www.youngpeopleszone.cjb.net -Presents- _____________________________ SIX BALLADS ABOUT KING ARTHUR _____________________________ -anonymous- Public Domain. Originally published 1881. THE BIRTH OF KING ARTHUR. 'To horse! to horse! my noble lord,'  Thus spake the fair Igraine, 'Ride hard -- ride fast all through the night,  Nor stay, nor slack the rein.' 'Now why such haste to leave the Court?'  The Duke of Cornwall cried. 'Ah me,' she said, 'King Uther wills  Thy wife should be his bride.' Fast, fast they rode all through the night,  Nor stayed, nor slacked the rein, Until the towers of Tintagel  Rose shining o'er the plain. But on the morrow, messengers  Came riding from the King: 'Uther Pendragon bids the Duke  Himself and wife to bring Back to fair London town.' -- 'Unto  The King this answer give: Nor self nor wife shall tread his halls  So long as either live.' Then sware the King a dreadful oath,  Or ere the fortieth day He would unearth him from his lair,  And waste, and burn, and slay. Alack for right 'gainst regal might!  It boots but ill to tell How in a sally 'gainst the King  The brave Duke Cornwall fell. The towers he manned, the wife he loved,  Became King Uther's prey, And from her home at Tintagel  Igraine was borne away. And when her baby boy was born,  In cloth of gold with state 'Twas given to a beggar-man,  Who waited at the gate. But this was Merlin, in disguise  Of beggar old and grey, The great enchanter, Merlin hight,  Who bore the babe away Unto a holy, saintly man,  Who christened him by name Of Arthur -- prince of chivalry,  First on the scroll of fame. And good Sir Ector's noble wife  Nurtured the baby fair, And brought him up in gentle ways,  Befitting England's heir. Eftsoons King Uther sickenèd  And fell in woful plight; He spake to non or great or small,  By day nor eke by night. Then Merlin rose in council full,  And spake both loud and high: 'God's will be done, but I will make  Him speak or ere he die!' So in hot haste, without delay,  Unto the King he hied, Knelt down beside the royal couch:  'Wilt thou, O Sire,' he cried 'That Arthur, thy own son, shall rule  O'er England in thy stead?' The noble vassals gathered round,  Listening astonishèd. For naught knew they of infant son,  But every Baron there Mighty of men, and strong of arm,  Wended to be the heir. King Uther Pendragon turned round  Upon his dying bed, And to the knights assembled there  And to great Merlin said: 'May God Almighty bless my son!  I, too, my blessing give; Bid him use fitting holy prayers  That my poor soul may live: 'And claim the crown right worshipful  On pain of blessing lost.' With that he turned him o'er again,  And yielded up the ghost. They buried him with regal pomp,  While all his Barons wept, As did Igraine, his beauteous queen --  But Uther calmly slept. ARTHUR MADE KING. When Uther passed away, the realm  Fell in great jeopardy, For many wended to be king  Through might and bravery. Then Merlin to the Archbishop  Of Canterbury went, And they together council took  This evil to prevent. Thus they agreed -- that every lord,  On pain of curses deep, And every gentleman-at-arms  A solemn tryst should keep, On Christmas day, at London town,  Since Christ, as all do know, Was then created Lord of all  The kingdoms here below; So who should reign o'er England fair  By miracle might show. Some nobles made them passing clean  From vice or crime, for fear Their prayers might enter gracelessly,  Within Christ Jesus' ear. Inside the church on Christmas day  (It was St. Paul's, I ween), A mightly host of knights and lords  And commoners is seen. But ere they read the early mass,  Or early matins sing, Unto the Lord Archbishop there  This startling news they bring: 'Outside, within the churchyard gate,  Near to the altar stone, There stands a large square marble slab  With anvil perched thereon; 'And in the anvil, of pure steel  A naked sword doth sit, Of finest point, and all around  Are golden letters writ: '"Whoso from out this marble stone  With his own powerful hand Shall pluck this sword, he shall be Lord  And King of all England."' The Lord Archbishop ordered then  That none should touch the stone, But all within the church should pray  Until High Mass was done, And when all prayers were finishèd  (This was his Grace's will), Ten knights of stainless troth and fame  Should guard the sword from ill; That jousts and tournaments be held  Upon the New Year's day; That all who willed their prowess try  To pluck the sword away. Thereto there flocked a gallant host  Of knights and ladies gay; Sir Ector brought young Arthur there,  And his own son, Sir Kay. But then befel a woful chance --  Sir Kay had lost his sword, In sooth, had left it at his home.  Then uttered he this word: 'O foster brother! backward speed,  Ride fast for love of me, And when thou reachest Ector's house,  My sword bring back to me.' 'That will I,' said the gallant youth,  Riding away alone; But when he reached the castle gate  He found the wardour gone, And all the inmates, great and small,  Off to the tournament; Baffled and wroth he turned his horse  And to the churchyard went. 'Ten thousand pities 'twere,' he said,  'My dearest brother Kay Should at the joust withouten sword  Appear in disarray. Whereat he lighted from his horse,  And tied it to the stile, While to the tent he bent his steps  And loitered there awhile, To see if the ten guards were there --  He recked not that they went With all the world, both rich and poor,  To the great tournament. So when he found no knights were there  But to the jousting gone, Lightly yet fierce the sword he seized,  And pulled it from the stone, And to Sir Kay delivered it,  Who wist, as soon as seen, That 'twas the sword from out the stone;  Then said, 'Full well I ween I have the sword, and I must be  The King of all Englànd. But when he showed it to his sire  Sir Ector gave command That to the church he should repair  And swear upon the book How gat he then the sword; but he,  Fearing his sire's rebuke, Told how his foster brother came  When all the knights were gone, And light and fiercely plucked the sword  From out the magic stone. 'Now try again,' Sir Ector said;  Whereat they all assayed, But none save Arthur there availed  To sunder out the blade. And thrice again he made assay,  And thrice the sword came free; Sir Ector and Sir Kay fell down  Upon their bended knee. 'O father! why,' young Arthur said,  'Your homage pay to me?' 'Because that God has willed it so.  Thou art no son of mine: 'Twas Merlin brought thee to my arms  From some far nobler line. 'But, O my liege! for King thou art,  Wilt thou to mine and me, Who nurtured thee and brought thee up,  A gracious sovereign be? But Arthur wept and made great dole  At what Sir Ector said, That he no sire or mother had,  Then sweetly answerèd: 'Else were I much to blame! I am  Beholden so to you, Command me, and may God me help  I will your bidding do.' 'Sir,' said Sir Ector, 'I will ask  No more than that of all The lands you govern, my son Kay  Be made the Seneschal.' Replied young Arthur, 'That shall be;  I here my promise give, That none but he that office fill  While he or I shall live.' Then happèd it that on Twelfth day  The Barons all assay To pluck the sword, but none prevail  Save Arthur on that day. Then waxed they wroth, and Candlemas  Was fixed for the assay, Yet still no knight but Arthur  Could pluck the sword away. Then at high feast of Eastertide,  Also at Pentecost, None but young Arthur loosed the sword --  The knights their temper lost. But when the Lord Archbishop came,  All cried with one accord, 'We will have Arthur for our King,  God wills him for our lord.' And down on bended knee they fell  To pay him homage due; And thus he won Excalibur  And all fair England too. Soon Scotland, and the North, and Wales,  To him obeisance made, Won by prowess of his knights  And of his trusty blade. THE MESSAGE. On battlemented Camelot  The moon was softly sleeping; Within, King Arthur's noble knights  Their wassail late were keeping. 'What ho! Sir Wardour, ope the gate,  And let the drawbridge down; I bear a message to your lord  From Ryence of renown.' Then up and spake the white-haired thrall  That kept the castle gate, 'It ill befits our courtesy  To one who comes so late, 'Who travel-stained and weary seems,  To bar his entry free; But tell me first your quest, I pray,  And who may Ryence be?' 'My quest I tell but to thy chief:  Enough for thee, I ween, That Ryence reigns o'er Wales, and eke  O'er Ireland's mountains green, And isles unnumbered round about,  Now glittering in the sheen.' The wardour oped the castle door,  And let the drawbridge down; The herald crossed in silence o'er,  And entered with a frown, And when within the banquet hall,  He never bowed the head, Nor bent the knee, but strode right on  And to King Arthur said: 'King Ryence vanquished in fair fight  Twice six good kings save one; He summons thee that one to be,  Or proffers thee a boon. 'He bids thee here on bended knee  Thy lawful homage pay, Or he will come with fire and sword  To waste, and burn, and slay. 'King Ryence hath a sammet cloak  All purfled round with hair -- With human hair torn from the chins  Of kings he slew in war. 'But still there is one little spot  Uncovered at the base: Flay thou thy chin, and send thy beard  To fill the vacant place.' Then started up King Arthur's knights  Indignant at this word; Each stamped his mailèd heel in ire,  Each drew his trusty sword. King Arthur rose with manly grace  And to the herald spake, 'Quail not before my noble knights,  But back this answer take: 'Say that of all the messages  E'er sent from king to king, This is the shamefullest and worst  That herald e'er did bring. ' 'Tis plain Ryence has never been  In knightly company; He lacks the soul -- he lacks the speech  Of common courtesy. 'Tell him, no homage do I owe,  Nor sire nor kith of mine; As for my beard, it is too scant  To purfle cloak so fine; 'And if he come, as now he boasts,  With fire and sword to slay, On both his bended knees he shall  To me his homage pay.' The herald left the hall -- the King  Thus broke the deep silènce: 'Now is there any here,' he said,  'That knoweth King Ryence?' Then answered him one night Naram,  'I know him passing well; In body few can match his strength,  In pride none him excel. 'I doubt not he will war with you  Full strong and powerfully.' 'Well!' said the King, 'I will ordain  For him, as he shall see.' THE MARRIAGE OF KING ARTHUR. Then happed it on Allhallowmas,  That Bors, the King of Gaul, And Ban of Benwick, over seas,  Came at King Arthur's call. They came with full three hundred knights,  All chosen, brave, and true, To vanquish Arthur's enemies  Who fierce and fiercer grew. And while they kept high festival  Beneathen cloth of gold, A thrall came riding in hot haste  And woful tidings told; How that King Ryence of North Wales  Had gone with sword and lance From out his mountain fastnesses  'Gainst King Leodogrance. Now Arthur loved this king for aid  In war, and friendly troth, But hated Ryence of North Wales,  So at this news was wroth. King Bors and Ban made ready then  Their chivalry from France, And all the country rose in arms  To aid Leodogrance. Full twenty thousand men-at-arms  Rode with King Arthur hard, Until within six days they reached  The towers of Cameliard. And then and there the mighty host  Engaged in dreadful fight, They slaughtered twice five thousand souls  And put Ryence to flight. 'Twas then King Arthur first beheld  The lovely Guinever, The King's fair daughter -- ever since  He loved but only her. When that the kingdom freedom gat  From wars and jealous strife, The barons begged King Arthur then  To wed a loving wife. With Merlin too was counsel ta'en,  Who deemed it good and wise, And asked the King if any maid  Found favour in his eyes. Then answered Arthur, 'There is one,  I deem her passing fair, The daughter of my trusty friend,  The lovely Guinever. 'To him my father gave a prize  I value more than gold, The huge Round Table at whose board  Sate knights a hundred told 'And fifty more.' 'Sir,' Merlin said,  'I grant you passing well, For beauty and for fairness too  No maid can her excel. 'But an ye loved her not, I could  Another damsel find, Whose beauty and whose goodness should  Be equal in your mind. 'But 'tis not meet a man should wed  Where he can feel no love; For where his heart is set, he will  Be quick his feet to move.' 'Ah! that is true,' the King replied,  Nor list what Merlin said, How grief and sorrow would ensue  If he the maid should wed, But sent him to Leodogrance,  In goodly company, To plead his suit, and ask the King  What might his pleasure be? Leodogrance was overjoyed  To welcome Merlin's suite, Exclaiming that it pleased him well  Arthur's demands to meet. But said, 'What can I proffer him  With Guinever for dower? For gold and land he does not lack,  He has such ample store. 'But I the huge Round Table have,  Uther Pendragon gave To me is trusted friend, and that  His son shall gladly have. 'Alack for hap and woful change!  Full many a gallant knight Who sate thereat has perished since,  Slain in the bloody fight. 'But still a hundred knights remain,  My faithful bodyguard; They shall escort my daughter when  She leaveth Cameliard.' So Merlin, knights, and Guinever  Journeyed by land and sea, Till they came nigh to London town,  A goodly company. Then did King Arthur joy to see  The cavalcade arrive, Bearing the Table that he prized  And Guinever to wive. He spake out openly and loud,  'This maid I long have loved, And more than land or precious gold  These gifts my heart have moved. 'For nothing is so lief to me  As Guinever the fair; To wed her, and to crown her queen,  We quickly will prepare. 'Let Merlin search through all the land  If fifty knights be found, To fill the places vacant left  Beside the Table Round.' But only eight-and-twenty knights  Of prowess and good fame Could Merlin find to fill the seats.  Then Canterbury came -- He came with pomp right royally  To bless the seats in state; Upon each chair, the while he prayed,  The eight-and-twenty sate. When they arose and homage paid  To Arthur, as was fit, Were golden letters found on each,  Telling who there should sit. But two were void, and so anon  Came riding young Gawaine, To beg the king to dub him knight,  Nor did he beg in vain Then forthwithal a poor man came,  And with him his fair son: 'Oh, where shall I King Arthur find?'  He questioned every one. 'Yonder he stands -- what wilt with him?'  Down on his bended knee He dropped and said, 'O blessed King!  O flower of chivalry! 'May Jesu save thee! here I come  A humble suppliant, Hearing that on your wedding-day  Ye any boon would grant. 'Sir, I have thirteen stalwart sons,  Who labour all the year, And do my bidding passing well;  But this thou seest here 'Will nothing do but bend the bow,  And cast the dart afar; He loves to watch the feasts and games,  And mix where battles are. 'Make him, my King, a gallant knight.'  ' 'Tis sooner said than done,' Arthur replied; but all the while  He watchèd well the son, And found that he fair-visaged was,  And passingly well made. 'What is thy name, and where thy sword?'  He to the young man said. 'My name is Tor, and here is my sword.'  'Unsheath it and alight.' The youth leaped from his meagre steed,  Kneeling in Arthur's sight. 'Oh make me, sir, a knight, I pray,  Knight of the Table Round!' Smiting him on the neck with sword,  'May'st thou be ever found,' King Arthur said, 'I pray to God,  A good knight and a true! But to be knight of Table Round  Lacks worth and prowess too.' And then there happed a wondrous sight;  For when the King was wed All solemnly at Camelot,  And the high feast was made, By Merlin's order every knight  Sat silent, one and all, Each in his siege in solemn state  Within the banquet hall. Till, as the portals open flew,  Rushed in a hart milk-white, A snow-white brachet followed on,  And then, O wondrous sight! Twice thirty coal-black hounds pursued  The hart with yell and cry, And when the brachet wounded her  She moanèd piteously, And gave a sudden bound that threw  One knight upon the ground, Wherefrom he soon arose and seized  By force the snow white hound. Quick out of hall, he leaped to horse,  Bearing his prize away, Riding as if for life and death,  That no man could him stay. Anon there came on palfrey white  A lady fair and gay, Who begged the King to give her back  Her brachet stolen away. That can I not,' said Arthur. Then  A knight in full array Came riding in, armed cap-a-pie  And bore the maid away. By force he snatched her that she made  Such dole with shriek and cry, That all within the banquet hall  Rejoiced to see them fly. Then Merlin spake: 'Ye may not treat  These shames as poor and slight, Else much disworship will arise  To King and every knight 'Belonging to the Table Round;  But order noble men, Gawaine, and Pellinore, and Tor,  To fetch them back again.' 'That will I,' said the King. 'Gawaine,  Bring back the milk-white hart. To you, King Pellinore, behoves  To play a nobler part: 'The Knight and Lady you shall meet  In war and fearful strife; Bring them again before this court,  Or sacrifice their life. 'And you, Sir Tor, your valour test,  And knightly honour gain, For bringing back the brachet white  Within this hall again.' It little boots me now to tell  How each one's work was sped; Suffice it that they all returned  Their task accomplishèd. Then Arthur stablished all the knights;  To such as were too poor He granted lands and tenements  Dividing up his store. And solemnly he charged them all  No outrage e'er to do, Murder, cruelty, and vice,  And treason to eschew. He said, 'To him that asketh you  Mercy and pardon give, Under the ban of forfeiting  My service while ye live; 'The penalty of death be yours,  If damsels in distress Or gentlewomen plead in vain  For succour or redress. 'And let no man for worldly goods,  Or lands, or sordid pelf, In wrongful quarrel battle make  Or glorify himself. 'Swear,' said King Arthur -- every knight  Uprose to do his will -- 'Swear faithfully and loyally  My precepts to fulfil.' 'Twas done -- in every future year,  As Pentecost came by, King Arthur's knights were bound by oath  To truth and chivalry. And thus was stablished in our land  Honour and loyalty; Long may they last, nor ever fail  Till time itself shall die! THE SANCGREAL. It chanced, when Lancelot du Lake  Had freed from durance vile The fairest lady in the land,  He journeyed on awhile, Until King Pelles spied the knight,  Whose castle stood hard by, And begged him to alight and share  His hospitality. So courteously and graciously  The twain passed through the gate, Then sat within the banquet hall,  The viands to await. But lo! through window opened wide,  Without or voice or sound, A gentle dove came gliding in,  And floated round and round. Within her beak a censer hung  Cast in pure molten gold, Whence clouds of fragrance issued forth  Which o'er the table rolled. It seemed as Araby the blest,  And every spicy isle, Had garnered all their treasures up,  To waft them there the while. And forthwithal upon the board  All kinds of meats were spread, And drinks that might the palate please  Were likewise furnishèd. A damsel passing fair and young,  Most beauteous to behold, Came gliding in -- betwixt her hands  She bare a vase of gold. And thereunto the King kneeled down,  Devoutly and with grace, To say his prayers, as also did  Each soul within the place. Then spake Sir Lancelot du Lake  And askèd of the King, 'What may this mean? I pray you tell.'  'This is the richest thing,' Replied King Pelles, 'that a man  Can own, alive or dead; E'en the Round Table, when this comes,  Shall be abolishèd. 'And wit thou well, thou here hast seen  The holy Sangreal -- The blessed gift -- the cherished hope  Sought for and prayed of all.' In after years when Lancelot  Had wedded sweet Elaine, King Pelles' child, within those walls,  The wonder happed again. For Lancelot's nephew, young Sir Bors,  To Corben Castle rode, And in the banquet-hall he saw  Elaine, just where she stood, Her baby on her arm; and when  She said the lovely boy Was Lancelot's child, he kneelèd down  And wept for very joy, And prayed to God, that when the child  To years of manhood grew, He might prove worthy of his sire,  As brave a knight and true. Then through the window opened wide,  Without or voice or sound, A gentle dove came gliding in,  And floated round and round. Within her beak a censer hung  Formed of pure molten gold, Whence clouds of fragrance issued forth,  Which o'er the table rolled. It seemed as Araby the blest,  And every spicy isle, Had garnered all their treasures up  To waft them there awhile. And forthwithal upon the board  All kinds of meats were spread, And drinks that might the palate please  Were also furnishèd. A damsel passing fair and young,  Most beauteous to behold, Came gliding in, betwixt her hands  Bearing a vase of gold. She spake, 'This babe Sir Galahad,  Sir Bors, I bid you wit, In future on Siege Perilous  As knight shall surely sit -- 'A nobler knight than is his sire' --  Her words rang through the hall -- 'For as he lives, he surely shall  Achieve the Sancgreal.' She vanished then. As of afore,  King Pelles spoke out loud: 'No knight shall win, or honour have,  Save he that loveth God. 'Be he a knight of high degree,  Or be he e'er so brave, An he nor love nor feareth God,  No honour shall he have.' Replied Sir Bors, 'Within these halls  (I wot not what they mean) Most strange and weird adventures hap,  And wondrous sights are seen. I will be shriven with good will  And be confessèd clean.' So was he shriven of his sins,  And in the dead of night Most marvellous adventures happed,  Too lengthy here to write. When morning broke, to Camelot  He spurred his gallant steed; For Arthur had returned from France  Victorious, and decreed That feasts and tournaments be held  Upon that very day, And all his knights at Table Round  Should sit in full array. But when uncovered was the siege  Hight Perilous, behold, The name of young Sir Galahad  Shone forth in molten gold. But no one at the Table wot  Who Galahad might be, Till long years afterward he came  Out from the nunnery Where holy women reared the child  Till he to manhood grew, And taught him to be good and wise,  Noble, and brave, and true. At Pentecost, he having first  Performed the holy rite, On bended knee he begged to be  Installèd as a knight. Sir Lancelot surveyed the youth,  And found him passing fair, With limbs well knit, of stature tall,  Graceful beyond compare. He struck him with his sword, and said,  'Sir Galahad, arise! God grant the virtue ne'er may fade  Now shining through your eyes!' Sir Galahad then hasted forth,  To joust withouten shield; He broke their spears, he threw the knights  Save twain who would not yield. He then unhorsed, unlaced him helm  At Guinever's request, Who, looking on his visage, spake,  'No marvel he is best 'At jousting and at holy prayer;  For, as you plainly see, His face and mien bespeak him sprung  From true nobility.' Then all to the great minster sped  To offer evensong, King, Queen, the knights of Table Round,  With all the motley throng. Then back to Camelot to sup,  Where in the lofty hall, Each sitting as toforehand, lo!  This marvel did befall: The thunder growled, and cracked ahead  As though the walls would rive. Each knight made sign of cross, as though  The priest had stood to shrive. But in the midst of crash and blast  A sunbeam entered there, By seven times brighter than the day,  When day is bright and clear. It shed such lustre over all,  Each scanned his neighbour o'er; And each seemed fairer in that light  Than e'er he seemed before. No word was spoke, no sound was made,  As they all dumb had been: The holy Grail in white samite  Came softly gliding in. And as afore the hall was filled  With perfumes where it moved, And every knight had meats and drinks  As each one wished and loved. As quickly as it glided in,  It quick evanishèd; None knew from whence or whitherward  The holy vision fled. King Arthur rose with reverence,  Bowing full low his head: 'Thank Jesu Christ our Lord for this  So precious boon,' he said. Then up and spake Gawaine, 'I vow  By all I hold most dear, In quest of this most holy Grail,  To wander for a year. 'And eke a day nor e'er return  Until it reappear Unto my longing eyes more bright  And openly than here!' Then rose up all the knights around,  And vowed, with one accord, With heart and soul to join the quest,  For love of Christ their Lord. King Arthur spake with troubled mien,  'Alas! Gawaine, Gawaine! With this avow and promise made,  Ye have me well nigh slain. 'Alas! this morn I held secure  A band so brave and true, The fairest fellowship on earth  That knighthood ever knew. 'Ye have bereft me of this band.  Alas! it grieves me sore; For when they once depart from hence,  I ne'er shall meet them more. 'For many in the quest will die --  Those that I loved so well. How close I held them to my heart,  No words of mine can tell. 'And thus it now forthinketh me,  I fain for grief would die; For 'twas an old, old usage  To have their company.' This spake he, with the gathering tears  Slow trembling in his eyes, Fresh from his o'ercharged heart, so full  Of loving memories. Next morn, the band of gallant knights  Through the great minster pass, And kneel below the altar stair  To celebrate the mass. And then 'to horse!' The eager crowd  Are gathering far and near; Maidens forlorn and gentlefolk  With wistful eyes are there: The rich, the poor, the camp, the court,  Arthur and Guinever; They bid farewell with many a sob  And many a bitter tear. They mount, they ride, their glittering plumes  Are waving in the wind; Ah! what remains save aching hearts  To those they leave behind? THE DEATH OF KING ARTHUR. False Mordred spake to Guinever,  'Arthur, thy lord, is dead, And has appointed me to reign  O'er England in his stead. 'We will be crowned right royally.  To Canterbury haste; We there high festival will make  For fifteen days at least, 'And thou shalt be my wedded wife.'  She shrank in mute dismay, Knowing King Arthur had embarked  His troops from Cardiff Bay: Full threescore thousand gallant men,  With his tried friend Gawaine, To 'venge an insult, they had gone  To Benwick over main. And now, poor Guinever, take heart;  Brush back they bitter tears; Trust in thy subtle woman's wit  Born of thy woman's fears. She answered him in gentle guise,  'I may not say thee nay, But grant me that I journey first  To London town, I pray, To buy some guards and trinkets fine  To grace my bridal day.' False Mordred granted her request,  In that she spake so fair; Then quick she hied to London town,  And bade her men repair Unto the Tower, the which she filled  With food, and arms, and men, Nor aught that Mordred said or did  Could lure her forth again. He sued her with false honeyed words,  They did not once prevail; He stormed the Tower with mighty guns,  It was of no avail. Within her fortress Guinever  Sent scornful answers true: 'Thou art a traitor to thy king,  Which thou full soon shalt rue. 'Ere I come forth to thee, false knight,  E'en though my lord be dead, I liever by this sword will die  Than ever I thee wed.' When Mordred heard that Arthur's host  Was coming over sea, In eager haste to be avenged  For this foul treachery, He writ to all the barons round  To come from far and near, And studied words of treason dark  He whispered in their ear: How that with Arthur evermore  Was naught but war and strife, While he, Sir Mordred, gave them peace,  And joy, and bliss of life. Then many that King Arthur had  Raised up from low estate, And granted lands, now slanderous words  And evil 'gainst him spake. Now, all ye Englishmen, behold  What mischief happened here: This King, who was the noblest king,  And knight withouten peer, Who loved the fellowship of none  But good and brave, who spent His life redressing crime and wrong,  Was held in discontent. This old, old custom of the land  Is not forgot, they say, That Englishmen are ne'er content,  Not even at this day. This is their great default -- no thing  Pleaseth this people long. Thus happed it that false Mordred's force  Waxed numerous and strong. They met at Dover. Arthur's fleet  Came sailing o'er the sea, Bearing its freight of human worth,  A goodly company. Then was there launching of great boats  And small, in eager haste To lift King Arthur from the realm  Whereto God had him placed. They rushed ashore -- ah, woe is me  For many a noble slain, For barons bold, and gentle knights,  Among them Sir Gawaine. When Arthur saw his sister's son  Fall with a deadly blow, He took him gently in his arms,  And kissed his pallid brow. 'Gawaine,' he cried, 'my only joy!  I pray thee, do not die, And leave me, in this cold bleak world,  To utter misery. 'For now I will confess to thee  That I have loved thee so, I cannot bear, withouten thee,  This life of grief and woe.' The dying man thrice oped his eyes,  And gasped amid his pain Some words of comfort to the King,  Then never spake again. King Arthur mourned with bitter grief  The friend he loved so well, At Dover Castle buried him  Within a small chapelle, Where even to this day his skull  Is shown, as travellers tell. Meanwhile the battle hurtled on  Far as to Barham plain; King Arthur's troops victorious  Drave Mordred back again. But then there happed a wondrous thing,  For in the dead of night A vision to King Arthur came,  Warning him not to fight. Gawaine, surrounded by a troop  Of ladies fair and bright, Whom he had rescued from foul wrong,  Or aided in the right, Thus spake: 'God sends us here to you  His purpose to maintain; For if you fight to-morrow morn,  You surely will be slain. 'Wait only till Sir Lancelot  With aid shall reappear.' Thus having said, he vanishèd  As into empty air. In council it was then decreed  That when the morrow came, When both the armies were afield,  A herald should proclaim A truce, with gold and lands in pledge,  If Mordred would accede. The morning broke, the herald cried,  Each party was agreed. But each, mistrustful of his foe,  Gave orders to his men To stand prepared for deadly fight,  Should aught occur again To mar the truce. Just then from out  Some heather on the right An adder glided forth, and stung  Upon his foot a knight, Who thought no harm, but drew his sword  To strike the reptile dead, Whereat both armies yelled aloud  As by one impulse led. At sound of trumpets, beams, and horns,  They hasted on to fight, And never in this Christian land  Was seen more doleful sight. Oh! there was rushing, riding fast,  And many a grim word spoke, Foining and striking everywhere,  And many a deadly stroke. They stinted not, but madly fought  Through all that livelong day; At night a hundred thousand dead  Stark on the common lay. When Arthur gazed across the down,  And saw his valiant host All slain, save two poor wounded knights,  He knew that all was lost. 'Jesu have mercy!' cried the King;  'Would that I too had been Like these, my comrades, stricken dead,  Ere I this day had seen! 'Now would to God I wist me where  That traitor foul may be, Who brought such mischief to the realm  And misery to me!' Thereat he suddenly turned round,  And spied, across the plain, False Mordred leaning on his sword  Among a heap of slain. Then cried he to a wounded knight  Yclept Sir Bedevere, 'Yonder I spy the traitor false.  Give me my trusty spear; 'For tide me life, or tide me death,  I see him there alone He shall not 'scape my vengeance now  As he before hath done.' With both his hands he seized the spear,  Crying, 'Thy hour is come -- Die, traitor, die!' rushed headlong on,  And drave the weapon home. But with his sword the dying man  Smote Arthur on the head, Piercing his helmet to the brain,  Then fell down stark and dead. When noble Arthur fell to earth  Thrice in a deadly swoon, Sir Lucan and Sir Bedevere  Thrice raised him up, and soon They led him on betwixt them both  Softly and tenderly, Until they reached a chapel small  Close by the moaning sea. And while they sat and hearkened there,  All in the broad moonlight, They saw the pillers on the down  Rob many a noble knight Of brooch, and beads, and jewels rare,  Of many a goodly ring, Which much distressed Sir Bedevere,  Who begged the dying King To haste to some securer spot,  Where they could hide away. Arthur replied, 'My time flees fast,  I have not long to stay. 'Now hie thee to yon waterside,  And throw my trusty sword, My own Excalibur, therein,  And quickly bring me word 'What there thou see'st.' 'It shall be done,'  Replied the willing knight. But when he saw that noble sword,  With precious stones bedight On haft and pommel, to himself  He reasoned in this wise: 'If I destroy this richest sword,  But harm and loss arise, 'For an I throw it in the stream,  No good to him or me.' Whereon he hid Excalibur  Under the nearest tree. When he gat back unto the King,  'What saw'st thou there?' quoth he. 'Naught but the waves and winds,' he said,  'Moaning most dolefully.' Then said King Arthur, 'Truth is good,  To lie is deadly sin; As thou art lief and dear to me,  Go back and throw it in.' Sir Bedevere returned again,  But thought it sin and shame To cast away the noble sword,  So acted just the same. He hid the sword amid the grass,  Then, on his bended knee, Told Arthur his command was done.  'Say then what didst thou see?' 'Sire,' said he, 'I saw nothing there  But the great waters wap, And the waves wan; while I remained,  Naught else to me did hap.' 'Ah, traitor!' said King Arthur, 'all  Thou sayest is untrue; Thou hast betrayed me twice, and now  Thou would'st me quite undo. 'Who would have wend that thou, who wast  So lief and dear to me, And called a noble knight, for gain  Should now deceitful be? Go quickly hence. The cold strikes keen;  I have short time to stay; An if thou disobey me now,  I surely will thee slay.' Thereat Sir Bevedere rushed forth;  Seizing the weapon fast, He bound the girdle round the hilt,  And threw it in at last. When lo! an arm and hand appeared  Above the watery grave, Caught at the sword, thrice brandished it,  Then vanished in the wave. When Arthur heard what had befell,  He spake, 'Sir Bedevere, Alas! Now help me hence; I dread  Too long I tarry here.' He took the King upon his back,  Close to the waterside, Where hovèd in, fast by the bank,  A little barge he spied; Wherein there sate a stately queen,  And many ladies fair, Who shrieked and wept for grief when they  Beheld King Arthur there. 'Now put me in the barge,' he said,  Which softly was obeyed; Three queens in sable hood therein  Gently King Arthur laid. Upon the lap of one of these  His weary head he laid. 'Why have ye tarried, brother dear,  So long from me?' she said. 'Alas! the cold has stricken deep  Into this wound, I fear;' And then they rowed far far away  From sad Sir Bedevere. Their wailing floated on the wind,  Most pitiful to hear. Soon as the barge was lost to sight,  Forlorn Sir Bedevere Wept and bemoaned the livelong night,  Wandering about, in fear Of armed foes and robbers vile,  Through devious forest ways. When morning brake, a hermitage  Met his bewildered gaze. Close by a little chapel stood,  Where holy men might pray; Within, low grovelling on the ground,  A saintly hermit lay Beside a new-made grave. The knight  Inquired in accents low, 'What man is recent buried there  Down in the grave below?' 'Fair Sir,' the hermit then replied,  'I wot not who he be; A band of lovely ladies brought  Him here last night to me. 'A hundred tapers, too, they brought,  A hundred besants gave, To lay in earth his lovely form,  His precious soul to save.' 'Alas! that was my honoured lord,'  Replied Sir Bedevere, 'King Arthur, prince of chivalry,  Who now lies buried here.' Whereat he fell into a swoon.  When he revived again, He begged the hermit piteously  To let him there remain. 'In life or death I would be near,  Not evermore remove, By fasting and by prayer to show  My loyalty and love.' And then he doffed his knightly gear,  Putting on mean array, And both together wept and prayed  Their weary lives away. Queen Guinever became a nun  In cloistered Almesbury, Spending her days in deeds of love  And acts of charity.