-sworn;
and now shull we speke of Ewein.</P>
<P>  Whan Ewein and his felowes were departed fro Gawein,
he rode till he com to the issue of a foreste, and ther
thei mette a damesell that rode vpon a mule, and made the moste
sorowe of the worlde, and rente hir heer, and cried lowde,
"Alas, where shall I be-come whan I haue loste hym that I
haue loved so wele, and he me.  And for the love of me hath


<PB REF="" N="688" ID="pb.688"/>

he loste the grete bewte that was in hym;" and whan sir
Ewein this herde, he hadde ther-of grete pite, and com hir
a-geins and asked why she made soche sorowe; and she
ansuerde, "Gentill knyght, haue pite of me and of my love, that
v knyghtes sle in this valey be-nethe this hill."  "Who is
youre love, damesell," quod sir Ewein.  "Sir," qoud she, "it
is Audain the duerf, the sone of kynge Brangore."  "Now
let be youre doell," seide sir Ewein, "for by the feith that I
owe to you he shall noon harme haue, yef I may come be-tyme."
"Sir, gramercy," seide the damesell; "but ye moste you
hasten."  Than sir Ewein rode that wey as the maiden hym
taught as faste as his horse myght renne; and the damesell hym
sewed as moche as she myght, for her mule wente werily, and
sir Ewein hath so riden that he saugh the duerf that vigerously
faught with two knyghtes, and saugh thre ly in myddell of the
feilde that hadde no power to a-rise; ffor that oon was smyte
with a spere thourgh the sholdre, that al was disseuered fro the
body, and that other was smyte with a suerde down to the teth;
and the other tweyne were full feble, and hadde grete doute of
theire deth, for the duerf sought on hem vigerously; and whan
sir Ewein saugh hym thus contene, he shewed to his felowes,
and seide   <MILESTONE N="243a" UNIT="folio"/>that it was grete harme of the duerf that was so
mysshapen, "for he is bolde and hardy, and of grete herte."
"Certes, sir," seide oon of his companye, "neuer no man of
his stature dide soche prowesse, but for goddes sake departe
hem that thei no myscheve, for that were pite, yef hym
myshappe." "Ye sey trouthe," quod sir Ewein; and than he
priked thider.  But er he com he hadde leyde oon to grounde,
and rode ouer his body thre tymes, that nygh he hadde hym
slayn; whan the fifte saugh he was a-lone, he hadde drede
of hym-self, and be-gan to blenche, and wolde haue fledde, and
with-oute faile he was wounded in thre places right depe; but
the duerf that richely was horsed hilde hym so straite, and so
hym hasted, that deed he hadde I-be ne hadde sir Ewein come
the soner, and seide, "Feire, sir, ne do no more, but lete hym
be for curtesie, for we se well how it is, and I-nough haue ye


<PB REF="" N="689" ID="pb.689"/>

don;" and whan the duerf herde how he hym required so
curteisly, he ansuerde as he that was curteise and
deboneir.  "Sir, pleseth it you that I cesse thus."  "Ye," seide Ewein,
"and ther-of I thanke you, for we se well how it is."  "And
I shall do youre request," seide the duerf, "for ye seme well
to be a worthy man;" with that com the <CHOICE><CORR>knyght</CORR><SIC>knyghtes</SIC></CHOICE>   that had
foughten with the duerf to sir Ewein, and seide, "Sir, gramercy,
for ye haue saued me fro deth by youre comynge, and blissed
be that lorde that hider you hath brought."  Than he dide
yelde his suerde to the duerf, and the duerf hit resceived; and
in the same wise dide the tother that were lefte on lyve, and
he hem sente in to the prison of kynge Arthur, and sir Ewein
and his companye departed fro the duerf and fro the damesell,
and spredde a-brode thourgh diuerse contrees, and sought Merlin
vp and down, but neuer myght thei here of hym tidinges, and
ther-fore were thei sory and wroth, and repeired to court at the
yeres ende, and eche of hem tolde his auenture that was hym
be-falle in his quest, but the kynge Arthur made all to be
writen.  But now cesseth of the kynge, and of alle the other
companye, and returne to sir Gawein.</P>
<P>  Whan that sir Gawein was departed fro his felowes, he
rode forth thourgh the foreste, he and v knyghtes of
his companye, and ther thei departed, and eche wente his wey,
for he wolde ride sooll by hym-self, and in this wise thei
departed, so that eche of hem toke his wey; and sir Gawein rode
so a-lone serchinge grete part of the londe, till it fill on a day
that he rode pensif and hevy, for that he myght not finde
Merlin; and in this stody he entred in to a foreste, and he
hadde riden a-boute two walsh myle ther com a damesell hym
a-gein that rode on the feirest palfrey of the worlde, and was
all blak, and sadell and the stiropes were all of golde, and
the cloth of scarlet trailinge to the erthe, and the bridill of
golde, and she was clothed in white samyte, and hir kirchires
of silke, and richely atired, and com ridinge be-fore sir Gawein


<PB REF="" N="690" ID="pb.690"/>

as he was in this pensifnesse, that he dide her not salue; and
whan he was passed the Damesell she reyned hir bridill, and
turned the heed of hir palfrey, and seide, "Gawein, Gawein,
  <MILESTONE N="243b" UNIT="folio"/>hit is not trewe the renomee that renneth of the thourgh the
reame of logres; ffor it is seide of the that thou art the best
knyght of the worlde, and of that thei sey trouthe.  Also it is
seide that thou art the gentilest and the most curteise knyght,
but in that faileth the renoon, for thou art the moste vileyn
knyght that euer I mette in my lif, that in this forest so fer fro
peple haste me I-met a-lone, and so grete felonye in the is roted,
that thow deynest not me ones to salue ne to speke a worde,
and knowe thow verily thow shalt it repente of that thow hast
don, in so moche that thou shalt wissh thou haddest it not don
for all the reame of logres."  And whan sir Gawein vndirstode
the damesell, he was sore a-shamed, and turned a-gein hir his
bridell of gringalet, and seide all shamefast as ye shull
heren.  "Damesell," quod sir Gawein, "so helpe me <CHOICE><CORR>god</CORR><SIC>go</SIC></CHOICE>, I thought
vpon a thinge that I go sechinge, and ther-fore I pray yow that
ye for-yeve it me that I haue mys-don."  "So helpe me god,"
quod the damesell, "rather shalt thou a-bye it full dere, ffor
I-nough thou shalt haue of shame and lothlynesse, and ther-fore
remembre a-nother tyme whan thou metest with eny lady or
damesell, that thou hir salue for curtesie.  But I sey not that
it shall the euer endure, ne of that thou goist sechinge shalt
thou finde noon in the reame of logres that the can telle no
tidinge, but in the litill breteigne maist thou here som maner
tidinges; and I will go now ther as I haue to don, and thou
shalt go seche that thou art moved fore; and the firste man that
thou metest with mote thou be like till thou se me eft-sones."
Than departed sir Gawein and the damesell; but he hadde not
riden fully half a walissh myle thourgh the foreste that he mette
with the duerf knyght; and the damesell that on the euen
be-fore were departed fro sir Ewein, and hedde sent the foure
knyghtes in Arthurs prison, and it was on trinite sonday a-boute
mydday, and than he remembred hym on the damesell that he
hadde mette be-fore, and lefte his pensifnesse, and seide to the

<PB REF="" N="691" ID="pb.691"/>

damesell, "God yeve you good day and moche ioye of hir
companye;" and the damesell and the duerf hym ansuerde that
god yeve hym good a-uenture; and so thei past a litill a-sonder,
sir Gawein on that oon part, and thei on that other; and whan
thei were departed a litill thens the duerf knyght be-com a-gein
in to his bewte as he hadde be at the first tyme, and was in
the age of xxij yere, right wele furnysshed and wonderly well
shapen of large stature, and ther-fore hym be-hoved to do a-wey
his armes, for thei were to hym nothinge meete; and whan the
damesell saugh hir love come a-gein in to so grete bewte, she
hadde so grete ioye that no tonge myght it telle, and caste hir
armes a-boute his nekke, and hym kiste an hundred tymes, and
ride forth that oon by that other gladde and ioyfull in grete
solas, and thanked oure lorde of the honour that he hadde hem
don, and praied oure lorde to sende sir Gawein good a-uenture,
that hadde seide that god yeve hem ioye, and so hadde he don,
and thus thei ride forth theire iourney.  But now shull we
speke of Gawein.</P>
<P>  Whan that sir Gawein was passed the duerf knyght, and
the damesell wele a two bowe draught, a-noon he
felte that the sleeves of his hauberk passed fer of lengthe ouer
his hondes, and   <MILESTONE N="244a" UNIT="folio"/>also the lengthe of his hauberk henge down
be-nethe his feet, and his legges were waxen so short that thei
passed not the skirtes of the sadill; and be-hilde and saugh
how his hosen of stiell resten in the stiropes, and saugh how
his shelde henge toward the erthe, and a-perceyved wele that
he was become a duerf, and seide to hym-self that that it was
that the damesell hadde hym promysed, and ther-with he wax
so worth, that for a litill he hadde gon oute of his witte, and
rode forth so in that wrathe and in that anguyssh in the foreste,
till he fonde a crosse and a ston therby; and thider he rode
and a-light vpon the ston and toke his stiropes, and made hem
shorter, and his hosen of stiel, and the renges of his swerde,
and the gige of his shilde, and the sleves of his hauberk,
with thonges of lether vpon his shuldres, and a-raied hym in
the beste wise he myght, so wroth and angry, that he hadde


<PB REF="" N="692" ID="pb.692"/>

leuer to be deed than on lyve; and after that he lepte vp and
rode forth his wey, and cursed the day and the hour that euer
he entred in to that quest, for shamed he was and dishonoured;
and so hath he gon in this maner that neuer he lefte castell,
ne town, ne burgh, but that he asked tidinges of Merlin of alle
the men and women that he mette, and many oon he mette that
grete shame and grete reproves hym seiden; and neuertheles he
dide many prowesses, ffor though he were a duerf and
mysshapen he hadde not loste his strengthe, neithir his hardinesse,
and many a knyght he conquered; and whan he hadde serched
the reame of logres vp and down, and saugh that he cowde not
finde Merlin, he thought to passe the see, and go in to the
litill Breteigne; and so he dide, and serched it fer and nygh,
but neuer cowde he here no tidinge of Merlin, and so it drough
nygh the terme that he hadde promysed to returne; and than
he seide to hym-self, "Allas, what shall I now do for the terme
a-proched that I muste returne by the oth that haue sworn
to myn oncle to repeire; returne moste I nede, for elles sholde
I be for-sworn and vn-trewe, and that will I not in no maner,
ffor the oth was soche that yef I were in my delyuer powste,
and in my powste am I nought, for I am disfigured and
a thinge of grete dispite, and I haue nought of my-self, and
therfore may I wele a-bide of goinge to court.  Certes now
haue I euell seide, ffor neuer will I be for-sworne for to go ne
to come what persone that euer I be, and for that I am not
shet in prison I may go at my wille, and I may not a-bide but
I be for-sworne, and ther-fore me be-houeth to go, ffor
vntrouthe will I never do; but I pray to god to haue of me mercy
and pite, ffor my body is shamefully and lothly arayed."  In
these complayntes that sir Gawein ther made, he returned bak
for to com to courte, and fill as he rode thourgh the foreste of
Brocheliande, and wolde turne for to come to the see, and euer
as he rode he  made grete moone; and as he made this
weymentacion he herde a voice a litill vpon the right side a-bove, and
he turned that wey where he hadde herde the voice, and loked
vp and down, and nothinge he saugh, but as it hadde ben a

<PB REF="" N="693" ID="pb.693"/>

smoke of myste in the eyre that myght not passe oute; than
he herde a voice that seide, "Sir Gawein, disconfort you
nothinge, for all shall falle as it be-houeth to falle."</P>
<P><MILESTONE N="244b" UNIT="folio"/>    Whan sir Gawein herde the voyce that hadde hym cleped
by his right name, he ansuerde and seide, "Who is
that in the name of god that to me doth speke?"  "How is
that," quod the voice, "ne knowe ye me nought, ye were wonte
to knowe me right wele, but so goth the worlde, and trewe is
the proverbe that the wise man seith that 'who is a fer from
his iye is soone for-yeten,' and so fareth it be me; ffor while
that I haunted the Courte, and serued the kynge Arthur and
his barouns, I was wele be-knowen of yow and many other,
and for that I haue left court I am vn-knowen, and that ought
I not to be, yef feith and trouthe regned thourgh the worlde."
Whan sir Gawein herde the voice thus speke, he thought a-noon
it was Merlin, and ansuerde a-noon, "Certes, it is trouthe I
ought you wele for to knowe, for many tyme haue I herde youre
speche and ther-fore I pray you that ye will a-pere to me so
that I may yow se."  "My lorde sir Gawein," quod Merlin,
"me shull ye neuer se, and that hevieth me sore that I may
do noon other; and whan ye be departed fro hens, I shall neuer
speke with yow no more, ne with noon other saf only with my
leef; for neuer man shall haue power hider for to come for
nothinge that may be-falle.  Ne fro hens may I not come oute,
ne neuer I shall come oute, ffor in all the worlde is not so
stronge a clos as is this where-as I am, and it is nother of
Iren, ne stiell, ne tymbir, ne of ston, but it is of the aire
with-oute eny othir thinge be enchauntement so stronge, that it
may neuer be vn-don while the worlde endureth.  Ne I may
not come oute ne noon may entre, saf she that me here hath
enclosed, that bereth me companye whan hir liked, and goth
hens whan hir liste."</P>
<P>  "How is that, swete frende," quod Gawein, "that ye be
in this maner with-holden, that noon may you
delyuer by no force that may be do?  Ne ye may not you shewe
to me that be the wisest man of the worlde."  "Nay, but the


<PB REF="" N="694" ID="pb.694"/>

moste fole," quod Merlin, "for I wiste wele that sholde
be-falle, and I am soche a fole that I love a-nother better than
my-self, and haue hir lerned so moche, where thourgh I am thus
be-closed and shette in prison, ne noon may me oute bringe."
"Certes," seide sir Gawein, "that me hevieth sore, and so will
the kynge Arthur, myn vncle, whan he it knoweth as he that
maketh you to be sought thourgh alle londes."  "Now he
moste it suffre," quod Merlin, "for he shall me se neuer more
ne I hym, for thus is it be-falle.  Ne neuer shall no man speke
with me after you, ther-fore for nought meveth eny man me
for to seche; ffor youre-self, a-noon as ye be turned fro hens, ye
shull neuer here me speke; and ther-fore now returne and grete
wele the kynge Arthur, and my lady the quene, and alle the
barouns, and telle hem how it is with me, and ye shull fynde
the kynge at Cardoell in wales; and whan ye come thider ye
shull finde alle youre felowes ther that fro you were departed;
and discounforte yow not of that is yow be-falle, ffor ye shall
fynde the damesell that so hath yow mysshapen in the foreste,
where-as ye hir mette, but for-yete not hir to salue, for it were
folye."  "Sir," seide Gawein, "ne nought I shall, yef god
will."  "Now," quod Merlin, "I be-teche yow to god that
kepe the kynge Arthur and the reame of logres, as for the best
peple of the worlde.</P><MILESTONE N="245a" UNIT="folio"/>
<P>    Than departed sir Gawein gladde and sorowfull: gladde
for that Merlin hadde hym assured to be releveth from
his lothlynesse, and sory for that he hadde Merlin thus loste,
and rode so forth till he come to the see, and passed ouer hastely
I-nough, and than toke his wey to ride to Cardoell in walis, and
fill that he mette the damesell that <SUPPLIED>he</SUPPLIED> hadde passed by
with-oute saluynge in the foreste; and than he remembred of that
Merlin hadde hym seide that he sholde not for-yete hir to salue
whan he hir mette; and he hadde grete feer, and douted lesse
she passed er he myght hir salewe, and dide of his helme of
his heed for to se hir more clerly, and be-gan to be-holde
be-fore and be-hynde, and on alle sides, till that he com in the
same place where he mette the damesell; and than he loked


<PB REF="" N="695" ID="pb.695"/>

be-twene two busshes, for the forest was somdell depe and
thikke, and saugh two knyghtes that were armed at alle poyntes,
saf of theire sheldes and helmes, that thei hadde don of, and
hadde theire horse reyned to theire speres that were pight in the
grounde, and hilde a damesell be-twene hem two, and made
semblaunce hir to enforce, and yet ther-to hadde thei no talent;
ffor the damesell made hem it for to do for to assaye the will
and the corage of sir Gawein, and she made countenaunce like
as thei hadde constreyned hir be force; and whan sir Gawein
saugh this, he wax wroth and rode thider gripinge his spere,
and seide to the knyghtes that thei were but deed, for that thei
dide force the damesell with-ynne the lordshippe of kynge Arthur;
"ffor ye knowe wele," quod he, "that thei sholde go sure."
And whan the damesell hym saugh, she hym ascried and seide,
"Gawein, now shull it be sene yef ther be soche prowesse in
you that ye may me delyuer from this shame."  "Damesell,"
seide Gawein, "so god be my socoure, as ye shull haue no
shame ther as I may you diffende, for owther I shall dye or
I shall you delyuer;" and whan the knyghtes this vndirstode
thei hadde ther-of grete disdeyne and dispite, and lepte on foote
and laced theire helmes, for yet thei douted of hym, and
neuertheles the damesell hadde hem assured that of hym sholde thei
haue noon harme, and hadde hem so enchaunted by hir art, that
no man myght hem anoye, and ther-fore thei were the more
sure at that tyme; and whan theire helmes were laced, thei
henge theire sheldes aboute theire nekkes, and seide to sir
Gawein, "So helpe me god, false duerf, countirfeted thou art
but deed, and neuertheless shame vs semeth to dele with soche
a wrecche as thou art;" and whan sir Gawein herde hym-self
cleped duerf, and so dispised, he hadde grete sorowe in herte,
and seide, "As lothly wrecche as I am, in euell tyme I am
com to youre be-hof.  But lepe vpon youre horse, for vilonye
me semeth to requere you on horsebak while ye be on foote."
"Trustest so moche in thy-self," seide the knyghtes, "that
thou wilt a bide till we be horsed."  "I truste so moche in
god," quod Gawein, "that whan ye departe fro me ye shull

<PB REF="" N="696" ID="pb.696"/>

neuer forfete to lady ne damesell in the londe of kynge
Arthur."  Than thei lepe to theire   <MILESTONE N="245b" UNIT="folio"/>horse, and hente theire speres, and
seide to sir Gawein that he was but deed, and drough hem to
the wey that was moste playne, and with-drough that oon fro
that other, and than thei bothe lete renne a-gein sir Gawein,
and he a-gein hem; and thei smote bothe vpon his shelde so
harde that theire speres braste a-sonder, but thei hym meved
not from his sadill, and he smote so that oon that he bar hym
to the erthe vpright, and the spere brake in peces, and he rode
ouer hym that was fallen, and vn-horsed, so that he brosed hym
sore.  Than he drough his suerde and rode toward that other,
and wolde smyte hym vpon the helme; and than the damesell
cried, "I-nough, sir Gawein, ne do no more."  "Damesell,"
seide Gawein, "will ye that it so be;" and she seide,
"Ye."  "And I will suffre than for youre sake, that god yeve you than
good a-venture, and to alle the damesels of the worlde; and
wite ye well ne were it for you youre prayer thei sholde be slayn,
for thei haue don you to grete shame and anoye, and to me
seide vilonye, and countirfet duerf haue me called; and yet
ther-of thei seide soth, for I am the moste lothly creature of
dispite that is in the worlde, and in this foreste it me be-fill
viij monethes passed;" and whan the damesell and the knyghtes
hym vndirstode thei be-gonne to laugh; and than seide the
damesell, "What wolde ye yeve hir that of that wolde
warisshen."  "Certes," seide Gawein, "yef it myght be that it were
warrished I wolde yeve my-silf firste and formest, and after all
that I myght raunsome in all the worlde."  "It shall not nede
you yeve so moche," seide the damesell, "but ye shull make
to me an oth soche as I shall you devise."  "Lady," seide
Gawein, "I will do all youre volunte."  Quod she, "Ye shull
to me swere be the oth that ye made to the kynge Arthur, youre
vncle, that neuer ye shull faile lady, ne maiden, ne damesell;
ne neuer mete lady ne damesell, but ye shull hir salue er she
salue you yef ye may."  "Lady," quod Gawein, "this I
graunte, as I am trewe knyght."  "And I take the oth in this
maner that yef ye breke youre oth that ye be-come in to the


<PB REF="" N="697" ID="pb.697"/>

same poynte that ye be now."  "Lady," quod he, "to this
I assent; with that the quarell be trewe of hir that of helpe
me requereth, ffor vntrouthe will I not do in no maner wise,
nother for lif ne for deth."  "Thus I you graunte," quod the
damesell, "ffor I will that ye be soche as ye were
be-fore."  A-noon brake the layners that he had bounden vp his hosen of
stiell, for his membres that were strecched oute and com a-gein,
a-noon in his owne semblaunce; and whan he felte that he was
come a-gein in to his power, he kneled be-fore the damesell,
and seide that he was hir knyght for eueuer more; and the
damesell hym thanked, and raught hym vp be the honde.  Than
toke the damesell leve of sir Gawein and departed, and hir two
knyghtes with hir, and comaunded eche other to god; and sir
Gawein a-bood there and lengthed his hauberke, and appareiled
his shelde and his armes full richely, and lepte vpon the
gringalet with his shelde aboute his nekke, and his spere in
hande, and rode forth toward Cardoell so fro day to day, till that
he com thider at the terme devised; and the same day that
sir Ewein and Segramor, and her felowes were comen, and eche
of hem hadde seide his a-uenture of that was hem be-fallen in<NOTE PLACE="foot" N="*" ID="note.49">The MS. is imperfect and breaks off here, the conclusion is a translation from the French original, the MS. of which is in the British Museum Library.</NOTE> [this Quest.  And when Sir Gawain was come, then was the joy
and mirth complete.  And Sir Gawain told them all the things
that had happened to him in this Quest, and the barons
marvelled at it very greatly.  And King Arthur was much grieved
about Merlin, but could do nothing more in it, and must needs
suffer: so they betook themselves to making the greatest mirth
they could for Sir Gawain.</P>
<P>  Whilst they were thus rejoicing, there entered into the
hall Evadeam, who was twenty-two years old, and so
beautiful and gentle that no one handsomer could be found in
the two kingdoms.  And he held his damsel by the hand, and they
came before the king, and saluted him right courteously.  And
the king returned him his salute; and the knight said to him,
"Sire, you know me not; and no wonder, for you never saw me
but once, and that was in such guise that no one who saw me
now and had seen me then, would know me unless he had known
me from childhood."  "Certes, handsome friend," answered



<PB REF="" N="698" ID="pb.698"/>

King Arthur, "I do not recollect that I ever saw you before,
but you are a very handsome knight."  "Sire," said Evadeam,
"do you remember a damsel who brought you a dwarf that you
knighted?"  "Yes," said the king, "I may well remember
that, for the knight has sent me five captive knights whom he
conquered by his prowess."</P>
<P>  "Sire," said then Evadeam, "I am the dwarf you knighted,
and see here is the damsel who prayed you to do
it.  And without doubt I sent you those captives, and the four last
of them Sir Ywain saw, for he found me fighting them in the
valley on Trinity eve; and next day by good hap I rode right
at noon in the forest of Broceliande, I and my damsel, and we met
my lord Gawain, whom I neither hear nor see here [?]  And he
saluted us, and we him, and he said, "May God give you
joy."  And so God did, for at the very moment that the words slipped
from his mouth I recovered the shaped and look that you see;
for then was I a dwarf, ugly and hideous.  So I believe verily
that his words and his prayer availed me so far that God
brought me out of the great shame in which I was; and I
thank for it our Lord and him."  And then the King asked him
who he was, and of what people; and he told him all in order,
as you have heard herein before.  And when the King, and Sir
Gawain, and the others heard this, they were all right glad and
right joyous; and the King received him as a companion like
those of the Table Round.  And the damsel dwelt with the
Queen in right great joy and in right great mirth.  Now here
the story becomes silent about King Arthur and his company,
and returns to tell of King Ban of <CHOICE><CORR>Benoyc</CORR><SIC>Benoy</SIC></CHOICE>, and King Bohort,
his brother, who was King of Gannes, who are both in their
own lands.</P>
<P>  Here says the story that when King Arthur had departed
from King Ban of Benoyc, and his brother King Bohort
of Gannes, that the two brothers dwelt in Benoyc in right great
joy and in right great mirth, and with them were their wives,
who were right beautiful and gentle.  Then it happened, as it
pleased our Lord, that King Ban had by his wife a son, who
was named at his baptism Gallead, and surnamed Lancelot.  This
name of Lancelot remained to him all his life, and King Ban and
the Queen his wife had right great joy of him, and the Queen
loved him so much that she fed him with her own milk.  And
the wife of King Bohort had a son whom they called Lyonel,
who was a right lovely child and well mannered; and in the
twelfth month afterwards she had another son whom they called
Bohort; and these three children were afterwards of great renown
in the kingdom of Logres, and they made themselves known
through all lands by their prowess.  Soon after Bohort was
born—the youngest of the two children of King Bohort—the

<PB REF="" N="699" ID="pb.699"/>

King Bohort fell into a great sickness, and lay long in the city
of Gannes, for which King Ban, his brother, was very sorrowful
and in great distress; for he could not be with him as his will
was, on account of a neighbour of his, who bordered on him,
and who was very fell and cruel.  This was King Claudas of the
Desert, who was so grieved and angry (about his Castle which
King Arthur had caused to be levelled), that he was nearly
going out his senses; and he did not know on whom to take
vengeance, except on King Ban of Benoyc, and on King Bohort,
who bordered on him, because they were King Arthur's
men.  So he warred on them, and wrought so that he had for helper
a prince of Rome, who was named Poince Antony, and who
came to him right willingly, because he too hated King Arthur
and all his, for the love of Luce, the Emperor of Rome,
whom they had slain.  And in this contest was killed Hoel of
Nantes, who had warred greatly on Claudas.  And the Romans
wrought so that they had all Gaul under their dominion; and
they sent the men of Gaul, and the men of the Desert, and
Poince Antony with all his Romans, to attack King Ban of
Benoyc.  And the King defended himself right vigourously, as
one who was of great heart and of great prowess, and he fought
often with the enemy in the open field, and often lost and often
won; and Leonces of Paerne, and Graciens of Trebes, and
Bannins, a godson of King Ban, did marvellous deeds of arms,
and destroyed and slew many of the people of King Claudas;
and Graciens died there, but Phariens died not.  And King Ban
became so weakened in men [?] that he could not endure against
the Romans, but they attacked him so from day to day that they
took his castles and his fortresses, and he could never get help
from King Bohort, his brother, who was lying sick in bed,
whence he never after rose.  And this did him great discomfort,
for Poince Antony had brought so many people that they took
from him his city of <CHOICE><CORR>Benoyc</CORR><SIC>Benoy</SIC></CHOICE> and all his land, so that there
was left to him neither castle nor city, except only the castle
of Trebes, where Queen Helaine was, and Lancelot her son, who
lay still in his cradle.  And king Ban had there with him as
many people as he could get together, but they were few to
endure such attacks.  Bannins his godson was there, in whom
he trusted much, and with reason, for he was a good and loyal
knight.  And he had a seneschal, whom he had brought up
from childhood, to whom he had entrusted all his land after
Gracien's death; and this was he who betrayed him, and by
whom he lost the Castle of Trebes, as the Story will tell you
hereinafter.</P><TRAILER>Explicit the shutting up of Merlin.
<LB/>
May God bring us all to a good end!</TRAILER>
</DIV1>
</BODY></TEXT></EEBO>
</ETS>
