CHAPTER XVIII
MORTE D'ARTHUR
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"And now the whole ROUND TABLE is dissolved,
Which was an image of the mighty world,
And I, the last, go forth companionless;
And the days darken round me, and the years
Among new men, strange faces, other minds."
- TENNYSON.
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SIR MODRED was left ruler of all England, and he caused
letters to be written, as if from beyond sea, that King
Arthur was slain in battle. So he called a Parliament, and
made himself be crowned king; and he took the queen,
Guenever, and said plainly that he would wed her, but she
escaped from him, and took refuge in the Tower of London.
And Sir Modred went and laid siege about the Tower of
London, and made great assaults thereat, but all might not
avail him. Then came word to Sir Modred that King Arthur
had raised the siege of Sir Launcelot, and was coming
home. Then Sir Modred summoned all the barony of the land;
and much people drew unto Sir Modred, and said they would
abide with him for better and for worse; and he drew a
great host to Dover, for there he heard say that King
Arthur would arrive.
And as Sir Modred was at Dover with his host, came King
Arthur, with a great number of ships and galleys, and
there was Sir Modred awaiting upon the landing. Then was
there launching of great boats and small, full of noble
men of arms, and there was much slaughter, of gentle
knights on both parts. But King Arthur was so courageous,
there might no manner of knights prevent him to land, and
his knights fiercely followed him; and so they landed, and
put Sir Modred aback so that he fled, and all his people.
And when the battle was done, King Arthur commanded to
bury his people that were dead. And then was noble Sir
Gawain found, in a great boat, lying more than half dead.
And King Arthur went to him, and made sorrow out of
measure. "Mine uncle," said Sir Gawain,
"know thou well my death-day is come, and all is
through mine own hastiness and wilfulness, for I am
smitten upon the old wound which Sir Launcelot gave me, of
the which I feel I must die. And had Sir Launcelot been
with you as of old, this war had never begun, and of all
this I am the cause." Then Sir Gawain prayed the king
to send for Sir Launcelot, and to cherish him above all
other knights. And so, at the hour of noon, Sir Gawain
yielded up his spirit, and then the king bade inter him in
a chapel within Dover Castle; and there all men may see
the skull of him, and the same wound is seen that Sir
Launcelot gave him in battle.
Then was it told the king that Sir Modred had pitched
his camp upon Barrendown; and the king rode thither, and
there was a great battle betwixt them, and King Arthur's
party stood best, and Sir Modred and his party fled unto
Canterbury.
And there was a day assigned betwixt King Arthur and
Sir Modred that they should meet upon a down beside
Salisbury, and not far from the seaside, to do battle yet
again. And at night, as the king slept, he dreamed a
wonderful dream. It seemed him verily that there came Sir
Gawain unto him, with a number of fair ladies with him.
And when King Arthur saw him, he said, "Welcome, my
sister's son; I weened thou hadst been dead; and now I see
thee alive, great is my joy. But, O fair nephew, what be
these ladies that hither be come with you?"
"Sir," said Sir Gawain, "all these be
ladies for whom I have fought when I was a living man; and
because I did battle for them in righteous quarrel, they
have given me grace to bring me hither unto you, to warn
you of your death, if ye fight to-morrow with Sir Modred.
Therefore take ye treaty, and proffer you largely for a
month's delay; for within a month shall come Sir Launcelot
and all his noble knights, and rescue you worshipfully,
and slay Sir Modred and all that hold with him." And
then Sir Gawain and all the ladies vanished. And anon the
king called to fetch his noble lords and wise bishops unto
him. And when they were come, the king told them his
vision, and what Sir Gawain had told him. Then the king
sent Sir Lucan the butler, and Sir Bedivere, with two
bishops, and charged them in any wise to take a treaty for
a month and a day with Sir Modred. So they departed, and
came to Sir Modred; and so, at the last, Sir Modred was
agreed to have Cornwall and Kent, during Arthur's life,
and all England after his death.
Then was it agreed that King Arthur and Sir Modred
should meet betwixt both their hosts, and each of them
should bring fourteen persons, and then and there they
should sign the treaty. And when King Arthur and his
knights were prepared to go forth, he warned all his host,
"If so be ye see any sword drawn, look ye come on
fiercely, and slay whomsoever withstandeth, for I in no
wise trust that traitor, Sir Modred." In likewise Sir
Modred warned his host. So they met, and were agreed and
accorded thoroughly. And wine was brought, and they drank.
Right then came an adder out of a little heath-bush, and
stung a knight on the foot. And when the knight felt him
sting, he looked down and saw the adder, and then he drew
his sword to slay the adder, and thought of no other harm.
And when the host on both sides saw that sword drawn, they
blew trumpets and horns, and shouted greatly. And King
Arthur took his horse, and rode to his party, saying,
"Alas, this unhappy day!" And Sir Modred did in
like wise. And never was there a more doleful battle in
Christian land. And ever King Arthur rode throughout the
battle, and did full nobly, as a worthy king should, and
Sir Modred that day did his devoir, and put himself in
great peril. And thus they fought all the long day, till
the most of all the noble knights lay dead upon the
ground. Then the king looked about him, and saw of all his
host were left alive but two knights, Sir Lucan the
butler, and Sir Bedivere his brother, and they were full
sore wounded.
Then King Arthur saw where Sir Modred leaned upon his
sword among a great heap of dead men. "Now give me my
spear," said Arthur unto Sir Lucan, "for yonder
I espy the traitor that hath wrought all this woe."
"Sir, let him be," said Sir Lucan; "for if
ye pass this unhappy day ye shall be right well revenged
upon him. Remember what the sprite of Sir Gawain told you,
and leave off now, for ye have won the field; and if ye
leave off now this evil day of destiny is past."
"Betide me life, betide me death," said King
Arthur, "he shall not now escape my hands." Then
the king took his spear in both hands, and ran toward Sir
Modred, crying, "Traitor, now is thy death-day
come." And there King Arthur smote Sir Modred under
the shield, with a thrust of his spear through the body.
And when Sir Modred felt that he had his death-wound, with
the might that he had he smote King Arthur, with his sword
holden in both his hands, on the side of the head, that
the sword pierced the helmet and the brain-pan; and then
Sir Modred fell stark dead upon the earth. And the noble
Arthur fell in a swoon to the earth. And Sir Lucan the
butler and Sir Bedivere raised him up, and gently led him
betwixt them both to a little chapel not far from the
seaside. And when the king was there he thought him well
eased. Then heard they people cry in the field. And Sir
Lucan went to see what that cry betokened; and he saw by
the moonlight that pillers* and robbers were come to rob
the dead. And he returned, and said to the king, "By
my rede, it is best that we bring you to some town."
"I would it were so," said the king. And when
the king tried to go he fainted. Then Sir Lucan took up
the king on the one part, and Sir Bedivere on the other
part; and in the lifting Sir Lucan fell in a swoon to the
earth, for he was grievously wounded. And then the noble
knight's heart burst. And when the king awoke he beheld
Sir Lucan, how he lay foaming at the mouth, and
speechless. "Alas!" said the king, "this is
to me a full heavy sight, to see this noble duke so die
for my sake; for he would have holpen me that had more
need of help than I, and he would not complain, his heart
was so set to help me." Then Sir Bedivere wept for
his brother. "Leave this mourning and weeping,"
said the king, "for wit thou well, if I might live
myself, the death of Sir Lucan would grieve me evermore;
but my time hieth fast. Therefore," said Arthur unto
Sir Bedivere, "take thou Excalibar, my good sword,
and go with it to yonder waterside; and when thou comest
there I charge thee throw my sword in that water, and come
again and tell me what thou there seest." "My
lord," said Sir Bedivere, "your commandment
shall be done." So Sir Bedivere departed, and by the
way he beheld that noble sword, that the pommel and the
haft were all of precious stones; and then he said to
himself, "If I throw this rich sword into the water
no good shall come thereof, but only harm and loss."
And then Sir Bedivere hid Excalibar under a tree. And so,
as soon as he might, he came again unto the king.
"What sawest thou there?" said the king.
"Sir," he said, "I saw nothing."
"Alas! thou hast deceived me," said the king.
"Go thou lightly again, and as thou love me, spare
not to throw it in." Then Sir Bedivere went again,
and took the sword in his hand to throw it; but again it
beseemed him but sin and shame to throw away that noble
sword, and he hid it away again, and returned, and told
the king he had done his commandment. "What sawest
thou there?" said the king. "Sir," he said,
"I saw nothing but waters deep and waves wan."
"Ah, traitor untrue!" said King Arthur,
"now hast thou betrayed me twice. And yet thou art
named a noble knight, and hast been lief and dear to me.
But now go again, and do as I bid thee, for thy long
tarrying putteth me in jeopardy of my life." Then Sir
Bedivere went to the sword, and lightly took it up, and
went to the waterside, and he bound the girdle about the
hilt, and then he threw the sword as far into the water as
he might. And there came an arm and a hand out of the
water and met it, and caught it, and shook it thrice and
brandished it, and then vanished away the hand with the
sword in the water.
* Plunderers: the word is not now used.
Then Sir Bedivere came again to the king, and told him
what he saw. "Help me hence," said the king,
"for I fear I have tarried too long." Then Sir
Bedivere took the king on his back, and so went with him
to that water-side; and when they came there, even fast by
the bank there rode a little barge with many fair ladies
in it, and among them was a queen; and all had black
hoods, and they wept and shrieked when they saw King
Arthur.
"Now put me in the barge," said the king. And
there received him three queens with great mourning, and
in one of their laps King Arthur laid his head. And the
queen said, "Ah, dear brother, why have ye tarried so
long? Alas! this wound on your head hath caught overmuch
cold." And then they rowed from the land, and Sir
Bedivere beheld them go from him. Then he cried: "Ah,
my lord Arthur, will ye leave me here alone among mine
enemies?" "Comfort thyself," said the king,
"for in me is no further help; for I will to the Isle
of Avalon, to heal me of my grievous wound." And as
soon as Sir Bedivere had lost sight of the barge he wept
and wailed; then he took the forest, and went all that
night, and in the morning he was ware of a chapel and a
hermitage.
Then went Sir Bedivere thither; and when he came into
the chapel he saw where lay an hermit on the ground, near
a tomb that was newly graven. "Sir," said Sir
Bedivere, "what man is there buried that ye pray so
near unto?" "Fair son," said the hermit,
"I know not verily. But this night there came a
number of ladies, and brought hither one dead, and prayed
me to bury him." "Alas!" said Sir Bedivere,
"that was my lord, King Arthur." Then Sir
Bedivere swooned; and when he awoke he prayed the hermit
he might abide with him, to live with fasting and prayers.
"Ye are welcome," said the hermit. So there bode
Sir Bedivere with the hermit; and he put on poor clothes,
and served the hermit full lowly in fasting and in
prayers.
Thus of Arthur I find never more written in books that
he authorized, nor more of the very certainty of his
death; but thus was he led away in a ship, wherein were
three queens; the one was King Arthur's sister, Queen
Morgane le Fay; the other was Viviane, the Lady of the
Lake and the third was the queen of North Galis. And this
tale Sir Bedivere, knight of the Table Round, made to be
written. Yet some men say that King Arthur is not dead,
but hid away into another place, and men say that he shall
come again and reign over England. But many say that there
is written on his tomb this verse:-
"Hic jacet Arthurus, Rex quondam,
Rexque futurus."
Here Arthur lies, King once and King to be.
And when Queen Guenever understood that King Arthur was
slain, and all the noble knights with him, she stole away,
and five ladies with her; and so she went to Almesbury,
and made herself a nun, and ware white clothes and black,
and took great penance as ever did sinful lady, and lived
in fasting, prayers, and alms-deeds. And there she was
abbess and ruler of the nuns. Now turn we from her, and
speak of Sir Launcelot of the Lake.
When Sir Launcelot heard in his country that Sir Modred
was crowned king of England and made war against his own
uncle, King Arthur, then was Sir Launcelot wroth out of
measure, and said to his kinsmen: "Alas, that double
traitor, Sir Modred! now it repenteth me that ever he
escaped out of my hands." Then Sir Launcelot and his
fellows made ready in all haste, with ships and galleys,
to pass into England; and so he passed over till he came
to Dover, and there he landed with a great army. Then Sir
Launcelot was told that King Arthur was slain.
"Alas!" said Sir Launcelot, "this is the
heaviest tidings that ever came to me." Then he
called the kings, dukes, barons, and knights, and said
thus: "My fair lords, I thank you all for coming into
this country with me, but we came too late, and that shall
repent me while I live. But since it is so," said Sir
Launcelot, "I will myself ride and seek my lady,
Queen Guenever, for I have heard say she hath fled into
the west; therefore ye shall abide me here fifteen days,
and if I come not within that time, then take your ships
and your host and depart into your country."
So Sir Launcelot departed and rode westerly, and there
he sought many days; and at last he came to a nunnery, and
was seen of Queen Guenever as he walked in the cloister;
and when she saw him, she swooned away. And when she might
speak, she bade him to be called to her. And when Sir
Launcelot was brought to her, she said: "Sir
Launcelot, I require thee and beseech thee, for all the
love that ever was betwixt us, that thou never see me
more, but return to thy kingdom and take thee a wife, and
live with her with joy and bliss; and pray for me to my
Lord, that I may get my soul's health." "Nay,
madam," said Sir Launcelot, "wit you well that I
shall never do; but the same destiny that ye have taken
you to will I take me unto, for to please and serve
God." And so they parted, with tears and much
lamentation; and the ladies bare the queen to her chamber,
and Sir Launcelot took his horse and rode away, weeping.
And at last Sir Launcelot was ware of a hermitage and a
chapel, and then he heard a little bell ring to mass; and
thither he rode and alighted, and tied his horse to the
gate, and heard mass. And he that sang the mass was the
hermit with whom Sir Bedivere had taken up his abode; and
Sir Bedivere knew Sir Launcelot, and they spake together
after mass. But when Sir Bedivere had told his tale, Sir
Launcelot's heart almost burst for sorrow. Then he kneeled
down, and prayed the hermit to shrive him, and besought
that he might be his brother. Then the hermit said,
"I will gladly"; and then he put a habit upon
Sir Launcelot, and there he served God day and night, with
prayers and fastings.
And the great host abode at Dover till the end of the
fifteen days set by Sir Launcelot, and then Sir Bohort
made them to go home again to their own country; and Sir
Bohort, Sir Hector de Marys, Sir Blanor, and many others,
took on them to ride through all England to seek Sir
Launcelot. So Sir Bohort by fortune rode until he came to
the same chapel where Sir Launcelot was; and when he saw
Sir Launcelot in that manner of clothing, he prayed the
hermit that he might be in that same. And so there was a
habit put upon him, and there he lived in prayers and
fasting. And within half a year came others of the
knights, their fellows, and took such a habit as Sir
Launcelot and Sir Bohort had. Thus they endured in great
penance six years.
And upon a night there came a vision to Sir Launcelot,
and charged him to haste him toward Almesbury, and
"by the time thou come there, thou shalt find Queen
Guenever dead." Then Sir Launcelot rose up early, and
told the hermit thereof. Then said the hermit, "It
were well that ye disobey not this vision." And Sir
Launcelot took his seven companions with him, and on foot
they went from Glastonbury to Almesbury, which is more
than thirty miles. And when they were come to Almesbury,
they found that Queen Guenever died but half an hour
before. Then Sir Launcelot saw her visage, but he wept not
greatly, but sighed. And so he did all the observance of
the service himself, both the "dirige" at night,
and at morn he sang mass, And there was prepared an
horse-bier, and Sir Launcelot and his fellows followed the
bier on foot from Almesbury until they came to
Glastonbury; and she was wrapped in cered clothes, and
laid in a coffin of marble. And when she was put in the
earth, Sir Launcelot swooned, and lay long as one dead.
And Sir Launcelot never after ate but little meat, nor
drank; but continually mourned. And within six weeks Sir
Launcelot fell sick; and he sent for the hermit and all
his true fellows, and said, "Sir hermit, I pray you
give me all my rights that a Christian man ought to
have." "It shall not need," said the hermit
and all his fellows; "it is but heaviness of your
blood, and to-morrow morn you shall be well."
"My fair lords," said Sir Launcelot, "my
careful body will into the earth; I have warning more than
now I will say; therefore give me my rights." So when
he was houseled and aneled, and had all that a Christian
man ought to have, he prayed the hermit that his fellows
might bear his body to Joyous Garde. (Some men say it was
Alnwick, and some say it was Bamborough.) "It
repenteth me sore," said Sir Launcelot, "but I
made a vow aforetime that in Joyous Garde I would be
buried." Then there was weeping and wringing of hands
among his fellows. And that night Sir Launcelot died; and
when Sir Bohort and his fellows came to his bedside the
next morning, they found him stark dead; and he lay as if
he had smiled, and the sweetest savor all about him that
ever they knew.
And they put Sir Launcelot into the same horse-bier
that Queen Guenever was laid in, and the hermit and they
all together went with the body till they came to Joyous
Garde. And there they laid his corpse in the body of the
quire, and sang and read many psalms and prayers over him.
And ever his visage was laid open and naked, that all
folks might behold him. And right thus, as they were at
their service, there came Sir Hector de Marys, that had
seven years sought Sir Launcelot his brother, through all
England, Scotland and Wales. And when Sir Hector heard
such sounds in the chapel of Joyous Garde, he alighted and
came into the quire. And all they knew Sir Hector. Then
went Sir Bohort, and told him how there lay Sir Launcelot
his brother, dead. Then Sir Hector threw his shield, his
sword, and helm from him. And when he beheld Sir
Launcelot's visage, it were hard for any tongue to tell
the doleful complaints he made for his brother. "Ah,
Sir Launcelot!" he said, "there thou liest. And
now I dare to say thou wert never matched of none earthly
knight's hand. And thou wert the courteousest knight that
ever bare shield; and thou wert the truest friend to thy
lover that ever bestrode horse; and thou were the truest
lover, of a sinful man, that ever loved woman; and thou
wert the kindest man that ever struck with sword. And thou
wert the goodliest person that ever came among press of
knights. And thou wert the meekest man, and the gentlest,
that ever ate in hall among ladies. And thou wert the
sternest knight to thy mortal foe that ever put spear in
the rest." Then there was weeping and dolor out of
measure. Thus they kept Sir Launcelot's corpse fifteen
days, and then they buried it with great devotion.
Then they went back with the hermit to his hermitage.
And Sir Bedivere was there ever still hermit to his life's
end. And Sir Bohort, Sir Hector, Sir Blanor and Sir
Bleoberis went into the Holy Land. And these four knights
did many battles upon the miscreants, the Turks; and there
they died upon a Good Friday, as it pleased God.
Thus endeth this noble and joyous book, entitled La
Morte d'Arthur; notwithstanding it treateth of the birth,
life and acts of the said King Arthur, and of his noble
Knights of the Round Table, their marvellous enquests and
adventures, the achieving of the Sangreal, and in the end,
la Morte d'Arthur, with the dolorous death and departing
out of this world of them all. Which book was reduced into
English by Sir Thomas Mallory, Knight, and divided into
twenty-one books, chaptered and imprinted and finished in
the Abbey Westmestre, the last day of July, the year of
our Lord MCCCCLXXXV.
Caxton me fieri fecit.
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