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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52139 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52139)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Uther and Igraine, by Warwick Deeping
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Uther and Igraine
-
-Author: Warwick Deeping
-
-Illustrator: W. Benda
-
-Release Date: May 23, 2016 [EBook #52139]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UTHER AND IGRAINE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Christopher Wright and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- UTHER AND IGRAINE
-
- [Illustration:
- "PELLEAS WATCHED HER AS HER GREY GOWN WENT AMID THE GREEN AND RED"]
-
-
-
-
- UTHER AND IGRAINE
-
-
- BY
-
- WARWICK DEEPING
-
-
- _ILLUSTRATED BY W. BENDA_
-
-
- NEW YORK
- THE OUTLOOK COMPANY
- 1903
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY
-
- THE OUTLOOK COMPANY.
-
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
-
-
- PUBLISHED OCTOBER, 1903.
-
-
-
-
- To
-
- MAUDE MERRILL
-
- WITH THE AUTHOR'S HOMAGE
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- BOOK I
-
- PAGE
-
- THE WAY TO WINCHESTER 1
-
- BOOK II
-
- GORLOIS 93
-
- BOOK III
-
- THE WAR IN WALES 199
-
- BOOK IV
-
- TINTAGEL 325
-
-
-
-
-BOOK I
-
-THE WAY TO WINCHESTER
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Beneath the dark cornices of a thicket of wind-stunted pines stood a
-small company of women looking out into the hastening night. The half
-light of evening lay over the scene, rolling wood and valley into
-a misty mass, while the horizon stood curbed by a belt of imminent
-clouds. In the western vault, a vast rent in the wall of grey gave out
-a blaze of transient gold that slanted like a spear-shaft to a sullen
-sea.
-
-A wind cried restlessly amid the trees, gusty at intervals, but tuning
-its mood to a desolate and constant moan. There was an expression of
-despair on the face of the west. The woods were full of a vague woe,
-and of troubled breathing. The trees seemed to sway to one another, to
-fling strange words with a tossing of hair, and outstretched hands. The
-furze in the valley--swept and harrowed--undulated like a green lagoon.
-
-The women upon the hill were garbed after the fashion of grey nuns.
-Their gowns stood out blankly against the ascetic trunks of the pines.
-They were huddled together in a group, like sheep under a thorn hedge
-when storms threaten. The dark ovals of their hoods were turned towards
-the south, where the white patch of a sail showed vaguely through the
-gathering grey.
-
-Between the hill and the cliffs lay a valley, threaded by a meagre
-stream, that quavered through pastures. A mist hung there despite
-the wind. Folded by a circle of oaks rose the grey walls of an
-ecclesiastical building of no inconsiderable size, while the mournful
-clangour of a bell came up upon the wind, with a vague sound as of
-voices chanting. Valley, stream, and abbey were rapidly melting into
-the indefinite background of the night.
-
-Suddenly a snarling murmur seemed to swell the plaining of the bell.
-A dark mass that was moving through the meadows beneath like a herd
-of kine broke into a fringe of hurrying specks that dissolved into
-the shadows of the circle of oaks. The bell still continued to toll,
-while the women beneath the pines shivered and drew closer together as
-though for warmth and comfort. There was not one among them who had not
-grasped the full significance of the sinister sound that had come to
-them from the valley. A novice, taller than her sisters, stood forward
-from the group, as though eager to catch the first evidence of the
-deed that was to be done on that drear evening. She held up a hand to
-those behind her, in mute appeal to them to listen. The bell had ceased
-pulsing. In its stead sounded a faint eerie whimper, an occasional
-shrill cry that seemed to leap out of silence like a bubble from a pool
-where death has been.
-
-The women were shaken from their strained vigilance as by a wind. The
-utter grey of the hour seemed to stifle them. Some were on their knees,
-praying and weeping; one had fainted, and lay huddled against the trunk
-of a pine. It was such a tragedy as was often played in those days of
-disruption and despair, for Rome--the decrepit Saturn of history--had
-fallen from empire to a tottering dotage. Her colonies--those Titans
-of the past--still quivered beneath the doom piled upon them by the
-Teuton. In Britain, the cry of a nation had gone out blindly into the
-night. Vortigern had perished in the flames of Genorium. Reculbuum,
-Rhutupiæ, and Durovernum had fallen. The fair fields of Kent were open
-to the pirate; while Aurelius, stout soldier-king, gathered spear and
-shield to remedy the need of Britain.
-
-The women upon the hill were but the creatures of destiny. Realism had
-touched them with cynical finger. The barbarians had come shorewards
-that day in their ships, and at the first breathing of the news the
-abbey dependants had fled, leaving nun and novice to the mercies of the
-moment. It had become a matter of flight or martyrdom. Certain fervent
-women had chosen to remain beside their abbess in the abbey chapel, to
-await with vesper chant and bell the coming of sword and saexe. Those
-more frail of spirit had fled with the novices from the valley, and
-now knelt numb with a tense terror on the brow of that windswept hill,
-watching fearfully for the abbey's doom. They could imagine what was
-passing in the shadowy chapel where they had so often worshipped. The
-face of the Madonna would be gazing placidly on death--and on more than
-death. It was all very swift--very terrible. Thenceforward cloister and
-garden were theirs no more.
-
-A red gleam started suddenly from the black mass in the valley. The
-nuns gripped hands and watched, while the gleam became a glare that
-poured steadily above the dark outline of the oaks. A long flame leapt
-up like a red finger above the trees. The belfry of the chapel rose
-blackly from a circlet of fire, and gilded smoke rolled away nebulously
-into the night. The barbarians had set torch to the place. The abbey of
-Avangel went up in flame.
-
-The tall novice who had been kneeling in advance of the main company
-rose to her feet, and turned to those who still watched and prayed
-under the pines. The girl's hood had fallen back; the hair that
-should have been primly coifed rolled down in billowy bronze upon her
-shoulders. There was infinite pride on the wistful face--a certain
-scorn for the frailer folk who wept and found sustenance in prayer. The
-girl's eyes shone largely even in the meagre light under the trees, and
-there was a straight courage about her lips. She approached and spoke
-to the women who knelt and watched the burning abbey in a cataleptic
-stupor.
-
-"Will you kneel all night?" she said.
-
-The words were scourges in their purpose. Several of the nuns looked up
-from the flames in the valley.
-
-"Shame on you, worldling!" said one of thin and thankless visage;
-"down on your knees, brat, and pray for the dead."
-
-The novice gave a curt, low laugh. The reproofs of a year rankled in
-her like bitter herbs.
-
-"Let the dead bury their dead," quoth she. "I am for life and the
-living."
-
-"Shame, shame!" came the ready response. "May the Mother of Mercy melt
-your proud heart, and punish you for your sins. You are bad to the
-core."
-
-"Shame or no shame," said the girl, "my heart can grieve for death as
-well as thine, Sister Claudia; and now the abbey's burnt, you may couch
-here and scold till dawn if you will. You may scold the heathen when
-they come to butcher you all. I warrant they will give such a beauty
-short shrift."
-
-The lean nun ventured no answer. She had been worsted before by this
-rebellious tongue, and had discovered expediency in silence. Several
-of the women had risen, and were thronging round the novice Igraine,
-querulous and fearful. Implicit faith, though pious and admirable in
-the extreme, neither pointed a path nor provided a lantern. Southwards
-lay the sea and the barbarians; the purlieus of Andredswold came down
-to touch the ocean. There was night in the sky; no refuge within miles,
-and wild folk enough in the world to make travelling sufficiently
-perilous. Moreover, the day's deed had harried the women's emotions
-into a condition of vibrating panic. The unknown seemed to hem them in,
-to smother as with a cloak. They were like children who fear to stir in
-the dark, and shrink from impalpable nothingness as though a strange
-hand waited to grip them to some spiritual torture. As it was, they
-were fluttering among the pines like birds who fear the falcon.
-
-"It grows dark," said one.
-
-"Let Claudia pray for us."
-
-"Igraine, you are wiser in the world than we!"
-
-"Truth," said the girl, "you may bide and snivel with Claudia if you
-will. I am for Anderida through the woods."
-
-"But the woods," said a child with wide, dark eyes, "the woods are
-fearful at night."
-
-"They are kinder than the heathen," said Igraine, taking the girl's
-hand. "Come with me; I will mother you."
-
-Even as she spoke the novice saw a point of fire disjoint itself from
-the dark circle of the oaks below. Another and another followed it, and
-began to jerk hither and thither in the meadows. The dashes of flame
-gradually took a northern trend, as though the torch-bearers were for
-ascending the long slope that idled up to the ragged thicket of pines.
-She turned without further vigil, and made the most of her tidings in
-an appeal to the women under the trees.
-
-"Look yonder," she said, pointing into the valley. "Let Sister Claudia
-say whether she will wait till those torches come over the hill."
-
-There was instant hubbub among the nuns. Cooped as they had been within
-the mothering arms of the Church, peril found them utterly impotent
-when self-reliance and natural instinct were needed to shepherd them
-from danger. The night seemed to sweep like a wheel with the burning
-pyre in the meadows for axle. The torches were moving hither and
-thither in fantastic fashion, as though the men who bore them were
-doubling right and left in the dark, like hounds casting about for a
-scent. The sight was sinister, and stirred the women to renewed panic.
-
-"Igraine, help us," came the cry.
-
-Even tyranny is welcome in times of peril. Witless, resourceless, they
-gathered about her in a dumb stupor. Even Claudia lost her greed for
-martyrdom and became human. They were all eager enough for the forest
-now, and hungry for a leader. Igraine stood up among them like a tall
-figure of hope. Her eyes were on the east, where a weird glow above the
-tree tops told her that the moon was rising.
-
-"See," she said, "we shall have light upon our way. There is a
-bridle-path through the wold here that goes north, and touches the
-road from Durovernum. I am going by that path, follow who will."
-
-"We will follow Igraine," came the answer.
-
-North, east, and west lay Andredswold, sinister as a sea at night. The
-hill, tangled with gorse and bracken, and sapped by burrows, dipped to
-it gradually like an outjutting of the land. To the east they could see
-a wide tangle of pines latticing the light of the moon. It was dark,
-and the ground more than dubious to the feet. The women, nine in all,
-herded close on Igraine, who walked like an Eastern shepherdess with
-the sheep following in her track. First came Claudia, who had held sway
-over the linen, with Malt, the stout cellaress, next Elaine and Lily,
-twin sisters, two nuns, and two novices. There was much stumbling, much
-clutching at one another in the dark; but, thanks to holy terror, their
-progress was in measure ungracefully speedy.
-
-The girl Igraine led with a keen gleam in her eyes and a queer
-cheerfulness upon her face, as she stepped out blithely for the dark
-mass where the wold began. Her sojourn in the abbey had been brief
-and stormy, a curt attempt at discipline that had failed most nobly.
-One might as well have sought to hem in spring with winter as to curb
-desire that leapt towards greenness and the dawn like joy. She had ever
-thought more of a net for her hair than of her rosary. The little pool
-in the pleasaunce had served her as her mirror, casting back a full
-face set with amber shadowed eyes, and a bosom more attuned to passion
-than to dreams of quiet sanctity. She had been the wayward child of the
-abbey flock, flooded with homilies, surrendered to eternal penances,
-yet holding her own in a fair worldly fashion that left the good women
-of the place wholly to leeward.
-
-Thrust out into the world again she took to the wild like a fox to
-the woodland, while her more tractable comrades were like caged doves
-baffled by unaccustomed freedom. Matins, complines, vespers were no
-more. Cold stone arched no more to tomb her fancies. Above stretched
-the free dome of the sky; around, the wilderness free and untainted; in
-lieu of psalms she heard the gathering cry of the wind, and the great
-voice of the forest at night.
-
-In due course they came to where a dark mass betokened the rampart
-thickets of the wold, rising like a wall across the sky. Igraine hoped
-for the track, and found it running like a white fillet about the brow
-of a wood. They followed till it thrust into the trees, a thin thread
-in the shadows. As they went, great oaks overreached them with sinuous
-limbs. The vault was fretted innumerably with the faint overdome of
-the sky. Now and again a solitary star glimmered through. To the women
-that place seemed like an interminable cavern, where grotto on grotto
-dwindled away into oblivious gloom. But for the track's narrow comfort,
-Igraine and her company would have been impotent indeed.
-
-The prospect was sad for these folk who had lived for peace, and had
-tuned their lives to placid chants and the balm of prayer. In Britain
-Christ was worshipped and the Cross adored, yet abbeys were burnt,
-and children martyred, and strong towns given over to sack and fire.
-Truth seemed to taunt them with the apparent impotence of their creed.
-The abbess Gratia had often said that Britain, for its sloth and sin,
-deserved to meet the scourge of war, and here were her words exampled
-by her own stark death. The nuns talked of the state of the land, as
-they plodded on through the night. There was no soul among them that
-had not been grossly stirred by the fate that had overtaken Avangel,
-Gratia, and her more zealous nuns. It was but natural that a cry for
-vengeance should have gained voice in the hearts of these outcast
-women, and that a certain querulous bitterness should have found tongue
-against those in power.
-
-Igraine, walking in the van, listened to their words, and laughed with
-some scorn in her heart.
-
-"You are very wise, all of you," she said presently over her shoulder.
-"You speak of war and disruption as though the whole kingdom were in
-the dust. True, Kent is lost, the heathen have burnt defenceless places
-on the coast, and have stormed a few towns. The abbey of Avangel is not
-all Britain. Have we not Aurelius and the great Uther? Our folk will
-gather head anon, and push these whelps into the sea."
-
-"God grant it," said Claudia, with a smirk heavenward.
-
-"We need a man," quoth Igraine.
-
-"Perhaps you will find him, pert one."
-
-"Peril will," said the girl; "there is no hero when there is no dragon
-or giant in need of the sword. Britain will find her knight ere long."
-
-"Lud," said Malt, the cellaress, "I wish I could find my supper."
-
-Thereat they all laughed, Igraine as heartily as any.
-
-"Perhaps Claudia will pray for manna dew," she said.
-
-"Scoffer!"
-
-"It will be cranberries, and bread and water, till better seasons come.
-I have heard that there are wild grapes in the wold."
-
-"Bread!" quoth Malt; "did some kind soul say bread?"
-
-"I have a small loaf here under my habit."
-
-"Ah, Igraine, girl, I would chant twenty psalms for a morsel of that
-loaf."
-
-"Chant away, sister. Begin on the 'Attendite, popule.' I believe it is
-one of the longest."
-
-"Don't trifle with a hungry wretch."
-
-"The psalms, Malt, or not a crust."
-
-"Keep it yourself, greedy hussy; I can go without."
-
-"We will share it, all of us, presently," said the girl, "unless Malt
-wants to eat the whole."
-
-They held on under the ban of night, following the track like Theseus
-did his thread. At times the path struck out into a patch of open
-ground, covered with scrub and bracken, or bristling thick with furze.
-Igraine had never seen such timid folk as these nuns from Avangel.
-If a stick cracked they would start, huddle together, and vow they
-heard footsteps. They mistook an owl's hoot for a heathen cry, and a
-night-jar's creaking note made them swear they caught the chafe of
-steel. Once they suffered a most shrewd fright. They drove a herd
-of red deer from cover, and the rush and tumultuous sound of their
-galloping created a most holy panic among the women. It was some time
-before Igraine could get them on the march again.
-
-As the night wore on they began to lag from sheer weariness. Two or
-three were feeble as sickly children, and the abbey life had done
-little for the body, though it had done much to deform the mind.
-Igraine had to turn tyrant in very earnest. She knew the women looked
-to her for courage and guidance, and that they would be hopeless
-without her stronger mind to lead them. She put this knowledge to
-effect, and held it like a lash over their weakly spirits.
-
-Igraine found abundant scope for her ingenuity. When they voted a halt
-for rest, she vowed she would hold on alone and leave them. The threat
-made the whole company trail after her like sheep. When they grumbled,
-she told tales of the savagery and lust of the heathen, and made their
-fears ache more lustily than did their feet. By such devices she kept
-them to it for the greater portion of the night, knowing that the
-shrewdest kindness lay in seeming harshness, and that to humour them
-was but mistaken pity.
-
-At last--heathen or no heathen--they would go no further. It was
-some hours before dawn. The trees had thinned, and through more open
-colonnades they looked out on what appeared to be a grass-grown valley
-sleeping peacefully under the moon. A great cedar grew near, a pyramid
-of gloom. Malt, the cellaress, grumbling and groaning, crept under its
-shadows, and commended Igraine to purgatorial fire. The rest, limp
-and spiritless, vowed they would rather die than take another step.
-Huddling together under the branches, they were soon half of them
-asleep in an ecstasy of weariness. Igraine, seeing further effort
-useless, surrendered to the inevitable, and lay down herself to sleep
-under the tree.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Day came with an essential stealth. The great trees stood without a
-rustling leaf, in a stupor of silence. A vast hush held as though the
-wold knelt at orisons. Soon ripple on ripple of light surged from the
-hymning east, and the night was not.
-
-The sleep of the women from Avangel had proved but brief and fitful,
-couched as they had been under so strange a roof. They were all awake
-under the cedar. Igraine, standing under its green ledges, listened to
-their monotonous talk as they rehearsed their plight dismally under
-the shade. The nun Claudia's voice was still raised weakly in pious
-fashion; she had learnt to ape saintliness all her life, and it was a
-mere habit with her. The cellaress's red face was in no measure placid;
-hunger had dissipated her patience like an ague, and she found comfort
-in grumbling. The younger women were less voluble, as age and custom
-behoved them to be. Unnaturally bred, they were like images of wax,
-capable only of receiving the impress of the minds about them. Such a
-woman as Malt owed her individuality solely to the superlative cravings
-of the flesh.
-
-About them rose the slopes of a valley, set tier on tier with trees,
-nebulous, silent in the now hurrying light. Grassland, moist and
-spangled, lay dew-heavy in the lap of the valley, with the track
-curling drearily into a further tunnel of green.
-
-Igraine, scanning the trees and the stretch of grassland, found on a
-sudden something to hold her gaze. On the southern side of the valley
-the walls of a building showed vaguely through the trees. It was so
-well screened that a transient glance would have passed over the line
-of foliage without discovering the white glimmer of stone. She pointed
-it out to her companions, who were quickly up from under the cedar
-at the thought of the meal and the material comforts such a forest
-habitation might provide. They were soon deep in the tall grass, their
-habits wet to the knee with dew, as they held across the valley for the
-manor amid the trees.
-
-The place gathered distinctness as they approached. Two horns of
-woodland jutted out--enclosing and holding it jealously from the
-track through the valley. There were outhouses packed away under the
-trees. A garden held it on the north. The building itself was modelled
-somewhat after the fashion of a Roman villa, with a porch--whitely
-pillared--leading from a terrace fringed with flowers.
-
-The silence of the place impressed itself upon Igraine and the women as
-they drew near from the meadowlands. The manor seemed lifeless as the
-woods that circled it. There were no cattle--no servants to be seen,
-not even a hound to bay warning on the threshold. Passing over a small
-stone bridge, they went up an avenue of cypresses that led primly to
-the garden and the terrace. They halted at the steps leading to the
-portico. The garden, broken in places, and somewhat unkempt, glistened
-with colour in the early sun; terrace and portico were void and silent;
-the whole manor seemed utterly asleep.
-
-The women halted by the stairway, and looked dubiously into one
-another's faces. There was something sinister about the place--a
-prophetic hush that seemed to stand with finger on lip and bid the
-curious forbear. After their march over the meadows, and considering
-the hungry plight they were in, it seemed more than unreasonable to
-turn away without a word. None the less, they all hesitated, beckoning
-each to her fellow to set foot first in this house of silence. Igraine,
-seeing their indecision, took the initiative as usual, and began to
-climb the steps that led to the portico. Claudia and the rest followed
-her in a body.
-
-Within the portico the carved doors were wide. The sun streamed down
-through a latticed roof into a peristylum, where flowers grew, and a
-pool shone silverly. There were statues at the angles; one had been
-thrown down, and lay half buried in a mass of flowers. The place looked
-wholly deserted, though, by the orderly mood of court and garden, it
-could not have been long since human hands had tended it.
-
-The women gathered together about the little font in the centre of the
-peristylum, and debated together in low tones. They were still but
-half at ease with the place, and quite ready to suspect some sudden
-development. The house had a scent of tragedy about it that was far
-from comforting.
-
-Said Malt, "I should judge, sisters, that the folk have fled, and that
-we are to be sustained by the hand of grace. Come and search."
-
-Claudia demurred a moment.
-
-"Is it lawful," quoth she, "to possess one's self of food and raiment
-in a strange and empty house?"
-
-"Nonsense," said the cellaress with a sniff.
-
-"But, Malt, I never stole a crust in my life."
-
-"Better learn the craft, then. King David stole the shewbread."
-
-"It was given him of the priests."
-
-"Tut, sister, then are we wiser than David; we can thieve with our own
-hands. I say this house is God-sent for our need. May I stifle if I
-err."
-
-"Malt is right," said Igraine, laughing; "let us deprive the barbarians
-of a pie or a crucifix."
-
-"Aye," chimed Malt, "want makes thieving honest. _Jubilate Deo._ I'm
-for the pantry."
-
-A colonnade enclosed the peristylum on every quarter. Beneath the
-shadows cast by the architrave and roof, showed the portals of the
-various chambers. Igraine led the way. The first room that they essayed
-appeared to have been a sleeping apartment, for there were beds in it,
-the bedding lying disordered and fallen upon the floor as though there
-had been a struggle, or a sudden wild flight. It was a woman's chamber,
-judging by its mirror of steel, and the articles that were scattered
-on floor and table. The next room proved to be a species of parlour or
-living-room. A meal had been spread upon the table, and left untouched.
-Platter and drinking cups were there, a dish of cakes, a joint on a
-great charger, bread, olives, fruit, and wine. Armour hung on the
-walls, with mirrors of steel, and paintings upon panels of wood.
-
-The women made themselves speedily welcome after the trials of the
-night. Each was enticed by some special object, and character leaked
-out queerly in the choosing. Malt ran for a beaker of wine; the cakes
-were pilfered by the younger folk; Claudia--whispering of Saxon
-desecration--possessed herself with an obeisance of a little silver
-cross that hung upon the wall. Igraine took down a bow, a quiver
-of arrows, and a sheathed hunting knife; she slung the quiver over
-her shoulder, and strapped the knife to her girdle. The clear kiss
-of morning had sharpened the hunger of a night, and the meal spread
-in that woodland manor proved very comforting to the fugitives from
-Avangel.
-
-Satisfied, they passed out to explore the rooms as yet unvisited. A
-fine curiosity led them, for they were like children who probe the dark
-places of a ruin. The eastern chambers gave no greater revealings than
-did those upon the west. The kitchen quarters were empty and soundless,
-though there was a joint upon the spit that hung over the ashes of a
-spent fire. It seemed more than likely that the inmates had fled in
-fear of the barbarians, leaving the house in the early hours of some
-previous dawn.
-
-As yet they had not visited a room whose door opened upon the southern
-quarter of the peristyle. Judging by its portal, it promised to be a
-greater chamber than any of the preceding, probably the banqueting or
-guest room. The door stood ajar, giving view of a frescoed wall within.
-
-Malt, who had waxed jovial since her communion with the tankard, pushed
-the door open, and went frankly into the half light of a great chamber.
-She came to an abrupt halt on the threshold, with a fat hand quavering
-the symbol of a cross in the air. The women crowded the doorway, and
-looked in over the cellaress's stout shoulders.
-
-In a gilded chair in the centre of the room sat the figure of a man.
-His hands were clenched upon the lion-headed arms of the siege, and
-his chin bowed down upon his breast. He was clad in purple; there were
-rings upon his fingers, and his brow was bound with a band of gold. At
-his feet crouched a great wolf-hound, motionless, dead.
-
-The women in the doorway stared on the scene in silence. The man in the
-chair might have been thought asleep save for a certain stark look--a
-bleak immobility that contradicted the possibility of life. Here they
-had stumbled on tragedy with a vengeance. The mute face of death lurked
-in the shadows, and the vast mystery of life seemed about them like a
-cold vapour. It was a sudden change from sunlight into shade.
-
-Igraine pushed past Malt, and ventured close to the crouching hound.
-Bending down, she looked into the dead man's face. It was pinched and
-grey, but young, none the less, and bearing even in death a certain
-sensuous haughtiness and dissolute beauty. The man had been dark, with
-hair turbulent and lustrous. In his bosom glinted the silver pommel of
-a knife, and there were stains upon cloak and tessellated pavement.
-Clasped in one hand was a small cross of gold that looked as though it
-had been plucked from a chain or necklet, and held gripped in the death
-agony. The wolf-hound had been thrust through the body with a sword.
-
-"Hum," said Malt, with a sniff,--"Christian work here. And a comely
-fellow, too--more's the pity. Look at the rings on his fingers;
-I wonder whether I might take one for prayer money? It would buy
-candles."
-
-Igraine was still looking at the dead man with strange awe in her heart.
-
-"Keep off," she said, thrusting off Malt; "the man has been stabbed."
-
-"Well, haven't I eyes too, hussy?"
-
-Claudia came in, white and quavering, with her crucifix up.
-
-"Poor wretch!" said she; "can't we bury him?"
-
-"Bury him!" cried Malt.
-
-"Yes, sister."
-
-"Thanks, no. It would spoil my dinner."
-
-Claudia gave a sudden scream, and jumped back, holding her skirts up.
-
-"There's blood on the floor! Holy mother! did the dog move?"
-
-"Move!" quoth Malt, giving the brute a kick; "what a mouse you are,
-Claudia."
-
-"Are you sure the man's dead?"
-
-"Dead, and cold," said Igraine, touching his cheek, and drawing away
-with a shiver. "Come away, the place makes my flesh creep. Shut the
-door, Malt. Let us leave him so."
-
-The women from Avangel had seen enough of the manor in the forest.
-Certainly, it held nothing more perilous than a corpse, perched
-stiffly in a gilded chair; but the dead man seemed to exert a sinister
-influence upon the spirits of the company, and to stifle any desire for
-a further sojourn in the place. Folk with murder fresh upon their hands
-might still be within the purlieus of the valley. The women thought
-of the glooms of the forest, and of the strong walls of Anderida, and
-discovered a very lively desire to be free of Andredswold, and the
-threats of the unknown.
-
-They left the man sitting in his chair, with the hound at his feet,
-and went to gather food for the day's journey. Bread they took, and
-meat, and bound them in a sheet, while Malt filled a flask with wine,
-and bestowed it at her girdle. Igraine still had her bow, shafts,
-and hunting knife. Before sallying, they remembered the dead. It was
-Igraine's thought. They went and stood before the door of the great
-chamber, sang a hymn, and said a prayer. Then they left the place, and
-held on into the forest.
-
-Nothing befell them on their way that morning. It was noon before they
-struck the road from Durovernum to Anderida, a straight and serious
-highway that went whitely amid wastes of scrub, thickets, and dark
-knolls of trees. The women were glad of its honest comfort, and blessed
-the Romans who had wrought the road of old. Later in the day they
-neared the sea again. Between masses of trees, and over the slopes,
-they caught glimpses of the blue plain that touched the sky. From a
-little hill that gave broader view, they saw the white sails of ships
-that were ploughing westward with a temperate wind. They took them for
-the galleys of the Saxons, and the thought hurried them on their way
-the more.
-
-Presently they came to a mild declivity, with a broken toll-house
-standing by the roadside, and two horsemen on the watch there, as the
-distant galleys swept over the sea towards the west. The men belonged
-to the royal forces in Anderida. They were reticent in measure, and in
-no optimistic mood. They told how the heathen had swept the coast, how
-their ships had ventured even to Vectis, to burn, slay, and martyr. The
-women learnt that Andred's town was some ten miles distant. There was
-little likelihood, so the men said, of their getting within the walls
-that night, for the place was in dread of siege, and was shut up like a
-rock after dusk.
-
-Igraine and the nuns elected, none the less, to hold upon their way.
-Despite their weariness, the women preferred to push on and gain
-ground, rather than to lag and lose courage. For all they knew, the
-Saxons might be soon ashore, ready to raid and slay in their very path.
-They left the soldiers at the toll-house, and went downhill into a long
-valley.
-
-Possibly they had gone a mile or more when they heard the sound of
-galloping coming in their wake. On the slope of the hill they had left,
-they could see a distant wave of dust curling down the road like
-smoke. The two men from Andred's town were coming on at a gallop. They
-were very soon within bowshot, but gave no hint of halting. Thundering
-on, they drew level with the women, shouted as they went by, and held
-on fast,--dust and spume flying.
-
-"God's curse upon the cravens," said Malt, the cellaress.
-
-Cravens they were in sense; yet the men had reason on their side,
-and the women were left staring at the diminishing fringe of dust.
-There was much frankness in the phenomenon, a curt hint that carried
-emphasis, and advised action. "To the woods," it said; "to the woods,
-good souls, and that quickly."
-
-The road ran through the flats at that place, with marsh and meadowland
-on either hand. Further westward, the wold thrust forth a finger from
-the north to touch the highway. Southward, scrub and grassland swept
-away to the sea. It was when looking southwards that the nuns from
-Avangel discovered the stark truth of the soldier's warning. Against
-the skyline could be seen a number of jerking specks, moving fast over
-the open land, and holding north-west as though to touch the road. They
-were the figures of men riding.
-
-The outjutting of woodland that rolled down to edge the highway was a
-quarter of a mile from where the women stood. A bleak line of roadway
-parted them from the mazy refuge of the wold. They started away at
-a run; Igraine and another novice dragging the nun Claudia between
-them. The display was neither Olympic nor graceful; it would have been
-ridiculous but for the stern need that inspired it. Igraine and her
-fellows made the best of the highway. In the west, the wold seemed to
-stretch an arm to them like a mother.
-
-The heathen raiders were coming fast over the marshes. Igraine,
-dragging the panting Claudia by the hand, looked back and took measure
-of the chase. There were some score at the gallop three furlongs or
-more away, with others on foot, holding on to stirrups, running and
-leaping like madmen. The girl caught their wild, burly look even at
-that distance. They were hallooing one to another, tossing axe and
-spear--making a race of it, like huntsmen at full pelt. Possibly there
-was sport in hounding a company of women, with the chance of spoil and
-something more brutish to entice.
-
-Igraine and her flock were struggling on for very life. Their feet
-seemed weighted with the shackles of an impotent fear, while every
-yard of the white road appeared three to them as they ran. How they
-anguished and prayed for the shadows of the wood. A frail nun, winded
-and lagging, began to scream like a hare when the hounds are hard on
-her haunches. Another minute, and the trees seemed to stride down to
-them with green-bosomed kindness. A wild scramble through a shallow
-dyke brought them to bracken and a tangled barrier about the hem of the
-wood. Then they were amid the sleek, solemn trunks of a beech wood,
-scurrying up a shadowed aisle with the dull thudding of the nearing
-gallop in their ears.
-
-It was borne in upon Igraine's reason as she ran that the trees would
-barely save them from the purpose of pursuit. The women--limp, witless,
-dazed by danger--could hardly hold on fast enough to gain the deeper
-mazes of the place, and the sanctuary the wold could give. Unless the
-pursuit could be broken for a season, the whole company would fall to
-the net of the heathen, and only the Virgin knew what might befall them
-in that solitary place. Sacrifice flashed into the girl's vision--a
-sudden ecstasy of courage, like hot flame. These abbey folk had been
-none too gentle with her. None the less she would essay to save them.
-
-She cast Claudia's hand aside, and turned away abruptly from the rest.
-They wavered, looking at her as though for guidance, too flurried for
-sane measures. Igraine waved them on, with a certain pride in her that
-seemed to chant the triumph song of death.
-
-"What will you do, girl? Are you mad?"
-
-"Go!" was all she said. "Perhaps you will pray for me as for Gratia the
-abbess."
-
-"They will kill you!"
-
-"Better one than all."
-
-They wavered, unwilling to be wholly selfish despite their fear and
-the sounding of pursuit. There shone a fine light on the girl's face
-as they beheld her--tyrannical even in heroism. Her look awed them and
-made them ashamed; yet they obeyed her, and like so many winging birds
-they fled away into the green shadows.
-
-Igraine watched them a moment, saw the grey flicker of their gowns
-go amid the trees, and then turned to front her fortune. Pursing her
-lips into a queer smile, she took post behind a tree bole, and waited
-with an arrow fitted to her string. She heard a sluthering babel as
-the men reined in, with much shouting, on the forest's margin. They
-were very near now. Even as she peered round her tree trunk a figure
-on foot flashed into the grass ride, and came on at the trot. The bow
-snapped, the arrow streaked the shadows, and hummed cheerily into the
-man's thigh. Igraine had not hunted for nothing. A second fellow edged
-into view, and took the point in his shoulder. Igraine darted back some
-forty paces and waited for more.
-
-In this fashion--slipping from tree to tree, and edging north-west--she
-held them for a furlong or more. The end came soon with an empty
-quiver. The wood seemed full of armed men; they were too speedy for
-her, too near to her for flight. She threw the empty quiver at her
-feet, with the bow athwart it, put a hand in the breast of her habit,
-and waited. It was not for long. A man ran out from behind a tree and
-came to a curt halt fronting her.
-
-He was young, burly, with a great tangle of hair, and a yellow beard
-that bristled like a hound's collar. A naked sword was in his hand,
-a buckler strapped between his shoulders. He laughed when he saw the
-girl--the coarse laugh of a Teuton--and came some paces nearer to her,
-staring in her face. She was very rich and comely in a way foreign to
-the fellow's fancy. There was that in his eyes that said as much. He
-laughed again, with a guttural oath, and stretched out a hand to grip
-the girl's shoulder.
-
-An instant shimmer of steel, and Igraine had smitten him above the
-golden torque that ringed his throat. Life rushed out in a red
-fountain. He went back from her with a stagger, clutching at the place,
-and cursing. As the blood ebbed he dropped to his knees, and thence
-fell slantwise against a tree. He had found death in that stroke.
-
-A hand closed on the girl's wrist. The knife that had been turned
-towards her own heart was smitten away and spurned to a distance. There
-were men all about her--ogrish folk, moustachioed, jerkined in skins,
-bare armed, bare legged. Igraine stood like a statue--impotent--frozen
-into a species of apathy. The bearded faces thronged her, gaped at her
-with a gross solemnity. She had no glance for them, but thought only of
-the man twitching in the death trance. The wood seemed full of gruff
-voices, of grotesque words mouthed through hair.
-
-Then the barbaric circle rippled and parted. A rugged-faced old man
-with white hair and beard came forward slowly. There was a tense
-silence over the throng as the old man stood and looked at the figure
-at his feet. There were shadows on the earl's face, and his hands
-shook, for the smitten man was his son.
-
-Out of silence grew clamour. Hands were raised, fingers pointed, a
-sword was poised tentatively above the girl's head. The wood seemed
-full of bearded and grotesque wrath, and the hollow aisles rang with
-the clash of sword on buckler. But age was not for sudden violence,
-though the blood of youth ebbed on the grass. The old man pointed to a
-tree, spoke briefly, quietly, and the rough warriors obeyed him.
-
-They stripped Igraine, cast her clothes at her feet, and bound her to
-the trunk of the tree with their girdles. Then they took up the body of
-the dead man, and so departed into the forest.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-It was well towards evening when the men disappeared into the wood,
-leaving the girl bound naked to the tree. The day was calm and
-tranquil, with the mood of June on the wind, and a benign sky above.
-Igraine's hair had fallen from its band, and now hung in bronze masses
-well-nigh to her knees, covering her as with a cloak. Her habit, shift,
-and sandals lay close beside her on the grass. The barbarians had
-robbed her of nothing, according to their old earl's wishes. She was
-simply bound there, and left unscathed.
-
-When the men were gone, and she began to realise what had passed, she
-felt a flush spread from face to ankle, a glow of shame that was keen
-as fire. Her whole body seemed rosily flaked with blushes. The very
-trees had eyes, and the wind seemed to whisper mischief. There were
-none to see, none to wonder, and yet she felt like Eve in Eden when
-knowledge had smitten the pure flesh with gradual shame. Though the
-place was solitary as a dry planet, her aspen fancy peopled it with
-life. She could still see the heavy-jowled barbaric faces staring at
-her like the malign masks of a dream.
-
-The west was already prophetic of night. There was the golden glow of
-the decline through the billowy foliage of the trees, and the shadows
-were very still and reverent, for the day was passing. A beam of gold
-slanted down upon Igraine's breast, and slowly died there amid her
-hair. The west flamed and faded, the east grew blind. Soon the day was
-not.
-
-Igraine watched the light faint above the trees, wondering in her heart
-what might befall her before another sun could set. She had tried her
-bonds, and had found them lacking sympathy in that they were staunch
-as strength could make them. She was cramped, too, and began to long
-for the hated habit that had trailed the galleries of Avangel, and had
-brought such scorn into her discontented heart. There was no hope for
-it. She was pilloried there, bound body, wrist, and ankle. Philosophy
-alone remained to her, a poor enough cloak to the soul, still worse for
-things tangible.
-
-Her plight gave her ample time for meditation. There were many chances
-open to her, and even in mere possibilities fate had her at a vantage.
-In the first place, she might starve, or other unsavoury folk find her,
-and her second state be worse than her first. Then there were wolves in
-the wold; or country people might find and release her, or even Claudia
-and the women might return and see how she had fared. There was little
-comfort in this last thought. She shrewdly guessed that the abbey folk
-would not stop till they happened on a stone wall, or the heathen took
-them. Lastly, the road was at no very great distance, and she might
-hear perchance if any one passed that way.
-
-Presently the moon rose upon Andredswold with a stupendous splendour.
-The veil of night seemed dusted with silver as it swept from her
-tiar of stars. Innumerable glimmering eyes starred the foliage of
-the beeches. Vague lights streamed down and netted the shadows with
-mysterious magic. Here and there a tree trunk stood like a ghost,
-splashed with a phosphor tunic.
-
-The wilderness was soundless, the billowy bastions of the trees
-unruffled by a breath. The hush seemed vast, irrefutable, supreme. Not
-a leaf sighed, not a wind wandered in its sleep. The great trees stood
-in a silver stupor, and dreamt of the moon. The solemn aisles were
-still as Thebes at midnight; the smooth boles of the beeches like ebony
-beneath canopies of jet.
-
-The scene held Igraine in wonder. There was a mystery about a moonlit
-forest that never lessened for her. The vasty void of the night,
-untainted by a sound, seemed like eternity unfolded above her ken. She
-forgot her plight for the time, and took to dreaming, such dreams as
-the warm fancy of the young heart loves to remember. Perhaps beneath
-such a benediction she thought of a pavilion set amid water lilies, and
-a boy who had looked at her with boyish eyes. Yet these were childish
-things. They lost substance before the chafing of the cords that bound
-her to the tree.
-
-Presently she began to sing softly to herself for the cheating of
-monotony. She was growing cold and hungry, too, despite all the magic
-of the place, and the hours seemed to drag like a homily. Then with
-a gradual stealthiness the creeping fear of death and the unknown
-began to steal in and cramp even her buoyant courage. It was vain for
-her to put the peril from her, and to trust to day and the succour
-that she vowed in her heart must come. Dread smote into her more
-cynically than did the night air. What might be her end? To hang there
-parched, starved, delirious till life left her; to hang there still,
-a loathsome, livid thing, rotting like a cloak. To be torn and fed
-upon by birds. She knew the region was as solitary as death, and that
-the heathen had emptied it of the living. The picture grew upon her
-distraught imagination till she feared to look on it lest it should be
-the lurid truth.
-
-It was about midnight, and she was beginning to quake with cold, when
-a sound stumbled suddenly out of silence, and set her listening. It
-dwindled and grew again, came nearer, became rhythmic, and ringing in
-the keen air. Igraine soon had no doubts as to its nature. It was the
-steady smite of hoofs on the high-road, the rhythm of a horse walking.
-
-Now was her chance if she dared risk the character of the rider. Doubts
-flashed before her a moment, hovered, and then merged into decision.
-Better to risk the unknown, she thought, than tempt starvation tied to
-the tree. She made her choice and acted.
-
-"Help, there! Help!"
-
-The words went like silver through the woods. Igraine, listening
-hungrily, strained forward at her bonds to catch the answer that might
-come to her. The sound of hoofs ceased, and gave place to silence.
-Possibly the rider was in doubt as to the testimony of his own hearing.
-Igraine called again, and again waited.
-
-Stillness held. Then there was a stir, and a crackling as of trampled
-brushwood, followed by the snort of a horse and the thrill of steel.
-The sounds came nearer, with the deadened tramp of hoofs for an
-underchant. Igraine, full of hope and fear, of doubt and gratitude,
-kept calling for his guidance. Presently a cry came back to her in turn.
-
-"By the holy cross, who are you that calls?"
-
-"A woman," she cried in turn, "bound here by the heathen."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Here, in a grass ride, tied to a tree."
-
-The words that had come to her were very welcome, heralding, as they
-did, a friend, at least in race, and there was a manly depth in the
-voice, too, that gave her comfort. She saw a glimmer of steel in the
-shadows of the wood as man and horse drew into being from the darkness.
-Moonlight played fitfully upon them, weaving silver gleams amid a smoke
-of gloom, making a white mist about the man's great horse. A single
-ray burnt and blazed like a halo about the rider's casque, and his
-spear-point flickered like a star beneath the vaultings of the trees.
-He had halted, a solitary figure wrapped round with night, and rendered
-grand and wizard by the misty web of the moon.
-
-The sight was pathetic enough, yet infinitely fair. Light streamed
-through, and fell full upon the tree where Igraine stood. The girl's
-limbs were white and luminous against the dark bosom of the beech,
-and her rich hair fell about her like mist. As for the strange rider,
-he could at least claim the inspiration accorded to a Christian.
-The servant of the Galilean has, like Constantine, a symbol in the
-sky, prophetic in all need, generous of all guidance. The Cross is a
-perpetual Delphi oracular on trivial matters as on the destinies of
-kingdoms. The man dismounted, knelt for a moment with sword held before
-him, and then rose and strode to the tree with shield held before his
-face.
-
-Igraine was looking at the figure in armour, kindly, redly, from amid
-the masses of her hair. The small noblenesses of his bearing towards
-her had won her trust with a flush of gratitude. The man saw only
-the white feet like marble amid the moss as he cut the thongs where
-they circled the tree. The bands fell, he saw the white feet flicker,
-a trail of hair waving under his shield. Then he turned on his heel
-without a word, and went to tether his horse.
-
-The interlude was as considerate as courtesy had intended. Igraine
-darted for her habit with a rapturous sigh. When the man turned
-leisurely again, a tall girl met him, cloaked in grey, with her hair
-still hanging about her, and sandals on her feet.
-
-"Mother Virgin, a nun!"
-
-The words seemed sudden as an echo. Igraine bent her head to hide
-the half-abashed, half-smiling look upon her face. It had been thus
-at Avangel. Nun and novice had worn like habits, and there had
-been nothing to distinguish them save the final solemn vow. The
-man's notions were plainly celibate, and, with a sudden twinkling
-inspiration, she fancied they should bide so. It would make matters
-smoother for them both, she thought.
-
-"My prayers are yours, daily, for this service," she said.
-
-The man bent his head to her.
-
-"I am thankful, madame," he answered, "that I should have been so good
-fortuned as to be able to befriend you. How came you by such evil
-hazard?"
-
-"I was of Avangel," she said.
-
-"You speak as of the past," quoth he, with a keen look.
-
-"Avangel was burnt and sacked but yesterday," she said. "Many of the
-nuns were martyred; some few escaped. I was made captive here, and
-bound to this tree by the heathen."
-
-Igraine could see the man's face darken even in the moonlight, as
-though pain and wrath held mute confederacy there. He crossed himself,
-and then stood with both hands on the pommel of his sword, stately and
-statuesque.
-
-"And the Lady Gratia?" he said.
-
-"Dead, I fear."
-
-A half-heard groan seemed to come from the man's helmet. He bent his
-head into the shadows and stood stiff and silent as though smitten into
-thought. Presently he seemed to remember himself, Igraine, and the
-occasion.
-
-"And yourself, madame?" he said, with a twinge of tenderness in his
-voice.
-
-The girl blushed, and nearly stammered.
-
-"I am unscathed," she hastened to say, "thanks to heaven. I am safe and
-whole as if I had spent the day in a convent cell. My name is Igraine,
-if you would know it. I fear I have told you heavy tidings."
-
-The man turned his face to the sky like one who looks into other worlds.
-
-"It is nothing," he said, gazing into the night; "nothing but what
-we must look for in these stark days. Our altars smoke, our blood is
-spilt, and yet we still pray. Yet may I be cursed, and cursed again, if
-I do not dye my sword for this."
-
-There was a sudden bleak fierceness in his voice that betrayed his
-fibre and the strong thoughts that were stirring in his heart that
-moment. His face looked almost fanatical in the cold gloom, gaunt,
-heavy-jawed, lion-like. Igraine watched this thunder-cloud of thought
-and passion in silence, thinking she would meet the man in the wrack of
-life rather as friend than as foe. The brief mood seemed to pass, or at
-least to lose expression. Again, there was that in the kindness of his
-face that made the girl feel beneath the eye of a brother.
-
-"You will ride with me?" he asked.
-
-Igraine hesitated a moment.
-
-"I was for Anderida," she said, "and it is only three leagues distant.
-Now that I am free I can go through the wold alone, for I am no child."
-
-"An insult to my manhood," said the stranger.
-
-"But the heathen are everywhere, and I should but cumber you."
-
-"Madame, you talk like a fool."
-
-There was a sheer sincerity about the speech that pleased Igraine. His
-spirit seemed to overtop hers, and to silence argument. Proud heart!
-yet without thought of debate she gave way in the most placid manner,
-and was content to be shepherded.
-
-"I might walk at your stirrup," she said meekly.
-
-The man seemed to ponder. He merely looked at her with dark, solemn
-eyes, showing a quiet disregard for her humility.
-
-"Listen to me," he said, "you, a woman, must not attempt Anderida
-alone. The town will be beleaguered, or I am no prophet. To Anderida
-I cannot go, for I have folk at Winchester who wait my coming. If you
-can put trust in me, and will ride with me to Winchester, you will find
-harbour there."
-
-She considered a moment.
-
-"Winchester," she said, "yes, and most certainly I trust you."
-
-The man stretched out a hand to her with a smile.
-
-"God willing," he said, "I will bear you safe to the place. As for your
-frocks and vows, they must follow necessity, and pocket their pride. It
-will not damn you to ride before a man."
-
-"I trow not," she said, with a little laugh that seemed to make the
-leaves quiver. So they took horse together, and rode out from the beech
-wood into the moonlight.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-When they were clear of the solemn beeches, and saw the road white
-as white before them, Igraine began to tell the man of the doom of
-Avangel, and the great end made by Gratia the abbess. The knight had
-folded his red cloak and spread it for her comfort. Her tale seemed
-very welcome to him despite its grievous humour, and he questioned
-her much concerning Gratia, her goodness and her charity. Now it had
-been well known in Avangel that Gratia had come of noble and excellent
-descent, and seeing that this stranger had been familiar with her in
-the past, Igraine guessed shrewdly that he himself was of some ancient
-and goodly stock. To tell the truth, she was very curious concerning
-him, and it was not long before she found a speech ready to her tongue
-likely to draw some confession from his lips.
-
-"I have promised to pray for you," she said, "and pray for you I will,
-seeing that you have done me so great a blessing to-night. When I bow
-to the Virgin and the Saints, what name may I remember?"
-
-The man did not look at her, for her face was in the shadow of her hood
-and his clear and white in the light of the moon.
-
-"To some I am known as Sir Pelleas," he said.
-
-"And to me?"
-
-"As Sir Pelleas, if it please you, madame."
-
-Igraine understood that she was to be pleased with the name, whether
-she liked it or not.
-
-"Then for Sir Pelleas I will pray," she said, "and may my gratitude
-avail him."
-
-There was silence for a space, broken by the rhythmic play of hoofs
-upon the road, and the dull jar of steel. Igraine was meditating
-further catechism, adapting her questions for the knowledge she wished
-for.
-
-"You ride errant," she said presently.
-
-"I ride alone, madame."
-
-"The wold is a rude region set thick with perils."
-
-"Very true," quoth the man.
-
-"Perhaps you are a venturesome spirit."
-
-"I believe that I am often as careful as death."
-
-Igraine made her culminating suggestion.
-
-"Some high deed must have been in your heart," she said, "or probably
-you would not have risked so much."
-
-The man Pelleas did not even look at her. She felt the bridle-arm that
-half held her tighten unconsciously, as though he were steeling himself
-against her curiosity.
-
-"Madame," he said very gravely, "every man's business should be for his
-own heart, and I do not know that I have any need to share the right or
-wrong of mine with others. It is a grand thing to be able to keep one's
-own counsel. It is enough for you to know my name."
-
-Igraine none the less was not a bit abashed.
-
-"There is one thing I would hear," she said, "and that is how you came
-to know of the abbess Gratia."
-
-For the moment the man looked black, and his lips were stern--
-
-"You may know if you wish," he said.
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Madame, the Lady Gratia was my mother."
-
-Igraine felt a flood of sudden shame burst redly into her heart. Gratia
-was the man's mother, and she had been plying him with questions,
-cruelly curious. She caught a short, shallow breath, and hung her head,
-shrinking like a prodigal.
-
-"Set me down," she said. "I am not worthy to ride with you."
-
-"Pardon me," quoth the man; "you did not think, not knowing I was in
-pain."
-
-"Set me down," was all she said; "set me down--set me down."
-
-The man Pelleas changed his tone.
-
-"Madame," he said, with a sudden gentleness that made her desire to
-weep, "I have forgiven you. What, then, does it matter?"
-
-Igraine hung her head.
-
-"I am altogether ashamed," she said.
-
-She drew her hood well over her face, and took her reproof to heart
-like a veritable penitent. Even religious solemnities make little
-change in the notorious weaknesses of woman. Igraine was angry, not
-only for having blundered clumsily against the man's sorrow, but also
-because of the somewhat graceless part she seemed to have played after
-the deliverance he had vouchsafed her. As yet her character seemed to
-have lost honour fast by mere brief contrast with the man's.
-
-Pelleas meanwhile rode with eyes watching the wan stretch of road to
-the west. On either hand the woods rose up like nebulous hills bowelled
-by tunnelled mysteries of gloom. He had turned his horse to the grass
-beside the roadway, so that the tramp of hoofs should fall muffled on
-the air. Igraine, close against his steeled breast, with his bridle-arm
-about her, looked into his face from the shadows of her hood, and found
-much to initiate her liking.
-
-If she loved strength, it was there. If she desired the grand reserve
-of silent vigour, it was there also. The deeply caverned eyes watching
-through the night seemed dark with a quiet destiny. The large, finely
-moulded face, gaunt and white in its meditative repose, seemed fit to
-front the ruins of a stricken land. It was the face of a man who had
-watched and striven, who had followed truth like a shadow, and had
-found the light of life in the heavens. There was bitterness there,
-pain, and the ghost of a sad desire that had pleaded with death. The
-face would have seemed morose, but for a certain something that made
-its shadows kind.
-
-Instinctively, as she watched the mask of thought beneath the dark arch
-of his open casque, she felt that he had memories in his heart at that
-moment. His thoughts were not for her, however much she pitied him or
-longed to tell him of her shame and sympathy. Nothing could come into
-that sad session of remembrances, save the soul of the man and the
-memories of his mother. That he was grieving deeply Igraine knew well.
-His was a strong nature that brooded in silence, and felt the more;
-it must be a terrible thing, she thought, to have the martyrdom of a
-mother haunting the heart like a fell dream at night.
-
-Slipping from such a reverie, the turmoil and weariness of the past
-days returned to take their tribute. Despite the strangeness of the
-night, Igraine began to feel sleepy as a tired child. The magnetic
-calm of the man beside her seemed to lull to slumber, while the motion
-of the ride cradled her the more. The noise of hoofs, the dull clink
-of scabbard against spur or harness, grew faint and faint. The woods
-seemed to swim into a mist of silver. She saw, as in a dream, the
-strong face above her staring calmly into the night, the long spear
-poised heavenwards. Her head was on the man's shoulder. With scarcely a
-thought she was asleep.
-
-It was then that Pelleas discovered the girl heavy in his arms, and
-looked down to find her sleeping, with hood fallen and a white face
-turned peacefully to his. Strangely enough, the sorrow that had taken
-him seemed to make his senses vibrate strongly to the more human things
-of life. The supple warmth of the girl's slim body crept up the sinews
-of his arm like a subtle flame. From her half-parted lips the sigh of
-her breathing came into his bosom. Over his harness clouded her hair,
-and her two hands had fastened themselves upon his sword-belt with a
-restful trust.
-
-The man bent his head and watched her in some awe. Her lips were like
-autumn fruit fed wistfully on moonlight. To Pelleas, woman was still
-wonderful, a creature to be touched with reverence and soft delight.
-The drab, the scold, and the harlot had failed to debase the ideals
-of a staunch spirit, and the fair flesh at his breast was as full of
-mystery as a woman could be.
-
-He took his fill of gazing, feeling half ashamed of the deed, and half
-dreading lest Igraine should wake suddenly and look deeply into his
-eyes. He felt his flesh creep with magic when she stirred or sighed,
-or when the hands upon his belt twitched in their slumber. Pelleas
-had seen stark things of late, burnt hamlets, priests slaughtered and
-churches in flames, children dead in the trampled places of the slain.
-He had ridden where smoke ebbed heavenwards, and blood clotted the
-green grass. Now this ride beneath the quiet eyes of night, with the
-bosomed silence of the woods around, and this lily plucked from death
-in his arms, seemed like a passage of calm after a page of tempest.
-Little wonder that he looked long into the girl's face, and thrilled
-to the soft sway of her bosom. He thanked God in his heart that he
-had plucked her blemishless from gradual death. It was even thus, he
-thought, that a good soldier should ride into Paradise bearing the soul
-of the woman he loved.
-
-Igraine stirred little in her sleep. "Poor child," thought Pelleas,
-"she has suffered much, has feared death, and is weary. Let her sleep
-the night through if she can." So he drew the cloak gently about her,
-said his prayers in his heart, and, holding as much as possible under
-the shadows of the trees, kept watch patiently on the track before him.
-
-All that night Pelleas rode, thinking of his mother, with the girl
-sleeping in his arms. He saw the moon go down in the west, while the
-grey mist of the hour before dawn made the forest gaunt like an abode
-of the dead. He heard the birds wake in brake and thicket. He saw the
-red deer scamper, frightened into the glooms, and the rabbits scurrying
-amid the bracken. When the east mellowed he found himself in fair
-meadowlands lying locked in the depths of the wold, where flowers were
-thick as on some rich tapestry, and where the scent of dawn was as the
-incense of many temples. With a calm sorrow for the dead he rode on,
-threading the meadowland, till the girl woke and looked up into his
-face with a little sigh. Then he smiled at her half sadly, and wished
-her good-morning.
-
-Igraine, wide-eyed, looked round in a daze.
-
-"Day?" she said, "and meadows? It was moonlight when I fell asleep."
-
-"It has dawned an hour or more."
-
-"Then I have slept the night through? You must be tired to death, and
-stiff with holding me."
-
-"Not so," said Pelleas.
-
-"I am sorry that I have been selfish," she said. "I was asleep before I
-could think. Have you ridden all night?"
-
-"Of course," quoth he, with a smile, "and not a soul have I seen. I
-have been watching your face and the moon."
-
-Igraine coloured slightly, and looked sideways at him from under her
-long lashes. Her sleep had chastened her, and she felt blithe as a
-bird, and ready to sing. Putting the man's scarlet cloak from her, she
-shook her hair from her shoulders, and sprang lightly from her seat to
-the grass.
-
-"I will run at your side awhile," she said, "and so rest you. Perhaps
-you will halt presently, and sleep an hour or two under a tree. I can
-watch and keep guard with your sword."
-
-Pelleas smiled down at her like the sun from behind a cloud.
-
-"Not yet," he said; "a soldier needs no sleep for a week, and I feel
-lusty as Christopher. We will go awhile before breakfast, if it please
-you. There is a stream near where I can water my horse, and we can make
-a meal from such stuff as I have. When you are tired, tell me, and I
-will mount you here again."
-
-She nodded at him gravely. Grass and flowers were well-nigh to her
-waist. Her gown shook showers of dew from the feathery hay. Foxgloves
-rose like purple rods amid the snow webs of the wild daisy. Tangled
-domes of dogrose and honeysuckle lined the white track, and there were
-countless harebells lying like a deep blue haze under the green shadows
-of the grass.
-
-Presently they came to where red poppies grew thickly in the golden
-meads. Igraine ran in among them, and began to make a great posy, while
-Pelleas watched her as her grey gown went amid the green and red. In
-due course she came back to him holding her flowers in her bosom.
-
-"Scarlet is your colour," she said, "and these are the flowers of sleep
-and of dreams for those that grieve. Hold them in the hollow of your
-shield for me."
-
-Pelleas obeyed her mutely. She began to sing a soft slumberous dirge
-while she walked beside the great black horse and plaited the flowers
-into its mane. The man watched her with a kind of wondering pain. The
-song seemed to wake echoes in him, like sea surges wake in the caverns
-of a cliff. He understood Igraine's grace to him, and was grateful in
-his heart.
-
-"How long were you mewed in Avangel?" he said, presently.
-
-"Long enough," quoth she, betwixt her singing, "to learn to love life."
-
-"So I should judge," said Pelleas, curtly.
-
-His tone disenchanted her. She threw the rest of the flowers aside, and
-walked quietly beside him, looking up with a frank seriousness into his
-face.
-
-"I was placed there by my parents," she said, by way of explanation,
-"and against my will, for I had no hope in me to be a nun. But the
-times were wild, and my father--a solemn soul--thought for the best."
-
-"But your novitiate. You had your choice."
-
-"I had my choice," she answered vaguely. "Did ever a woman choose for
-the best? Avangel was no place for me."
-
-Pelleas eyed her somewhat sadly from his higher vantage. "The nun's is
-a sorry life," he said, "when her thoughts fly over the convent walls."
-
-A level kindness in the words seemed to loose her tongue like magic.
-Twelve long months had her sympathies been outraged, and her young
-desires crushed by the heel of a so-called godliness. Never had so kind
-a chance for the outpouring of her discontent come to her. Women love
-an honest grumble. In a moment all her bitterness found ready flight
-into the man's ears.
-
-"I hated it!" she said, "I hated it! Avangel had no hold on me. What
-were vigils, penitences, and long prayers to a girl? They made us kneel
-on stone, and sleep on boards. The chapel bell seemed to ring every
-minute of the day; we had vile food, and no liberty. It was Saint This,
-Saint That, from morning till night. We saw no men. We might never
-dress our hair; and, believe me, there were no mirrors. I had to go to
-a little pool in the garden to see my face.
-
-"And they were so dull,--so dismal. No one ever laughed; no one ever
-told romances; all our legends were of pious things in petticoats. And
-what was the use of it all? Was any one ever a jot the better? I used
-to get into my cell and stamp. I felt like a corpse in a charnel-house,
-and the whole world seemed dead."
-
-Pelleas scanned her half smilingly, half sadly.
-
-"I am sorry for your heart," he said.
-
-"Sorry! You needs must be when you are a soldier, with life in your
-ears like a clarion cry."
-
-"Life is a sorry ballad, Sister Igraine, unless we remember the Cross."
-
-"Ah, yes, I have all the saints in mind--dear souls; but then, Sir
-Pelleas, one cannot live on one's knees. I was made to laugh and
-twinkle, and if such is sin, then a sorry nun am I."
-
-"You misunderstand me," said the man. "I would that a Christian held
-his course over the world, with a great cross set in the west to lead
-him. He can laugh and joy as he goes, sleep like the good, and take
-the fruits of life in his time. Yet ever above him should be the glory
-of the cross, to chasten, purge, and purify. There is no sin in living
-merrily if we live well, but to plot for pleasure is to lose it. Look
-at the sun; there is no need for us to be ever on our knees to him, yet
-we know well it would be a sorry world without his comfort."
-
-"Ah," she said, with a little gesture. "I see you are too devout for
-me, despite my habit. Take me up again, Sir Pelleas, and I will ride
-with you, though I may not argue."
-
-Pelleas halted his horse, and she was soon in the saddle before him,
-somewhat subdued and pensive in contrast to her former vivacity. The
-man believed her a nun, and she had a character to play. Well, when she
-wearied of it, which would probably be soon, she could tell him and
-so end the matter. It was not long before they came to the ford across
-the stream Pelleas had spoken of. It was a green spot shut in by thorn
-trees, and here they made a halt as the knight had purposed.
-
-Before the meal Pelleas knelt by the stream and prayed. Igraine, seeing
-him so devout, did likewise, though her eyes were more on the man than
-on heaven. Her thoughts never got above the clouds. When they were at
-their meal of meat and bread, with a horn of water from the stream, she
-talked yet further of her life at Avangel, and the meagre blessing it
-had been to her. It was while she talked thus that she saw something
-about the man's person that fired her memory, and set her thinking of
-the journey of yesterday.
-
-Pelleas was wearing a gold chain that bore a cross hanging above the
-left breast, but with no cross over the right. Looking more keenly,
-Igraine saw a broken link still hanging from the right portion of the
-chain. Instinctively her thoughts fled back to the silent manor in the
-wood, and the dead man seated stiffly in the great carved chair.
-
-Without duly weighing the possible gravity of her words, she began to
-tell Pelleas of the incident.
-
-"Yesterday," she said, "I saw a strange thing as we fled through the
-wold. We came to a villa, and, seeking food there, found it deserted,
-save for a dead man seated in a chair, and stricken in the breast. The
-dead man had a small gold cross clutched in his fingers, and there was
-a dead hound at his feet."
-
-The man gave her a keen look from the depths of his dark eyes, and then
-glanced at the broken chain.
-
-"You see that I have lost a cross," he said.
-
-Igraine nodded.
-
-"Your reason can read the rest."
-
-She nodded again.
-
-"There is nothing like the truth."
-
-Igraine stared at the man in some astonishment. He was cold as a frost,
-and there was no shadow of discomfort on his strong face. Knowledge
-had come to her so sharply that she had no answer for him at the
-moment. Yet there stood a sublime certainty in her heart that this
-violent deed was deserving of absolute approval, so soon had her faith
-in him become like steel.
-
-"The man deserved death," she said presently, with a curt and ingenuous
-confidence.
-
-Pelleas eyed her curiously.
-
-"How should you know?" he asked.
-
-"I have faith in you," was all she said.
-
-Pelleas smiled, despite the subject.
-
-"No man deserved death better."
-
-"And so you slew him."
-
-He nodded without looking at her, and she could see still the embers of
-wrath in his eyes.
-
-"I slew him in his own manor, finding him alone, and ready to justify
-himself with lies. Honour does not love such deeds; but what would
-you?--Britain is free of a viper."
-
-"And you have blood on your hand."
-
-He winced slightly, and glanced at his fingers as though she had not
-spoken in metaphor.
-
-"All is blood in these days," he said.
-
-"And what think you of such laws?" she ventured, with a supreme
-reaching after the requirements of her Order. "What of the Cross?"
-
-"There was blood upon it."
-
-"But the blood of self-sacrifice."
-
-Her words moved him more than she had purposed. His dark face flushed,
-and light kindled in his eyes as though the basal tenets of his life
-had been called in question. He glowed like a man whose very creed
-is threatened. Igraine watched the fire rising in him with a secret
-pleasure,--the love of a woman for the hot courage of a man.
-
-"Listen to me," he said strongly; "which think you is the worthier
-life: to dream in a stone cell mewed from the world like a weak weed
-in a cellar, or to go forth with a red heart and a mellow honour; to
-strive and smite for the weak and the wounded; to right the wrong; to
-avenge the fatherless? Choose and declare."
-
-"Choose," she said, with a shrill laugh and a kindling colour, "truth,
-and I will. Away with the rosary; give me the sword."
-
-Like a wild echo to her human choice came the distant cry of a horn
-borne hollowly over the sleeping meadows. Both heard it and started.
-The great war-horse, grazing near by, tossed his head, snorted, and
-stood listening with ears twitching and head to the east. Pelleas rose
-up and scanned the road from under his hand, with the girl Igraine
-beside him.
-
-"A Saxon horn," he said laconically; "the heathen are in the woods."
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-As they watched, looking down betwixt two thorn trees, a faint puff
-of dust rose on the road far to the east, and hung like a diminutive
-cloud over the meadows. This danger signal counselled the pair. Pelleas
-caught his horse and sprang to selle; Igraine clambered by his stirrup,
-and was lifted to her seat before him. Pelleas slung his shield
-forward, and loosened his sword.
-
-"If it comes to battle," he said, "I will set you down, and you must
-hide in the meadows or woods, while I fight. You would but cumber me,
-and be in great peril here. Rest assured, though, that I shall not
-desert you while I live."
-
-With that he turned his horse to the road, and halted, gazing down amid
-the placid fields to where the little cloud of dust had hinted at life.
-It was there still, only larger, and sounded on by the distant triple
-canter of horses at the gallop. Pelleas and Igraine could see three
-mounted figures coming up the road amid a white haze, moving fast, as
-though pressed by some as yet unseen enemy. It was soon evident to
-Pelleas and the girl that one of the fugitives was a woman.
-
-"We will abide them," said the man, "and learn their peril. We shall be
-stronger, too, for company, and may succour one another if it comes to
-smiting. Look! yonder comes the heathen pack."
-
-A second and larger cloud of dust had appeared, a mile or less beyond
-the first. Pelleas watched it awhile, and then turned and began riding
-at a trot towards the west, so that the three fugitives should overtake
-him. He bade Igraine keep watch over his shoulder while he scanned the
-meadows before them for sign of peril or of friendly harbour.
-
-"Have no fear, child," he said; "I could vow, by these fields, that
-there is a manor near. I trust confidently that we shall find refuge."
-
-Igraine smiled at him.
-
-"I am no coward," she said.
-
-"That is well spoken."
-
-"I would, though, that you would give me your dagger, so that, if
-things come to an evil pass, I shall know how to quit myself."
-
-"My dagger!" he said, with a sudden stare. "I left it in the man's
-heart in Andredswold."
-
-"Ah!" said Igraine; "then I must do without."
-
-The dull thunder of the nearing gallop came up to them--a stirring
-sound, full of terse life and eager hazard. Pelleas spurred to a
-canter, while Igraine's hair blew about his face and helmet as they
-began to meet the kiss of the wind. She clung fast to him with both
-hands, and told what was passing on the road in their rear.
-
-"How they ride," she said; "a tangle of dust and whirling hoofs.
-There is a lady in blue on a white horse, with an armed man on either
-flank. They are very near now. I can see the heathen far away over the
-meadows. They are galloping, too, in a smoke of dust. Our folk will be
-with us soon."
-
-In a minute the lady and her men were hurtling close in Pelleas's wake.
-He spurred to a gallop in turn, and bade Igraine wave them on to his
-side. The three were soon with them, stride for stride. The girl on the
-white horse drew up on Pelleas's right flank. She was habited in blue
-and silver--a flaxen-haired damosel, with the round face of a child.
-Seemingly she was possessed of little hardihood, for her mouth was a
-red streak in a waste of white, and her blue eyes so full of fear that
-Igraine pitied her. She cried shrilly to Pelleas, her voice rising
-above the din like the cry of a frightened bird.
-
-"The heathen!" she cried.
-
-"Many?" shouted the man.
-
-"Two score or more. There is a strong manor near. If we gain it we may
-live."
-
-"How far?"
-
-"Not a mile over the meadows."
-
-"Lead on," said Pelleas; "we will follow as we may."
-
-The damosel on the white horse turned from the road, and headed
-southwards over the meadows, with her men galloping beside her. The
-long grass swayed, water-like, before them, its summer seed flying like
-a mist of dew. Wood and pasture slid back on either hand. The ground
-seemed to rise and fall before them as a sea, while rocks here and
-there thrust up bluff noses in the grass like great lizards stirred by
-the hurtling thunder of the gallop.
-
-On they went, with white spume on breast and bridle; leaping, swerving
-where rough ground showed. To Igraine the ride was life indeed,
-bringing back many a whistling gallop from the past. She felt her heart
-in her leaping to the horse's stride. Now and again she took a sly look
-at Pelleas's face, finding it calm and vigilant--the face of a man
-whose thought ran a silent course unruffled by the breeze of peril.
-She felt his bridle-arm staunchly about her like a girdle of steel.
-Although she could see the dust gathering thickly on the distant road,
-she felt blithe as a new bride in the man's company, and there was no
-fear at all in her thought.
-
-The grassland began to slope gradually towards the south. A quavering
-screech of joy came back to them from the woman riding in the van.
-Pelleas spoke his first word during the gallop.
-
-"Courage," he said. "Southwards lies our refuge."
-
-Igraine looked over his shoulder, and saw how their flight tended down
-the flank of a gentle hill into the lap of a fair valley. The grass
-stretch was broken by great trees--oaks, beeches, and huge, corniced
-cedars. Down in the green hollow below them a mere shone with the soul
-of the sky steeped in its quiet waters. It was ringed with trailing
-willows, and an island held its centre, piled with green shadows and
-the grey shape of a fair manor. The place looked as peaceful as sleep
-in the eye of the morning.
-
-The woman on the white horse bade one of her men take his bugle-horn
-and blow a summons thereon to rouse the folk upon the island. Twice the
-summons sounded down over the water, but there was no answering stir to
-be marked about the house or garden. The place was smokeless, lifeless,
-silent. Like many another home, its hearths were cold for fear of the
-barbarian sword.
-
-As they held downhill, Igraine wove the matter through her thought like
-swift silk through a shuttle.
-
-"Should there be no boat," she said, giving voice to her misgivings,
-"what can you do for us?"
-
-"We must swim for it," said Pelleas, keenly.
-
-"It is a broad, fair water, and the horse cannot bear us both."
-
-"He shall, if needs be."
-
-She felt that the brute would, after Pelleas had spoken so. She patted
-the arched black neck, and smiled at the sky as they came down to the
-mere's edge at a canter. The water was lapping softly at the sedges
-amid a blaze of marsh marigolds and purple flags, the surface gleaming
-like glass in the sun. Half a score water-hens went winging from the
-reeds, and skimming low and fast towards the island. A heron rose from
-the shallows, and laboured heavenwards with legs trailing.
-
-Riding round the margin, they found to their joy a barge grounded in
-a little bay, with sweeps ready upon the thwarts, and a horse-board
-fitted at the prow. A purple cloak hung over one bulwark, trailing in
-the water; a small crucifix and a few trinkets were scattered on the
-poop, as though those who had used the ferry last had fled in fear,
-forgetful of everything save flight.
-
-Then came the embarkation. The barge would but hold three horses at one
-voyage, so Pelleas ordered Igraine and the rest into the boat, and bade
-the men row over and return. Igraine demurred a moment.
-
-"Leave your horse," she said; "they may come before the boat can take
-you."
-
-Pelleas refused her with a smile, running his fingers through the
-brute's black mane.
-
-"I have a truer heart than that," he said.
-
-The men launched away, and pulled at the sweeps with a will, Igraine
-helping, and doing her devoir for the man Pelleas's sake. The barge
-slid away, with ripples playing from the prow, and a gush of foam
-leaping from each smile of the blades. It was a hundred yards or more
-to the island, and the craft was ponderous enough to make the crossing
-slow.
-
-Pelleas sat still and watched the meadows. Suddenly--bleakly--a figure
-on horseback topped the low hill on the north, and held motionless on
-the summit, scanning the valley. A second joined the first. Pelleas
-caught a shout, muffled by the wind, as the two plunged down at full
-gallop for the mere, sleeping in its bed of green. Here were two
-gentlemen who had outstripped their fellows, and were as keen as could
-be to catch Pelleas before the barge could recross, and set the mere
-betwixt them. Pelleas saw his hazard in a moment. Even if the barge
-came before the heathen, there would be some peril of its capture in
-the shallows.
-
-He would have to fight for it, unless he cared to swim the mere.
-Provided he could deal with these two outriders before the main company
-came up, well and good, the raiders would find clear water between
-the quarry and their swords. He thought of Avangel, and grew iron of
-heart. Then there was the nun, Igraine, with the wonderful eyes, and
-hair warm as the dun woods in autumn. He was her sworn knight as far
-as Winchester. God helping him, he thought, he would yet see her face
-again. So he rode out grimly to get fair field for horsecraft, and
-waited for the two who swept the meadows.
-
-Igraine, standing on the wooden stage at the water's edge, saw Pelleas
-taking ground and preparing for a tussle. The barge had put off again
-and had already half spanned the water. She was alone with the woman
-of the white horse, who stood beside her still quaking like a reed,
-and almost voiceless from the fulsome terror of an unshrived death.
-Igraine had no heed for her at the moment. Her whole thought lurked
-with the red shield and the black horse in the meadows. Worldly heart!
-her desire burnt redly in her own bosom, and found no flutter for the
-powers above.
-
-She saw Pelleas gathering for the course, while the heathen slackened
-so as not to override their mark. A crescent of steel flashed as the
-foremost man launched his axe at the knight's head. The red shield
-caught and turned it. In a trice Pelleas's spear had picked the rogue
-from the saddle, despite his crouching low and seeking to shun it. The
-second fellow came in like a whirlwind. His horse caught the black
-destrier cross counter and rolled him down like a rammed wall. Pelleas
-avoided, and was up with bleak sword. Smiting low, he caught the man's
-thigh, and broke the bone like a lath. The Saxon lost his seat, and
-came down with a snarling yell. The rest was easy as beating down a
-maimed wolf.
-
-The main company had just topped the hill. Pelleas, with the skirmish
-ended to his credit, shook his sword at them, and led his horse into
-the shallows. The barge swept in, took its burden from the bank, and
-held back for the island, where Igraine stood watching on the stage,
-ready with her welcome. She was glad of Pelleas in her heart, as though
-the comradeship of half a day had given her the right to share his
-honour, and to chime her joy with his. The woman in her swamped the
-assumed sanctity of the nun. As the water stretch lessened between
-them, Pelleas, silent and dark-browed as was his wont, found himself
-beneath the beck of eyes that gazed like the half-born wonder of the
-sky at dawn. It was neither joy nor great light in them, but a kind of
-quiet musing, as though there were strange new music in her soul.
-
-"Are you hurt?" she asked, as he sprang from the barge and stood beside
-her, with head thrown back and his great shoulders squared.
-
-"Not a graze."
-
-"Two to one, and a fair field," quoth she, with a quaver of triumph;
-"my heart sang when those men went down. That was a great spear thrust."
-
-"Less and less of the rosary!"
-
-She caught his deep smile, and laughed.
-
-"I am a greater heathen than either," she said. "God rest their souls."
-
-Meanwhile the lady in the blue tunic had somewhat recovered her
-squandered wits and courage. She came forward with a simpering dignity,
-walking daintily, with her gown gathered in her right hand, and her
-left laid over her heart. Her eyes were very big and blue, their
-brightness giving her an eager, sanguine look that was upheld the more
-by an assumed simpleness of manner. Her childish bearing, winsomely
-studied, exercised its subtleties with a lavish embellishment of smiles
-and blushes. Looked at more closely, and in repose, her face belied
-in measure the perspicuous personality she had adopted. A sensual
-boldness lurked in mouth and nostrils, and there was more carnal
-wisdom there than a pretended child should possess.
-
-"Courtesy fails me, sir," she said, letting her shoulders fall into a
-graceful stoop, and turning her large eyes to Pelleas's face; "courtesy
-fails me when I would most praise you for your knightly deed in yonder
-meadows. I am so frightened that I cannot speak as I would. My heart is
-quite tired with its fear and flutter. Think you--you can save us from
-these wolves?"
-
-Pelleas had neither the desire nor the leisure to stand juggling
-courtesies with the woman.
-
-"Madame," he said, "we shall fight. Leave the rest to Providence. I can
-give you no better comfort."
-
-"No," she said, "no"--as in a daze.
-
-Pelleas, reading her misery, repented somewhat of his abrupt
-truthfulness.
-
-"Come," he said, with a kind strength and a hand on her shoulder; "go
-to the house and rest there with Sister Igraine. I see you are too much
-shaken. Go in and pray if you can, while we hold the island."
-
-The girl looked at him unreservedly for a moment. Then she gave a
-little laugh that was half a sob, and, bending to him, kissed his hand
-before he could prevent her. Giving him yet another glance from her
-tumbled hair, she stepped aside to Igraine, and they turned together
-towards the manor, and the trees and gardens that ringed it. The
-girl had set her hand in Igraine's with a little gesture that was
-intended to be indicative of confidence in the supposed nun's greater
-intelligence.
-
-"Let us go and sit under that yew tree," she suggested. "I cannot
-stifle within walls now. You are named Igraine. I am called
-Morgan--Morgan la Blanche,--and I am a lord's daughter. I almost envy
-you your frock now, for death cannot frighten you as it frightens me.
-Of course you are very good, and the Saints guard and watch over you.
-As for me, I have always been very thoughtless."
-
-"Not more than I," said Igraine, with a smile. "I have often hummed
-romances when I should have praised Paul or Peter."
-
-"But doesn't the fear of death blight you like a frost?"
-
-"I never think of death."
-
-"It seems so near us now that I can hardly breathe. Do you think we are
-tortured in the other world, if there be one?"
-
-"How should I know, simple one?"
-
-"I wish the mere were a league broad. I should feel further from the
-pit."
-
-"Is your conscience so unkind?"
-
-"Conscience, sister? It is self-love, not conscience. I only want to
-live. Look!--the heathen are coming down to the mere. How their axes
-shine. Holy Mother!--I wish I could pray."
-
-Igraine, catching the girl's pinched face, with lips drawn and
-twitching, pitied her from her very heart.
-
-"Come then, I will pray with you," she said.
-
-"No, no, my prayers would blacken heaven. I cannot, I cannot."
-
-The wild company had swept down between the great trees in disorderly
-array. Their weapons shone in the sunlight, their round bucklers
-blickered. They were soon at the place where Pelleas had slain his men
-in fair and open field. Dismounting, they gathered about their dead
-fellows, and sent up, after their custom, a vicious, dismal ululation,
-a sound like the howling of wolves, drear enough to make the flesh
-tingle under the stoutest steel. Lining the bank among the willows,
-they shook buckler and axe, gesticulating, threatening, their long hair
-blowing wild, their skin-clad bodies giving them a wolfin look not
-pleasant to behold. Round the margin they paddled--searching--casting
-about for a boat. They seemed like beasts behind the gates of some
-Roman amphitheatre--caged from the slaughter. The girl Morgan looked
-at them, screamed, and hid her face in her tunic. Igraine found the
-girl's quaking hand, and held it fast in hers.
-
-"Courage, courage," she said; "there is no boat, and, even if they
-swim, Sir Pelleas is a great knight."
-
-"What can he do against fifty?" whined the girl, with her face still
-covered.
-
-"Fifty? There are but a score. I have numbered them myself."
-
-"I would give all the jewels in the world to be in Winchester."
-
-"Ah! girl, I have no jewels to give; but this, I promise you, is better
-than a convent."
-
-The barbarians had gathered in a group beneath a great willow. Plainly
-they were in debate as to what should be done. Some, by their gestures,
-their tossing weapons, and their bombast, were for swimming the mere.
-Their councils were palpably divided. Possibly the sager folk among
-them did not think the venture worth the loss to them it might entail,
-seeing that one of those cooped upon the island had already given proof
-of no mean prowess. They could see the three armed men waiting grimly
-by the water's edge, ready to strike down the swimmer who should crawl
-half-naked from the water weeds and mire. Gradually, but surely, the
-elder tongues held the argument, and the balance went down solemnly for
-those upon the island.
-
-Pelleas and the two men, watching keenly for any movement, saw the
-circle of figures break and melt towards the horses. They saw them
-pick up the bodies of their two dead fellows, and lay them across the
-saddle. In a minute the whole troop turned, and held away southwards
-at a trot, flinging back a last wild cry over the water. The meadows
-rolled away behind them; the gradual trees hid them from moment to
-moment. Pelleas and the two servants stood and watched till the black
-line had gone southwards into the thickening woods.
-
-Under the yew tree Morgan la Blanche had uncased her white face, and
-was smiling feebly.
-
-"I am glad I did not pray," she said; "it would have been so weak.
-Look! I have torn my tunic, and my belt's awry. Bind my hair for me,
-sister, quickly,--before Sir Pelleas comes."
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-With the heathen lost in the distant woods, Pelleas and the women
-essayed the house, leaving the two servants to sentinel the island.
-
-The great gates of the porch were ajar. Pushing in, they crossed
-into the atrium, and found it sleepy as solitude. The water in the
-impluvium gleamed with the gold flanks of the fish that moved through
-its shadows. Lilies were there, white and wonderful, swooning to their
-own images in the pool. The tiled floor was rich with colour. Venturing
-further, they found the triclinium untouched, rich couches and flaming
-curtains everywhere, gilded chairs, and deep-lustred mirrors, urns, and
-flowers. In the chapel candles were guttered on the altar; dim lights
-came down upon a wealth of solemn beauty--saints, censers, crosses,
-frescoed walls all green and azure, gold and scarlet. The viridarium,
-set betwixt chapel and tablinum, held them dazed with a glowing
-paradise of flowers. Here were dreamy palms, orange trees like mounts
-of gold, roses that slept in a deep delight of green. Over all was
-silence, untainted even by the silken purr of a bird's wing.
-
-Gynœcium and bower were void of them in turn. Everywhere they found
-the relics of a swift desertion. The manor folk had gone, as if to
-the ferry of death, taking no worldly store or sumptuous baggage with
-them. Not a living thing did they discover, save the fish darting in
-the water. The cubicula were empty, their couches tumbled; the culina
-fireless, and its hearth cold.
-
-Pelleas and the women marvelled much at the beauty of the place; its
-solitude seemed but a ghostly charm to them. As for the girl Morgan,
-she had taken Pelleas into her immediate and especial favour, holding
-at his side everywhere, a-bubble with delight. The luxury of the place
-pleased her at every glance; her vanity ran riot like a bee among
-flowers. She eyed herself furtively in mirrors, and put a rose daintily
-in her hair while Pelleas was not looking. She had already rifled a
-cabinet, strung a chain of amethysts about her neck, and poked her
-fingers into numberless rings. Then she would try the couches, queen
-it for a moment in some stately chair, or smother her face sensuously
-in the flowers growing from the urns. All these pretty vapourings were
-carried through with a most mischievous grace. Igraine, who had seen
-the girl white and whimpering an hour before and in deadly horror of
-the pit, wondered at her, and hated her liberally in her heart.
-
-Nor was Pelleas glad of the change her presence had wrought; for her
-childish subtleties had no hold on him, and even her thieving seemed
-insipid. With solemn and shadowy thoughts in his heart, her frivolous
-worldliness came like some tinkling discord. Igraine seemed to have
-dimmed her eyes from him beneath the shadow of her hood. Her face was
-set like the face of a statue, and there was no play of thought upon
-it. She walked proudly behind the pair--not with them--like one elbowed
-out of companionship by a vapouring rival.
-
-In the women's bower Morgan found a lute, and pounced upon it.
-
-"One's whole desire seems here," she chattered. "This bower suits my
-fancy like a dream, and I could lodge here a month for love of it.
-What think you, Knight Pelleas? I never set foot in a fairer manor. I
-warrant you there are meat and wine in the cellars. We will feast and
-have music anon."
-
-Pelleas's face looked more suited to a burial. Igraine pitied him, for
-his eyes looked tired and sad. Morgan ran on like a jay. In the chapel
-she found Igraine a share.
-
-"Here is your portion, holy Sister," she said; "mine the bower, yours
-the altar. So you see we are all well suited. Come, though, is it not
-very horrible having to look solemn all day, and to wear a grey gown?
-I should fade in a week inside such a hood; besides, it makes you look
-such a colour."
-
-Igraine could certainly boast a colour at that moment that might have
-warned the woman of her rising fume. Pelleas broke in and took up the
-argument.
-
-"Men do not consider dress," he said; "everything is fair to the
-comely. I look into a woman's face and into her eyes, and take the
-measure of her heart. Such is my catechism."
-
-"But you like to see rich silks and a smile, and to hear a laugh at
-times. What is a girl if she is not gay? No discourtesy to you, sister;
-but you seem so far set from Sir Pelleas and myself."
-
-Igraine, lacking patience, flared up like a torch. "Ha! mark you," she
-said, "my habit makes me no coward, nor do I thieve. No discourtesy to
-you, my dear lady."
-
-Morgan set up a thrill of laughter.
-
-"How true a woman is a nun," quoth she; "but you are too severe, too
-careful. Thieving, too; why, I may as well have a trinket or so before
-the place is rifled, even if I take a single ring. And what is more, I
-have been turned from my own house with hardly a bracelet or a bodkin.
-Come, Sir Pelleas, let us be going; the Sister would be at her prayers.
-I see we but hinder her."
-
-Pelleas had lost both pity and patience in the last minute.
-Partisanship is inevitable even in the most trivial differences, and
-Pelleas's frown was strongly for Morgan la Blanche.
-
-"Perhaps it would be well, madame," said he, "if we all went on our
-knees for the day's deliverance. I cannot see that there is any shame
-in gratitude."
-
-"Gratitude!" chirped the girl. "Gratitude to whom?"
-
-"To the Lord Saviour, madame, and the Mother Virgin."
-
-She half laughed in his face, but his eyes sobered her. For a moment
-she fronted him with an incredulous smirk, then her glance wavered,
-and lowered to his breast. It held there with a tense stare, while
-her whole face hardened. Pelleas saw her pupils darken, her cheeks
-flush and pale in a moment. He thought nothing of it, or ascribed her
-distraught and strange look to some sudden shame or shock of penitence.
-In a trice the smile was back again, and she seemed pert and pleased as
-ever.
-
-"I see you are too devout for me," she said with a glib laugh, "and
-that I am too wicked a thing for the moment. I will leave you to Sister
-Igraine till you both have prayed your fill." Here she laughed again, a
-laugh that made Igraine's cheeks burn. "Remember me to St. Anthony if
-you may. If I recollect rightly he was a nice old gentleman, who cured
-'the fire' for a miracle, and nearly fell in love with a devil. Till
-you have done, I will go and gather flowers."
-
-Pelleas and Igraine looked at one another.
-
-"A devout child," said the man.
-
-"And not bred in a nunnery."
-
-"The world's convent, I should say."
-
-For the moment Igraine was almost for telling him of her own hypocrisy,
-but the thought found her more troubled on that score than she could
-have guessed. She had acted a lie to the man, and feared his true eyes
-despite her courage. "Another day I will tell him," she thought; "it
-is not so great a sin after all." So they turned and knelt at their
-devotions.
-
-Morgan la Blanche went away like the wind. She ran through atrium and
-porch with hate free in her eyes, and her child's face twisted into
-a scowl of temper. In the garden she idled up and down awhile in a
-restless fume, like one whose thoughts bubble bodingly. Sometimes she
-would smite a lily peevishly with her open hand, or pluck a flower and
-trample it under her feet as though it had wronged her. Then she would
-take something from her bosom and stare at it while her lips worked,
-or while she bit her fingers as though galled by some inward barb.
-Presently she found her way by a laurel walk to the orchard, and thence
-by a wicket-gate to the island's rim, where one of her men kept watch
-on the further meadows.
-
-She stood under an apple tree, called to him, and beckoned. He came
-to her--a short, burly fellow with the look of a bull, and brute writ
-large on his visage. Morgan drew him under the swooping dome of the
-tree, plucked something that shone from her bosom, and dangled it
-before his eyes.
-
-"The cross," she said, almost in a whisper. "Galerius, the cross."
-
-The man stared at her stupidly. Morgan lifted a finger, ran this way
-and that peering into the green glooms and listening. Then she came
-back to the man, soft-footed, glib as a cat, with the cross of gold
-gripped in her fingers. She smiled at him, a smile that was almost a
-leer.
-
-"Galerius," she said, "the knight in the house yonder wears a chain
-with one cross missing, and the fellow cross matches this. Moreover,
-his poniard sheath is empty. I marked all this as I stood by him a
-moment ago. This is the man who slew my lord."
-
-The servant's heavy face showed that he understood her well enough now.
-
-"To-night," she said, almost skipping under the trees with the
-intensity of her malice, "it shall be with his own poniard. I have it
-here. Galerius, you have always been a good fellow."
-
-The man grinned.
-
-"Keep silence and leave all to me. I shall need your hand and no more."
-
-"Nor shall he," said Galerius curtly.
-
-Morgan grew suddenly bleak and quiet, with the thought of murder
-harboured in her heart.
-
-"Look for yourself, Galerius," she said; "see that my eyes have not
-deceived me. The man must have come upon Lord Madan when he was alone,
-after our hirelings had deserted the house. He slew him in the winter
-room--this whelp sent by Aurelius the king. You and I, Galerius,
-found the cross in my lord's dead hand, and the poniard in his bosom.
-I warrant you we will level this deed before we hold again for
-Winchester."
-
-"Trust my hand, Madame Morgan," quoth the man; "if you can have the
-fellow sleeping, so much the better, one need not strike in a hurry."
-
-"Leave it to me," she said; "I will give you your knife and your chance
-to-night."
-
-With that she sent the fellow back to his watching, and threaded the
-orchard to the manor garden. Pelleas and Igraine had long ended their
-prayers in the chapel. Morgan found them in the atrium, watching the
-fish in the water and their own reflections in the pool. The girl
-had quite smothered the bleak look that had held her features in the
-orchard. She was the same ingenuous, self-pleased little woman whose
-blue eyes seemed as clear and honest as a sleeping sea in summer.
-Before, she had flown in Pelleas's face for vanity's sake; now she
-seemed no less his woman--ready with smiles and childish flattery, and
-all the pleasantness she could gather. She was at his side again--quick
-with her eyes and tongue. Probably she guessed that the man despised
-her, but then that was of no moment now, seeing that it made the secret
-in her heart more bitter.
-
-At noon they dined in the triclinium, with man Galerius to serve. He
-had ransacked kitchen and pantry, and from the ample store discovered,
-had spread a sufficient meal. His eyes were ever on Pelleas as he
-waited. There was no doubt about cross or poniard sheath; and Galerius
-found pleasure in scanning the knight's armour and looking for the
-place where he might strike.
-
-The afternoon proved sultry, and Pelleas took his turn in keeping watch
-by the bank. Cool and placid lay the water in the sun, while vapoury
-heat hung over the meadows and the distant woods. There was still
-fear lest the heathen might return, thinking to catch the islanders
-napping. The very abruptness of their retreat had been in itself
-suspicious; and Pelleas was all for caution. Igraine's face seemed to
-make him more careful of peril. He thought much of her as he paced the
-green bank for three hours or more, before leaving the duty to Galerius
-and his fellow.
-
-Returning to the manor he found Igraine cushioned on the tiled floor
-beside the impluvium, fingering the lute that Morgan la Blanche had
-found. The latter lady was still in the tablinum, so Igraine said,
-pilfering and admiring at her leisure, with fruit and a cup of spiced
-wine ready at her hand. Pelleas took post on the opposite side of the
-pool to Igraine, unarmed himself at his leisure, and began to clean his
-harness. No task could have pleased Igraine better. She put the lute
-away, took his helmet on her lap, and burnished it with the corner of
-her gown. Pelleas had sword, breast-plate, greaves and shoulder pieces
-beside him. Their eyes often met over the pool as they sat with the
-scent of lilies in the air, and talked little--but thought the more.
-
-Igraine felt queerly happy. There seemed a warm fire in her bosom, a
-stealthy, happy heat that crept through every atom of her frame like
-the sap into the fibres of some rich rose. Her heart seemed to unfold
-itself like a flower in the sun. She looked often at Pelleas, and her
-eyes were very soft and bright.
-
-"A fair place, this," she said presently, as the man furbished his
-sword.
-
-"Fair indeed," said he; "a rich manor."
-
-"It is strange to me after Avangel."
-
-"Perhaps more beautiful."
-
-"Ah," she said, with a sudden kindling; "I think my whole soul was made
-for beauty, my whole desire born for fair and lovely things. You will
-smile at me for a dreamer, but often my thoughts seem to fly through
-forests--marvellous green glooms all drowned in moonlight. I love to
-hear the wind, to watch the great oaks battling, to see the sea one
-laugh of gold. Every sunset harrows me into a moan of woe. I can sing
-to the stars at night--songs such as the woods weave from the voice of
-a gentle wind, dew-ladened, green and lovely. Sometimes I feel faint
-for sheer love of this fair earth."
-
-Pelleas's eyes were on her with a strange deep look. His dark face was
-aglow with a new wonder, as though his soul had flashed to hers. The
-great sword lay naked and idle in his hands.
-
-"Often have I felt thus," he said, "but my lips could never say it.
-Thoughts are given to some without words."
-
-"But the joy is there," she answered, with a quiet smile.
-
-"Joy in beauty?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Ah, girl, a beautiful face, or a blaze of gold and scarlet over the
-western hills, are like strange wine to my heart."
-
-"Yes, yes, it is grand to live," said Igraine.
-
-Pelleas's head went down over his sword as though in thought.
-
-"It would seem," he said presently, "that beauty is a closed book, save
-to the few. It is good to find a heart that understands."
-
-"Ah, that know I well," she chimed; "in Avangel they had souls like
-clay; they saw nothing, understood nothing. I think I would rather die
-than be soul blind."
-
-"So many folk," said the man, "seem to live as though they were ever
-scanning the bottom of a pot. They never get beyond reflections on
-appetite."
-
-As they talked, Morgan la Blanche came in from behind the looped
-curtains, with silks, samites, siclatons, and sarcanets in her arms.
-She had found some rich chest in the bower accomplice to her fingers,
-and had revelled gloriously. She sat herself down near Pelleas, and
-began to laugh and chatter like a pleased child. The dainty stuffs
-were tossed this way and that, gathered into scarves or frills, spread
-over her lap and eyed critically as to colour, before being bound in
-a bale for her journey. Vain and vapid as her behaviour seemed, there
-was more in this little woman's heart than either Pelleas or Igraine
-could have guessed. Her whole mood was false. Foolish as she seemed on
-the surface, she was more keen, more subtle by far than Igraine, whose
-whole soul spelt fire and courage.
-
-As the day drew towards evening, Morgan became more stiff and silent.
-Her eyes were bright as the jewels round her neck; they would flash
-and waver, or fall at times into long, sidelong stares. More than
-once Igraine caught the girl's face in hard thought, the pert lips
-straight and cruel, the eyes hungry and very shallow. It reminded
-her of Morgan's look in the morning, when she was in such stark fear
-of the heathen and of death. Yet while she watched her, smiles and
-glib vivacity would sweep back again as though there had been but a
-transient cloud of thought over the girl's face.
-
-With the shadows lengthening, they turned, all three of them, into
-the garden, and found ease on a grass bank beneath the black boughs
-of a great cedar. The arch of the dark foliage cut the sky into a
-semicircle of azure. All about them the grass seemed dusted with dim
-flowers--blue, white, and violet. A rich company of tiger lilies bowed
-to the west. Dense banks of laurels and cypresses stood like screens of
-blackest marble, for the sun was sinking. As they lay under the tree,
-they could look down upon the water, sheeny and glorious in the evening
-peace. Further still, the willows slept like a mist of green, with the
-fields Elysian and full of sweet stupors, the woods beyond standing
-solemn and still at the beck of night.
-
-Morgan, who had brought the lute with her, began to touch the strings,
-and to sing softly in a thin, elfin voice--
-
- My heart is open at the hour of night
- When lilies swoon
- And roses kiss in bed.
- When all the dreams of sad-lipped passion rise
- From sleep's blue bowers
- To die in lover's eyes.
- Come flame,
- Come fire,
- A woman's bosom
- Is but life's desire.
- So, all my treasures are but held for love
- In scarlet silks
- And tapestries of snow.
- I long, white-bosomed like the stars that sigh
- A bed in heaven
- For love's ecstasy.
- Come flame,
- Come fire,
- A woman's bosom
- Is all man's desire.
-
-The birds were nestling and gossiping in the laurel bushes, taking
-lodging for the night. From the topmost pinnacle of the cedar, a
-thrush, a feathered muezzin, had called the world to prayer. From the
-mere came the cries of water-fowl; the eerie wail of the lapwing rose
-in the meadows. Presently, all was still and breathless; a vast hush
-seemed to hold the world. The west was fast dying.
-
-Under the cedar the light lurked dim and magic. Morgan's fingers were
-still hovering on the strings, and she was singing to herself in a
-whisper, as though she had care for nothing, save for that which was
-in her heart. Pelleas and Igraine were quite near each other in the
-shadow. They had looked into each other's eyes--one long, deep look.
-Each had turned away troubled, yet with a sudden glory of quick anguish
-in their hearts. The night seemed very subtle to them, and the whole
-world sweet.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Igraine's thoughts were to music when she went to bed that night.
-Pelleas's eyes stayed with her, darkly, sadly; his tragic face seemed
-to look out of the night, like the face of one dead. And he more than
-liked her. She felt sure of that, even if she did not dream of kinder
-things sprung from long looks and quiet sighings. She sat on her bed,
-and smiled the whole strange day over to herself again. She had the
-man before her in all his looks and poses; how he sat his horse, the
-habit he had of looking deeply into nothingness, his strength and quiet
-knightliness, and above all his devout soul. He seemed to please her
-at every point in a way that set her thrilling within herself with a
-delicious wonder. Last, she thought of the weird twilight under the
-grand old tree--rare climax to a day of deeds and memories. She felt
-her heart leap as she remembered the great wistful look that had shone
-out on her from Pelleas's eyes.
-
-The manor house seemed still as the night itself. Morgan la Blanche had
-taken herself to a couch in the triclinium, choosing it rather than one
-of the cubicles leading from the atrium. Galerius was on guard, pacing
-the mere's bank, while his comrade slept in the kitchen. Pelleas,
-armed, with sword and shield beside him, had quartered himself on
-cushions in the great porch, with the doors open.
-
-It was about ten o'clock. Igraine, full of sweet broodings, crept
-into bed, and settled herself for sleep. The night was wonderfully
-peaceful. The window of the room was overgrown with a tangle of roses,
-the flowers seeming to mellow the air as it came softly in, and there
-was a faint shimmer into the shadows that hinted at moonlight. Igraine
-lay long awake, with her eyes on the few stars that peeped through
-between the jambs. There was too much in her heart to let sleep in for
-the while, and her thoughts were a'dance within her brain like wild,
-fleet-footed things. As she lay in a happy fever of thought, her face
-grew hot upon the pillow, and her tumbled hair was like a lustrous lava
-flow over the bed. In course, despite her tossing, she fell into a
-shallow, fitful sleep that verged between wakefulness and dreams.
-
-It was well past midnight when she started, wide awake, with the
-half-dreamt memory of some eerie sound in her ears. She sat up in bed,
-and listened, shivering. There were footfalls, swift and light, on the
-pavement of the atrium. From somewhere came a gruff voice, speaking
-tersely and in bated tones. Next, there was something that sounded like
-a groan, and then silence.
-
-Igraine crept out of bed, hurried on her habit, opened the door gently,
-and looked out. Moonlight streamed in through the square aperture in
-the roof of the hall, but all else lay in darkness. The porch gates
-were ajar, with a band of light slanting through upon the tiles. Eager,
-tremulous, she fancied as she stood that she heard the beat of oars.
-Then the low, groaning cough that she had heard before thrilled her
-into action like a trumpet cry.
-
-She was across the court in a second, and into the darkened porch. The
-doors swung back to her hands, and the night streamed in. Clear before
-her, lit with a silver emphasis, lay the water, and on it she saw the
-dark outline of the barge, moving with foaming oars towards the further
-bank. For the moment her heart seemed to halt within her.
-
-"Pelleas!" she cried. "Pelleas!"
-
-A stifled sound answered her from a dark corner of the porch. With a
-sudden frost in her bosom she saw a black rill trickling over the tiles
-in the moonlight, even touching her feet. Great fear came upon her, but
-left her power to think. In the triclinium she had seen a lamp, with
-tinder, steel, and flint in a tray beside it, and in her fear she ran
-thither, tore her fingers in her haste with stone and steel, but had
-the lamp lit with such speed as she had never learnt at Avangel. Then
-she went back trembling into the porch.
-
-The knight Pelleas lay in the corner, half propped against the wall.
-His head was bowed down upon his chest, and he had both hands clasped
-upon the neck-band of his tunic. Blood was trickling from his mouth,
-and he seemed to be hardly breathing, while under the left arm-pit
-shone the silver hilt of the knife that had been thrust there by
-Galerius's hand. To the thought of the girl it seemed as if the man
-were in his death agony.
-
-The utter realism of the moment drove all fear from her. She set the
-lamp on the tiles, and kneeling by Pelleas, pulled the knife slowly
-from his side. A gush of blood followed. She strove to staunch it with
-a corner of her gown. The man was quite unconscious, and never heeded
-her, though he was still breathing jerkily and feebly, with a rattling
-stridor in his throat. She lifted his head and rested it upon her
-shoulder, while she knelt and pressed her hand over the wound, dreading
-to see him die each moment.
-
-For an hour she knelt, cold and almost bare-kneed, on the stone floor,
-holding the man to her, watching his breathing with a tense fear,
-pressing upon the wound as though ethereal life would ebb and mock
-her fingers. Little by little she felt the warm flow cease, felt her
-fingers stiffened at their task, while the minutes dragged like æons,
-and the lamp flickered low in the night. At last she knew that the
-issue was stayed, and that Pelleas bled no more. Gradually, fearfully,
-lest life should fall away like a poised wand, she laid the man
-down, and again watched with her hand over the stricken side. He was
-breathing more noticeably now, with less of the look of death about
-him. Encouraged thus, she dared to meditate leaving him to find wine,
-and sheets to cover him there. When she essayed to move she found her
-habit clotted to the wound where she had held it. It took her minutes
-to cut the cloth through with the knife that had stabbed Pelleas, for
-she was palsied lest the wound should break again and lose her her
-love's labour.
-
-Free at last, she fled into her room, tore the clothes in which she
-had lain from the bed, and carried them trailing into the porch. Then,
-lamp in hand, she spoiled the triclinium of rugs and cushions, and
-found there the chalice of wine that Morgan had sipped from. Ladened,
-she struggled back across the hall, fearing all the while to find the
-man parted. No such foul fortune, however. He was breathing better and
-better.
-
-Then she set to to make a bed. She spread cushions and rugs; and then,
-so slowly, so gently, that she seemed hardly to move, she had the man
-laid upon the couch, with two cushions under his head. Next she covered
-him with the clothes taken from her own bed. Thus much completed
-without mishap, she washed his lips and face with water taken from the
-pool, trickled some wine down his throat, and set the doors wide to
-watch for dawn.
-
-So pressed had she been by the man's peril, that even the right of
-thought had been denied her. Now, seated by the lamp, she began to sift
-matters as well as her meagre knowledge would suffer, keeping constant
-watch on wounded Pelleas the while. She knew that Morgan and her men
-were gone in the barge, but as to who gave Pelleas his wound, she could
-come to no clear understanding in her heart. There must have been some
-deep feud for such a stroke, though she could find no reason for the
-deed. Still, she could believe anything of that chit Morgan la Blanche,
-and there the riddle rested for a season.
-
-Before long she saw the summer dawn stealing silently and mysteriously
-into the east. The face of the sky grew grey with waking light, and the
-hold of the moon and night relaxed on wood and meadow. Then the birds
-began in the garden, till she thought their shrill piping must wake
-Pelleas from his swoon, so blithe and lusty were they. The east was
-forging day fast in its furnace of gold. The glare touched the clouds
-and rolled them into wreaths of amber fire.
-
-A sigh from the couch brought her to her feet like magic. She went and
-knelt by the bed in quite a tumult of expectation. Pelleas's hands
-were groping feebly over the coverlet like weak, blind things. Igraine
-caught them in hers, thrilled as they closed upon her fingers, and,
-bending low, she waited with her lips almost on the man's, her hair on
-his forehead, her eyes fixed on his closed lids. All her soul seemed
-to droop above him like a lily over a grave. Presently he sighed again,
-stirred and opened his eyes full on Igraine's, as she knelt and mingled
-her breath with his.
-
-"Pelleas," she whispered. "Pelleas."
-
-He looked at her for a moment with a dazed stare that dawned into a
-smile that made her long to sing.
-
-"It is Igraine," she said.
-
-Pelleas caught a deep breath, and groaned as his stricken side twinged
-to the quick.
-
-Igraine put two fingers on his lips.
-
-"Lie still," she said, "lie still if you love earth. You must not
-speak, no, not one little word. I must have you quiet as a child,
-Pelleas. You have been so near death."
-
-She felt the man's hand answer hers. He did not speak or move, but lay
-and looked at her as a little child in a cradle looks at its mother, or
-as a dog eyes his master. Igraine put his hands gently down upon the
-coverlet, and smiled at him.
-
-"Lie so, Pelleas," she said; "be very quiet, for I am to leave you, for
-a minute and no more. You must not move a finger, or I shall scold."
-
-She beamed at him, started up and ran straight to the chapel, her heart
-a-whimper with a joy that was not mute. She went full length on the
-altar steps with her face turned to the cross above--the cross whose
-golden arms were aglow with the sun through the eastern window. In her
-mood, the white Christ's face seemed to smile on her with equal joy.
-She learnt more in that moment than Avangel had taught her in a year.
-
-Hardly five minutes had passed before she was with Pelleas again,
-bearing fruit and olives, bread and oil. She made a sweet dish of bread
-and berries, with some wine in it for his heart's sake, and then knelt
-at his side to feed him. She would not let him lift a finger, but
-served him herself with silver spoon and platter, smiling to give him
-courage as he obeyed her like a babe. It seemed very pitiful to her
-that so much strength and manliness should have been smitten so low
-in one brief night. None the less, the man's feebleness brought her
-more joy than ever his courage had done, and his peril had discovered
-clear wells of ruth in her that might have been months hidden but for
-the hand of Galerius. When Pelleas had finished the bread and fruit,
-she gave him more wine, and then set to to bathe his hands and face
-with scented water taken from the tablinum. Pelleas's eyes, with deep
-shadows under them now, watched her all the while with a kind of
-wondering calm. The sunlight flooded in, and lit her hair like red
-gold, and made her neck to shine like alabaster. Meeting his look, she
-reddened, and turned to hide her face for a moment, that he might not
-see all that was writ there in letters of flame.
-
-"Now you must sleep, Pelleas," she said, crossing his hands upon the
-quilt.
-
-He shook his head feebly.
-
-"I am going to leave you," she persisted, "so you must not flout me,
-Pelleas. I shall be here, ready, when you wake."
-
-She smiled at him, and closed his lids gently with her finger tips.
-
-"Sleep," she said, brushing her hand softly over his forehead, "for
-sleep will give you strength again. You may need it."
-
-She left him there, and taking bread and olives with her, she closed
-the porch gates to shade him, and went herself into the garden. After a
-meal under the old cedar, she went down to the water's edge and washed
-her feet from the stains of Pelleas's blood, and bathed her hands and
-face. She saw the barge amid the reeds and rushes on the further bank.
-There was no sign of life in the meadows, and the woods were deep with
-peace.
-
-Then she remembered Pelleas's horse. Going to the stable behind the
-manor, she found the beast stalled there, though Morgan's horses had
-been taken by the men in the barge. Igraine took hay from the rack,
-gave him a measure of oats in his manger, and watered him with water
-from the mere. Then she stood and combed his mane with her fingers
-as he fed. Some of the poppies she had plaited there were dead and
-drooping in the black hair. She thought as she unbound the withered
-things how nearly Pelleas's life had withered with theirs. She was very
-happy in her heart, and she sang softly the low tender songs women love
-when their thoughts are maying.
-
-Igraine passed the whole morning in the garden, going every now and
-again to the porch to open the doors gently, and peep in upon the
-sleeper. She gathered a basket of fruit and a lapful of flowers. About
-noon she went in, and bringing jars from the triclinium, she filled
-them with water and garnished them with flowers. These jars she set in
-array about Pelleas's bed, one of tiger lilies and one of white lilies;
-a bowl of roses at his head, a jar of hollyhocks and one of thyme, and
-fragrant herbs at the foot. Moreover, she strewed the coverlet with
-pansies, and scattered rose leaves on his pillow. Then she went to the
-chapel to pray awhile, before sitting down to watch beside his bed.
-
-Pelleas woke about an hour after noon had turned. At his first
-stirring, Igraine was hanging over him like a mother, with her hands
-on his. Pelleas looked up at her, saw the flowers about his bed, and,
-risking her menaces, spoke his first word.
-
-"Igraine," he said.
-
-She put her face down to his.
-
-"I am much stronger," he said; "I can talk now."
-
-"Perhaps a very little," she answered, with her eyes on his.
-
-"Igraine!"
-
-"Yes, Pelleas."
-
-"You are very wonderful."
-
-"Pelleas!" she said redly.
-
-"I should have died without you, for I was witless, and coughing blood."
-
-"I thought you would die," she said very softly, with her eyes
-downcast. "I held you in my arms and, God helping me, staunched the
-flow from your wound. But tell me, Pelleas, who was it stabbed you?"
-
-The man smiled at her.
-
-"There, I am as ignorant as you," he said. "I woke with a fiery twinge
-in my side, and saw a man running out of the porch in the dark. I
-struggled to rise. Blood came into my mouth, and betwixt coughing and
-hard breathing I must have fainted. What of the others?"
-
-Igraine knelt up from stooping over him, and thought.
-
-"Morgan and her men," she said presently, "fled across the mere in the
-barge just after you had been stabbed. I saw them go in the moonlight.
-It was your cry that woke me in bed. I came and found you senseless in
-the corner, and the woman and her rascals making off in the boat. One
-of the men must have smitten you while you slept."
-
-Pelleas kept silence for a while, as though he were thinking hard.
-
-"Show me the knife," he said anon.
-
-Igraine had washed away the stains, and laid it aside in a corner. She
-held it up now before Pelleas's eyes as he lay in bed. He took it from
-her with trembling hands, and handled it, his face darkening.
-
-"This is my own poniard," he said, "the poniard I left in the heart of
-the man in Andredswold. Look, girl, look! Search and see, mayhap you
-may find a cross."
-
-Igraine did his bidding, and searched the pavement, but found nothing.
-Then she came back to the bed, and began to turn the cushions up here
-and there, and to scan the tiled floor. Sure enough, under the foot of
-the bed, she found a small gold cross lying, smeared lightly with dried
-blood. She took it up and gave it to Pelleas. He caught and held it
-with a terse cry.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Pelleas lay the afternoon through in a half dream of shifting thought.
-But for the tangible things about him there might have been elfin
-mischief in the air, for the last few days had passed with such flash
-of new feeling and desire that the man's mind was still in a daze.
-
-He lay in bed, with jars of lilies round him, and a woman tending him
-with the grace of a Diana. It was all very strange, very pleasant,
-despite the ague in his ribs and his inordinate weakness. He was not so
-sure after all that he bore Morgan la Blanche any so fervent a piece of
-malice; fortune seemed to beckon him towards generosity, seeing that
-his condition was so truly picturesque. Uncouth feelings were swallowed
-up for the time being by a benignant stupor of contentment.
-
-But the balance of human happiness is often very nice and subtle.
-Leaden reason tumbled into the scale of melancholy may even outscale
-the bowl of dreams. Love and law often dangle on either beam of a man's
-mind, or philosophy anchored to a rock may sky poor fancy into the
-clouds. So it was with Pelleas that day, wisdom being often enough a
-miserable nurse. When he thought of Igraine, reason as he would with
-himself, his soul began to shimmer like moon-rippled water. When she
-looked at him the very pillars of his manhood seemed to quake. When
-she passed, light-footed, from garden to porch, she seemed to come
-in like the sun, bringing streams of warmth into his wounded flesh.
-Of necessity, he soon met other cogitations less pleasant, and no
-less imperative. From legal quarters came that inevitable pedagogue
-blear-eyed Verity, paunched up with dogma and breathing ethical
-platitudes like garlic. "The woman's a nun," quoth Dom Verity, with
-a sneer. "Keep your fancy in leash, my good Pelleas, and forswear
-romance. Bar your thoughts from a child of the church or you will rue
-it. No man may serve a nun. The world has said."
-
-What with his wound and his fractious meditations, Pelleas soon
-fell into a most dismal temper. Like most sick folk he had lost for
-the time that level sense of proportion that is the sure outcome of
-health. His thoughts began to gape at him, and to pull most melancholy
-grimaces. Even the dead man squatting in the great chair in the manor
-in Andredswold began to haunt him like an ogrish conscience. Hot and
-racked, he could stand his own company at last no longer. Calling
-Igraine to him, he began to unburden himself to her with regard to the
-man he had done to death in the forest.
-
-The girl listened, mild as moonlight, and ready to swear away her soul
-to soothe him.
-
-"I am troubled for the deed," he was saying, "though the man deserved
-death, twenty deaths, and though I served justice to the echo. His
-blood hangs on my hands, and makes me restless at heart."
-
-"Tell me his sin, Pelleas."
-
-"They were many, and too gross for ears such as thine."
-
-"Then palpably he was too gross to live."
-
-"No doubt, child."
-
-"Then why trouble for his death, Pelleas; you would not shrink from
-treading out an adder's brains?"
-
-"Ah, but there is the man's soul. I feel for him after my own
-down-bringing. What chance had he of penitence?"
-
-"True," she said gravely, "but your mother, the Abbess Gratia, used to
-tell us that bad men repented only in legends and in the Bible; never
-in grim life. Besides, you prevented the man committing worse offences
-in the future, and getting deeper into the pit. Why, Pelleas, hundreds
-of good knights have lost life for a mere matter of love; why trouble
-for the life of a wretch who perhaps never knew what truth meant. You
-would not grieve for men slain in battle."
-
-"In battle the blood is hot and the brain afire. This was a rank and
-reasonable stroke."
-
-"And therefore the more deserved. Why trouble about it, Pelleas? In
-faith, since your plight makes me tyrant, I forbid such brooding. It is
-but the evil fancy of a distraught mind, an incubus I must chase away.
-See, your hands are hot, and your forehead too. Will you sleep again,
-or shall I sing to you?"
-
-"Presently," he said. "I have more to speak of yet."
-
-Igraine knelt by him on her cushion, serene and tender.
-
-"Say on, Pelleas," she said; "a woman loves a man's confidence. If I
-can give you comfort I will gladly listen here till midnight. You are
-not yourself, weak from loss of blood, and a gnat's sting is like a
-lance thrust to you. Tell me your other troubles."
-
-Pelleas groaned, hesitated, looked up into her eyes, and recanted
-inwardly. He furbished up a minor woe to serve the occasion.
-
-"It is my sword and shield," he said; "they were given me blessed and
-consecrated by my mother. It is in my thought that I had smirched them
-by this deed. What think you, girl?"
-
-"I cannot think so," she said stoutly.
-
-Then since his face was so wistful and troubled, she racked her fancy
-for some plan she thought might soothe him. A sudden purpose came to
-her like prophecy.
-
-"Listen," she said. "I can do this for you. Give me your shield and
-sword, and let me lay them on the high altar under the cross with
-candles burning, and let me pray for them there. Will that comfort you,
-Pelleas?"
-
-"Yes," he said, with a sudden sad smile; "pray for me, go and pray for
-me, Igraine."
-
-It was the impulse of a moment. She bent down with a great thrill of
-wonder, and kissed the man's lips. It was soon done, soon sped. She saw
-Pelleas's blood stream to his face, saw something in his eyes that made
-her heart canter. Then she darted away, took up the great sword and
-the shield with its red face, and went to the chapel singing like a
-seraph. Her prayers were a strange jumble of worship and recollection.
-"Lord Jesu, cleanse his spirit," said her heart one moment; "truth,
-how he coloured and looked at me," it sang with more human refrain the
-next. "May he be a knight above knights," quoth devotion; "and may I be
-ever fair in his eyes," chimed love. Altogether, it was a most quaint
-prayer.
-
-Now, a certain mundane matter had been troubling Igraine's thought that
-day. The barge, seized and put to use by Morgan and her men, lay amid
-the reeds on the nether shore, ready to give passage to any chance
-wayfarer, welcome or otherwise, who should choose to cross the mere.
-The boat, so fixed, floated as a constant peril to Pelleas and herself.
-She felt that peace would flout them so long as the barge lay ready
-to play ferry-boat to any casual intruder. Pelleas's wound might keep
-them cooped many days in the place. She vowed to herself that the boat
-should be regained, and blushed when the oath accused her.
-
-At dusk, when the birds were piping, and there was a green hush over
-the world, she went back to Pelleas, a beautiful shameface, accompliced
-by the twilight.
-
-"I have prayed," she said simply.
-
-Pelleas touched her fingers.
-
-"I feel happier," he said.
-
-"That is well."
-
-"Stay near me, Igraine. It grows dark fast."
-
-"I shall be with you till you sleep," she said.
-
-Igraine fed him with her own hands, talking little the while, but
-feeling very enamoured of her lot. She was thinking of her new surprise
-with some mischieful pleasure as she tended Pelleas. The man was
-silent, yet very placid and facile to her willing. When she had bathed
-his face and neck, and seen him well couched, she took the lute Morgan
-had handled, and began to sing to him softly--wistfully, as though the
-song was the song of a quiet wind through willows. It was a chant for
-the dusk, for the quiet gazing of the first fires of heaven. Pelleas
-heard it like the distant touching of strings over charmed water, and
-with the breath of lilies over him he fell asleep.
-
-Igraine held by him still as a mouse in the dark, till she knew by his
-breathing that he was deep in slumber. Then she set the lute aside, put
-the lamp by the porch door, so that it should be ready to hand, and
-stole out into the garden.
-
-The moon was just coming up above the distant trees. Igraine waited
-under the black-vaulted cedar till the great ring rode bleak above the
-fringe of the tops before she went down between laurels to the water's
-edge. There was a deep cedarn scent on the warm air, and everything
-seemed deathly still. Going to the landing stage, she stood there
-awhile looking at the water, dark and mysterious, with pale webs of
-light upon its agate surface. Then she began to bind her hair closely
-on her head, smiling to herself, and staring down at her vague image in
-the water.
-
-Her hair in shackles, she turned to her task in earnest. Soon habit,
-shift, and sandals were lying in a heap, and she was standing clean,
-rare, gleamingly straight as a statue, with her arms folded upon her
-breast. For a moment she stood, making the night to swoon, before
-taking to the mere. Pearly white with an aureole of foam, she swam
-flankwise with an overhand stroke, one arm thrusting out like a silver
-sickle. Here and there, fretted by the willows, long moonbeams glinted
-on her round whiteness, as the maddened foam bubbled, and the water
-sighed and yearned amid the sedges. A fine glow had leapt through her
-body like wine, and the mere seemed to sway and sing as she swam for
-the main bank, where the willows stood blackly in a mist of phosphor
-glory. Soon she reached the shallows at a pleasant place where stretch
-of grassland tongued down into the mere. She climbed out, and stood
-like a water nymph, her body agleam and asparkle with its dew, her skin
-like rare silk, smooth as a star's glance. Down fell her hair like
-smoke. She stretched her arms to the moon, and laughed, aglow with the
-warmth gotten of her swim. Then she went to where the barge lay amid
-the reeds, and boarding it poled out into the deeps.
-
-Standing on the poop she used an oar as a paddle, and so brought the
-cumbrous barge slowly under way. It stole out from the fretted shadows
-of the trees, and glided like a great ark over the mere in black
-silence, save for the dip of the blade and the drip of water. The
-voyage took Igraine longer than her swim. At last, with the boat moored
-at the stage, she dried her limbs and body with her hair, and took
-again to shift and habit. Then she stole back to the manor, listened a
-moment to Pelleas's breathing, and having lit her lamp she went to bed.
-
-Next morning Igraine, with her deed locked up in her heart, was
-preparing Pelleas a meal. He had just stirred and roused himself from
-sleep with a little cry, and he was watching the girl with the mute
-reflective look of one just freed from the visions of the night.
-
-"Igraine," he said.
-
-She turned to him with a soft smile.
-
-"I have been dreaming," he confessed gravely.
-
-"Dreaming, Pelleas?"
-
-"I thought," said he, "that I saw a great dragon of gold come over the
-meadows with a naked sword in his mouth, and a collar of rubies round
-his throat. And he came to the mere's edge, ramping and breathing fire.
-And lo! he entered into the barge there, and the barge went forth
-bearing him, while all the mere's water boiled and shone about the
-boat like flame. So he came to the island, and all greenness seemed to
-wither before him, and with the fear of him I awoke."
-
-Igraine shook her head at the man.
-
-"Your dreams are distraught," she said; "it is your wound, Pelleas. In
-faith we should need the great Merlin for such a vision."
-
-"Ah," said he, "I can read you the riddle, Igraine. Our barge lies by
-the land bank ready for any foe. That is where the dream touches us."
-
-Igraine brought him a bowl of crushed bread and fruit, and made as
-though to feed him.
-
-"Never worry," she said; "the barge is moored safe at the stage."
-
-Pelleas put the bowl aside with one hand, and stared at her from his
-pillows.
-
-"Did the barge swim the mere of herself," quoth he, "and anchor for us
-so fairly?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Then--"
-
-Igraine went red of a sudden, and looked at her knees.
-
-"Sooth, Pelleas," she said, "I must have been the dragon of your dream;
-God pardon me."
-
-"Igraine!"
-
-"I never knew I seemed so fearful a creature."
-
-"Honour and praise--"
-
-He half rose on his pillows in his enthusiasm. Igraine put him gently
-back, and took up the bowl of bread and fruit.
-
-"That will do, my dear Pelleas," she said; "now just lie still and have
-your breakfast."
-
-What boots it to chronicle at length their sojourn in the island manor.
-Twelve days Igraine nursed the man there, giving all her heart for
-service, tending him from sunrise to the fall of night. She seemed
-to have no other joy than to sit and talk to him, to make music with
-voice and hand, to keep his couch posied round with flowers. On waking
-Pelleas would find her by him, fresh as the dawn and full of a golden
-tenderness; at night his eyes closed upon her gracious figure as she
-sat in the gloaming and sang. She was near to hear his voice, quick to
-see his needs and to remedy them with soft hands and softer looks. The
-very atmosphere about the man seemed touched and mellowed by her, and
-the hours seemed to trip to the measure of a golden rhyme.
-
-Pelleas mended very rapidly under her care. His wound, sweet and
-innocent, gave him no trouble save some slight feverishness on the
-third day. The sixth morning found him so stalwart of temper that
-Igraine consented to his leaving bed for a morning provided he obeyed
-her to the letter. His first steps were taken in the atrium with
-Igraine's arm about his waist, and his upon her shoulders. So well did
-he bear himself that the girl led him to the chapel, and there side
-by side on the altar steps they winged up their devotion to heaven.
-Igraine's prayers, be it known, were all for love; Pelleas's for the
-threatening shadows over his own soul.
-
-Daily after this innovation Igraine would make him a couch under the
-great cedar tree in the garden, where he could rest shaded from the
-sun, and there, morn, noon, and eve, they had much comradeship and
-speech together. They would talk of God, the saints, and the souls of
-men, of love and honour, and the needs of Britain. Pelleas would tell
-her of his own service with Aurelius, of all the fair pomp of Lesser
-Britain, where Conan had begun a goodly kingdom years ago, and where
-many British folk had taken refuge. He had been to Rome as a boy, and
-he described that vast city to her, or told her of the bloody fields he
-had seen when the steel of Christendom met the heathen. Fresh streams
-from either soul welled out, and mingled much during those summer days.
-Pelleas and Igraine looked deep each into the heart of the other,
-finding fine store of nobleness, of truth, and of things beautiful,
-till the heart of each had treasured everything for love and for love's
-desire. They were fair hours and very sweet to the two. The day seemed
-a casket of gold, and the night a bowl of ebony ablaze with stars.
-
-About this time the man Pelleas began to go down into deep waters. Many
-days had passed with a flare of torches in the west; their sojourn was
-drawing to a close, and the night seemed near. The haler Pelleas grew
-in body, the more halt and hopeless waxed his soul. The whole world
-seemed to grow wounded to his eyes; the west was wistful at evening,
-and the starry sky a sob of pain. When Igraine harped and sang, each
-note flew like winged death into his heart. He had no joy that was not
-smitten through with anguish, no thought that was not crowned with
-thorns. It was a very simple matter indeed, but perverse to utter
-bitterness. Pelleas saw no hope for himself in the end. He would rock
-and toss, and think at night till the darkness seemed to crush him into
-a mere mass of misery. Above all there seemed to rise a great hand
-holding a cross of gold, and a voice that said, "Beware thy soul and
-death."
-
-Not so was it with Igraine. To her life had no shroud, and love
-prophesied of love alone. She knew what she knew, and her heart was
-full of summer and the song of birds. Pelleas loved her; she would have
-staked her soul on it, though she did not realise the desperate turmoil
-passing in the man's clean heart. Knowing what she did, she was all for
-sun and moods of radiant thought and happiness. Each day she imagined
-that she would tell Pelleas of her secret; each day she gave the golden
-moment to the morrow. She knew how the man's face would flame up with
-the fulness of great wonder, and like a woman she hoarded anticipation
-in her heart and waited.
-
-The day soon came when Pelleas declared himself hale enough to
-bear armour, though the admission was made with no great amount of
-satisfaction. To test his strength he armed himself with Igraine's
-help, harnessed his black horse, and rode round the island, first at
-a level pace with Igraine running beside him. Then he tried a gallop,
-handling spear and shield the while. Lastly, he took Igraine up to him,
-and rode with her as he had ridden through the wold. Suffering nothing
-from these ventures, and seeming sure in selle as ever, he declared
-with heavy heart that they should sally for Winchester on the morrow.
-
-Pelleas and Igraine passed their last evening in the island under the
-great cedar in the garden. The place had deep memories for them, and
-very loth were they to leave it, so fair and kind a refuge had it
-proved to them in peril. Neither said much that evening, for their
-thoughts were busy. As for Pelleas, he was glum and heavy-browed as
-thunder, with a look in his deep eyes that spelt misery. It was as
-though he were leaving his very soul in the place to ride out like a
-corpse on a pilgrimage with despair. How much she might have eased him,
-perhaps Igraine never knew.
-
-The west was already red and rosy, and there was a green hush over the
-meadows, and a canopy of pale porphyry in the east. All the soul of the
-world seemed to lift white hands to the night in a stupor of mutest
-woe. Yet the girl's mood tended towards mere sensitive regret, for the
-future was not dark to her imaginings.
-
-"You are sad, Pelleas," she said.
-
-"I am only thinking, Igraine."
-
-"I am sorry to leave this place."
-
-Pelleas sighed for answer. With a contradictory spirit, born of pain,
-he longed for night and the peace it would not bring. Something swore
-to him that he was more to the girl than man had ever been, and yet she
-seemed happy when he compared her humour with his own. The possibility
-that she could dream of broken vows was never in his thought. He could
-only believe that her heart was less deep than his, and the thought
-only added bitterness to his mead of sorrow.
-
-"Igraine," he said anon.
-
-She turned to him.
-
-"You love life?"
-
-"Truth, Pelleas, I do."
-
-"Then love it not, girl."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"'Tis a broken bowl."
-
-"How so?" she said, thrilling.
-
-Pelleas turned his face from her to hide the strife thereon. He felt
-as though death was in his heart, yet he spoke as quietly as though
-he were telling some mundane tale, and not words conjured up by a
-desperate wisdom.
-
-"Igraine," he said, "I have lived and learnt something in my time,
-and my words are honest. On earth what do we find--a lie on truth's
-lips, and anguish on the face of joy. The roses bloom and die, white
-hands shrivel, and harness rusts under the green grass. As for fame, it
-breeds hate and jealousy, and the curse of the proud. Music is broken
-by the laugh of the fool, nor can youth forget the crabbed noisomeness
-of age. Women sing and pass. A man marries one night and is tombed the
-next. And love, what of love? I tell you love lives only in the eyes of
-woe. It is all mockery, cold damned mockery. I have said."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Pelleas and Igraine were stirring soon after dawn on the morning of
-their sally for Winchester. It was a summer dawn, still and stealthy;
-the meadows were full of a shimmering mist, the mere spirit-wrapped,
-and dappled here and there with gold.
-
-Silent and distraught they made their last meal in the quiet manor.
-Everything seemed sad and solemn, as though the stones could grieve;
-the lilies by the impluvium seemed adroop, and the flowers about
-Pelleas's bed were withered. After the meal Pelleas armed himself, and
-went to harness his horse, while Igraine put up bread and foodstuff
-into a linen cloth for their journey. Before sallying they went all
-round the manor, into the chapel, where they prayed before the altar,
-into bower, parlour, and viridarium. The porch with its empty bed and
-withered flowers they took leave of last. There was such wistfulness
-there that even the dumb things seemed to cry out in pain.
-
-Pelleas closed the gates with bowed head, and made the sign of the
-cross upon them with the pommel of his dagger. His throat seemed full
-of one great muffled sob. Together they wandered for the last time
-through the garden, while Igraine plucked some flowers for a keepsake.
-Pelleas felt that he loved every leaf in the place like his own soul.
-Then they went down to the water's edge, and, getting the horse on
-board, they loosed the barge from the bank, and came slowly to the
-nether shore. It might have been the fury of death, so stark and solemn
-was Pelleas's face.
-
-Before turning their backs and riding away, they stood and looked long
-at the place girdled with its quiet waters. The great cedar slept there
-with a hood of mist over his green poll. Like a dream island it seemed,
-plucked by magic from some southern sea, fair with all fairness. Anon,
-despite their grieving, the last strand cracked, and the wrench was
-done. They were holding over vapoury meadows with their faces to the
-west.
-
-Pelleas was very stoical that morning. As a matter of fact he had been
-awake all night, couched with misery and with thoughts that wounded
-him. All night through the lagging hours he had tossed and turned,
-cursing his destiny in his heart--too bitter for any prayer. What
-mockery that he who had passed so long unscathed should fall into
-hopeless homage to a nun. Desperate, he left his bed in the dark, and
-made the garden a dim cloister until dawn. Yet in the rack of struggle
-a clear voice had come to touch and dominate his being, and day had
-found him steadfast. He would hold to the truth, he vowed, do his duty,
-and let God judge of the measure of his gratitude. He could obey, but
-not with humility; he could suffer, but not with resignation.
-
-It was after such a night in the furnace of struggle that he forged his
-temper for the days to come. He had thought to meet love with a stark
-hardihood, to talk lightly, to go with unruffled brow while his heart
-hungered. Nothing should move him to any emotion. He would meet destiny
-like a rock, let surges beat and melt back to the sea. It was better
-thus, he thought, than to go moaning for the moon.
-
-Such was the determination that met Igraine's lighter humour that
-morning. She could make nothing of the man as she rode before him. He
-was bleak, dismal, yet striving to seem contented with their lot, now
-conjuring up a withered smile, now lapsing into interminable silence.
-His eyes were stern in measure, but there was the old light in them
-when she looked deeply, and the staunch flame was there still. After
-all, Pelleas's quiet humour did not trouble her very vastly. She had
-her own reading of the riddle, and a word in her heart that could
-unlock his trouble. Moreover, she was more than inclined to put him to
-such a test as should bring his manhood to a splendid trial. Perhaps
-there was some imp of vanity deep down in her woman's heart. At all
-events, she suited herself to the occasion, and passed much of the time
-in thought.
-
-A ride of some seventy miles lay before them before they should come
-to the gates of Winchester. Much of that region was wild forestland
-and moor, bleak wastes of scrub let into woods and gloom. Occasional
-meadows, and rare acres of glebe ringing some rude hamlet, broke
-the shadowy desolation of the land. Great oaks, gnarled, vast, and
-terrible, held giant sway amid the huddled masses of the lesser folk.
-Here the boar lurked, and the wolf hunted. But, for the most, it was
-dark and calamitous--a ghostly wilderness almost forsaken by man, and
-given over to the savagery of beasts.
-
-Pelleas and Igraine came upon the occasional trail of the heathen as
-they went. A smoking villa, a burnt village with a dun mist hanging
-over it like a shroud, and once a naked man, bruised and bloody, bound
-to a tree, and shot through with arrows--such were the few sights that
-remembered to them their own need of caution. The wild country had been
-raided, and its sparse civilisation scattered to the woods. The crosses
-at the cross-roads had been thrown down and broken. A hermitage they
-came on in the woods had been sacked, and in it, to their pity, they
-found the body of a dead girl. They halted there to pray for her, and
-to give her burial. Pelleas dug a shallow grave under an oak, and they
-left her there, and went on their way with greater caution.
-
-Not a soul did they meet, yet Pelleas kept under cover as much as
-possible for prudence' sake. He scanned well every valley or piece of
-open land before crossing it, and kept under the wooelshawe whenever
-the track ran near trees. Fear of the unknown, and the dear burden
-that he bore, kept him alert as a goshawk for possible peril. By noon,
-despite sundry halts and reconnoitrings, they had covered nearly twenty
-miles, and by the evening of the same day they had added another score,
-for Pelleas's horse was a powerful beast, and Igraine's weight cumbered
-him little.
-
-Towards evening it began to rain, a heavy, summer, windless shower,
-that made moist rattle in the leaves, and flooded fragrant freshness
-into the air. Pelleas gave Igraine his cloak, and made her wear it,
-despite her excuses. As luck would have it, they came upon a little inn
-built in the grey shelter of a forsaken quarry. The inn folk were still
-there--an old woman, and a brat of a boy, her grandson. Seeing so great
-a knight, the beldam was ready enough to give them lodgings, and what
-welcome she could muster. She spread a supper of goat's milk, brown
-bread, and venison--not a bad table for such a hovel. The meal over,
-she pointed Pelleas with a leer to a little inner room that boasted a
-rough bed, a water-pot, and ewer.
-
-"We will not disturb ye," she said; "my lad has foddered the horse. You
-would be stirring early?"
-
-Pelleas gave the woman her orders, and sent Igraine into the inner
-room. He made himself a bed of dried bracken before her door, and laid
-himself there so that none could enter save over his body. The woman
-and the boy slept on straw in a corner. In this wise they passed the
-night.
-
-On the morrow, after more goat's milk and brown bread, with some wild
-strawberries to smooth it, they sallied early, and held on their way to
-Winchester. The shower of the night had given place to fair weather,
-and a fresh breeze blowing from the west. Soon the sun was up in such
-strength that the green woods lost their dankness, and the leaves their
-dew. It was the very morning for a ride.
-
-If possible, Pelleas was even more gloomy than on the day before. There
-was such a level air of dejection over his whole being that Igraine
-began to have grave qualms of conscience, and to suffer the reproaches
-of a pity that grew more clamorous hour by hour. None the less, maugre
-the man's sorry humour, there was a certain stealthy joy in it all, for
-Pelleas, by his very moodiness, flattered her tenderness for him not a
-little. She began to see, in very truth, how staunch the man was; how
-he meant to honour to the letter her imagined vows, though his love
-grieved like a winged merlion. His great strength became more and more
-apparent. A lighter spirit would have gone with the wind, or made great
-moan over the whole business. Pelleas, she saw, was striving to buckle
-his sorrow deep in his bosom, to save her the pain of knowing his
-distress. There was nothing little about the man. Palpably he had not
-succeeded eminently in his attempt to spur a wounded spirit into light
-courtliness and easy hypocrisy. Still, that was not his fault; it only
-said the more for his love.
-
-It was not till noon had passed that Pelleas, with a heavy courage,
-constrained himself to speak calmly of their parting. Even then he was
-so eager to shape his speech into mere courtesies, that he overdid the
-thing, more than betraying himself to the girl's quick wit.
-
-He had questioned her as to her friends in Winchester, and her purposes
-for the future. His rambling took somewhat of a didactic turn as he
-laboured at his mentorship.
-
-"There is a fair abbey within the walls," he said; "I have heard it
-nobly spoken of both as to devoutness and comfort. Their rules are not
-of such iron caste as at some other holy houses; the library is good,
-and there is a well-planted garden. The abbess is a gracious and kindly
-woman, and of high family. I have often had speech with her myself, and
-can vouch for her courtliness and benevolence. Assuredly you may find
-very safe and peaceful harbour there."
-
-Igraine smiled to herself at the callous benignity of his counsel. He
-might have been her grandfather by his manner.
-
-"You see," she said naively, "I do not like being caged; it spoils
-one's temper so. I have an uncle in the place--an uncle by marriage--a
-man not loved vastly by the proud folk of my own family. He is a
-goldsmith by trade, and is named Radamanth."
-
-Pelleas's quick answer was not prophetic of great favour.
-
-"Radamanth," he said--"a gentleman who weighs his religion by the
-pound, and is seen much at church. Pardon my frankness, I had this
-gold chain of him. He is rich as Rome, and has high rank among the
-merchants."
-
-"So I had heard," she answered.
-
-Pelleas looked into space with a most judicial air.
-
-"You do not think of going to a secular house," he said.
-
-Igraine smiled to herself, and halted a moment in her answer.
-
-"Why not?" she said.
-
-"You--a nun?"
-
-"Pelleas, I do not see why it is necessary for holiness to be bricked
-up like a frog in a wall in order to escape corruption. Why, you are
-eating your own words."
-
-"But you have vows," he said.
-
-"I have; and doubts also."
-
-"Doubts?" quoth the man, with a quick look, thrilling inwardly.
-
-"Doubts, Pelleas, doubts."
-
-She caught his eyes with hers, and gave him one long, deep stare that
-made him quake as though all that had been flame within him--that which
-he had sought to tread to ashes--had but spread redly into her bosom.
-There was no parrying such a message. It smote him blind in a moment.
-The spiritual bastions of his soul seemed to reel and rock as though
-some chaos had broken on their stones. There was great outcry in his
-heart, as of a leaguer when guards and stormers are at grapple on the
-walls. "Cross! Holy Cross!" cried Conscience, in the moil. "Yield ye,
-yield ye, Pelleas," sang a voice more subtle, "yield ye, and let Love
-in!" He sat stiff in the saddle, and shut his eyes to the day, while
-the fight boiled on within him. Now Love had him heart and hand; now
-Honour, blind and bleeding, struggled in and stemmed the rout. He was
-won and lost, lost and won, a dozen times in a minute.
-
-Recovered somewhat, he made bold to question Igraine yet further.
-
-"Tell me your doubts, girl," he said.
-
-"They are deep, Pelleas, deep as the sea."
-
-"Whence came they, then?"
-
-"Some great power put them in my heart, and they are steadfast as
-death."
-
-Again the wild flush of liberty swept Pelleas like wind.
-
-"Tell me, Igraine," he said, in a gasp.
-
-She put her fingers gently on his lips. "Patience--patience," she said,
-"and perhaps I will tell them to you, Pelleas, ere long."
-
-Thus much she suffered him to go, and no further. Her quick instinct
-had read him nearly to the "Explicit," and there she halted, content
-for an hour or a day. Her love was singing like a lark in the blue.
-She beamed on the man in spirit streams of pride and tumultuous
-tenderness. How she would comfort him in the end! He should carry her
-into Winchester on his horse, and she would lodge there, but not at the
-great inn that harboured souls for heaven. She would have the bow and
-the torch for her signs, and possibly the Church might serve her in
-other fashion. Like a lotus eater, she dallied with all these dreams in
-her heart.
-
-With the sun low in the west, Pelleas and Igraine were still three
-leagues or so from Winchester. The day was passing gloriously, with
-the radiant acolytes of evening swinging their jasper censers in the
-sky. The two were riding on a pine-crowned ridge, and the stretch of
-wilderness beyond seemed wrapped in one mysterious blaze of smoking
-gold. Hills and woods were glittering shadows, like spirit things in a
-spirit atmosphere. The west was a great curtain of transcendent gold.
-Pelleas and Igraine could not look at it without great wonder.
-
-Presently they came to a little glade, green and quiet, with a clear
-pool in it ringed round with rushes. A lush cushion of grass and moss
-swept from the water to the bases of the trees. It was as quaint and
-sweet a nook as they had passed that day. The place, with its solitude
-and stillness, pleased Igraine very greatly.
-
-"What say you, Pelleas," she said, "let us off-saddle, and harbour here
-the night. This little refuge will serve us more kindly than a ride in
-the dark to Winchester."
-
-Pelleas looked round about him, knelt for once without struggle to his
-own inmost wishes, and agreed with Igraine.
-
-"Very good," he said. "I can build you a bower to sleep in. There are
-hazels yonder--just the stuff for a booth. The water in the pool there
-looks sweet enough to drink, and we have ample in the cloth for a
-supper."
-
-Igraine gave him no more leisure to moralise on such trifles. She
-sprang down to the cushiony turf, and took his horse by the bridle.
-
-"I will be master again for once, Pelleas," she said, "since, well of
-your wound, you have played the tyrant. At least you shall obey me
-to-night."
-
-Pelleas, half in a stupor, gave up fighting his own heart for a while,
-and fell in with Igraine's humour. She was strangely full of smiles and
-quiet glances; her eyes would meet his, flash, thrill him, and then
-evade his soul with sudden mischief. She tethered his horse for him,
-and then, making him sit down under a tree, she began to unarm him,
-kneeling confidently by his side. Her fingers lingered over-long on the
-buckles. When she lifted off his helmet, her hands touched his face
-and forehead, and set him blushing like a boy. The very nearness of
-her--her breath, her dress, her lips and eyes so near to his--made him
-like so much wax--passive, obedient, yet red as fire.
-
-When she had ended her task, she gave him his naked sword and her
-orders.
-
-"Now you may cut me hazels for a bower, Pelleas," she said. "I will
-have it here under this tree where the moss is soft and dry. This
-summer night one could sleep under the stars and never feel the dew."
-
-Pelleas rose up and did her bidding. The green boughs were ready to
-his great sword, as it gleamed and glimmered in the wizard light. He
-cut two forked stakes, and set them upright in the ground, with a pole
-between them. Then he built up branches about this centrepiece till
-the whole was roofed and walled with shelving green; he spread his
-red cloak therein for a carpet. Igraine sat and watched his labour.
-Life seemed to have rushed nearly to its zenith, and her thoughts were
-soaring in regions of gold.
-
-The black moth night had come into the sky with his golden-spotted
-wings all spread. It was time for idyllic love, pure looks, and the
-touch of hands. The billowy bosoms of the trees rolled sombrously
-above, and the little pool was like a wizard's glass, black and deep
-with sheeny mysteries.
-
-Igraine beckoned Pelleas to a seat on the grass bank at her feet when
-he had finished. There was a light on her face that the man had not
-seen before, a kind of quiet rapture, a veil of exultation, as though
-her maidenhood were flowering gold under a net of pinkest satin. She
-had loosened her hair in straight streams upon her shoulders, and her
-habit lay open to the very base of her shapely throat. She sat there
-and looked at him, with hands clasped in her lap, and her grey gown
-rising and falling markedly as she breathed. It seemed to Pelleas that
-there was nothing in the whole universe save twilight, two eyes, a
-stirring bosom, and two wistful lips.
-
-They had been speaking of their ride, and of the many strange things
-that had befallen them during their adventures together. Igraine had
-waxed strangely tender in her talk, and had spoken subtle bodeful
-words that meant much at such a season. She was flinging bonds about
-Pelleas that made him exult and suffer. His heart seemed great within
-him and ready to break, for the blood that bubbled and yearned in it in
-glorious anguish.
-
-"To-morrow," said the girl, "we enter Winchester, and I have known you,
-Pelleas, two weeks and some few hours more. You seem to have been in my
-life many years."
-
-Words flooded into Pelleas's heart, and stifled all struggle for a
-moment. He was breathing like a hunted thing.
-
-"Igraine," he said.
-
-"Pelleas."
-
-"I never lived till our lives were joined."
-
-Igraine gave a little gasp, and bent over him suddenly, her eyes aglow,
-her hair falling down into his face.
-
-"Kiss me, Pelleas," she said; "in the name of God, kiss me."
-
-Pelleas gave a great groan.
-
-"Girl, I dare not."
-
-"You dare."
-
-"Igraine?"
-
-She bent herself till her lips were over his, and both their heads were
-clouded in her hair. Her eyes glimmered, her breath beat on his, he saw
-the whiteness of her teeth between her half-closed lips.
-
-"Igraine," he said again, half in a groan.
-
-She did not answer him, but simply took his face between her hands and
-looked into his eyes.
-
-"Coward, Pelleas."
-
-Power seemed to go from the man in a moment. He put his hands upon
-her shoulders and looked at her as in a splendid dream. Her face was
-beautifully peevish, and there lurked an infinite hunger on her lips.
-Then with a great woe in his heart he drew her face down to his and
-kissed her. There was such sweet pain in the grand despair of it all
-that he felt faint for strength of loving. Before he had gathered
-breath, Igraine had slipped away from him and was in the bower.
-
-"Till dawn, Pelleas, till dawn," she said.
-
-"Ah, Igraine!"
-
-"Go and sleep, Pelleas; I will talk to you on the morrow."
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-With the girl's face lost behind the green eaves of the bower, Pelleas
-fell of a sudden into great darkness of soul. It was as though the moon
-had passed behind a cloud, and left him agrope in the woods without
-light and without guide. Igraine had bidden him to go and sleep. She
-might as well have told the sea to be still in the lap of the wind.
-
-Going aside towards the mouth of the glade so that he might not disturb
-the girl, he began to tread the grass between brake and brake, while
-he held parley with his turbulent and seething thoughts. What was
-Igraine to be to him on the morrow? She had broken the back of his
-determination, and beaten down his strength in those grand moments of
-sudden passion. The rich June of her beauty was still on his sight. Her
-grace, her infinite tenderness, the purity of her, were all set about
-his soul like angels round a dreamer's bed. She was light and darkness,
-sound and silence; she had the round world in her red heart, and the
-stars seemed to go about her in companies of gold. Never had Pelleas
-thought idolatry so smooth and swift a sin. He had never believed that
-love in so brief a space could make such wrack of madness in a hale and
-healthy body.
-
-As he walked under the giant limbs of the great trees he tried to
-grapple the thing with reason, to untangle this knot by natural logic.
-These were the bleak facts, and they stood up like white headstones in
-the night. He loved Igraine, and Igraine he knew loved him in turn;
-but Igraine was a nun despite her womanliness, and there lay the core
-of the whole matter. If he obeyed love he must disgrace the girl
-with broken vows, for like a staunchly taught Christian of somewhat
-stern and primitive mould he stood in honest awe of things spiritual
-and ecclesiastic. His very love for the girl made him fearful of in
-any way dishonouring her. If he held to the trite observations of a
-prompted conscience, then he must forswear love, and leave Igraine to
-the miserable celibacy of the Church, that chrysalid state that never
-burgeons into the fuller, fairer life of perfect womanhood. These were
-the two forces that held him shaken in the balance.
-
-Long while he went east and west under the trees with the old gloom
-flooding back like thunder. His whole thought seemed warped into
-bitterness; the blatant mockery of it all grinned and screamed like a
-harpy. Again with clarion cry and rosy flush of banners love stormed in
-and held law at death's door for a season. Again came the inevitable
-repulse, the moaning lapse of desire, while the black banner of the
-Church flapped once more over him in dismal sanctity. Pelleas found
-no shred of peace wheresoever he looked. Who has not learnt that when
-anarchy is in the heart, the whole world seems out of gear?
-
-As the night passed, love seemed to faint and wax pale before an
-ever-darkening visage that declared despair. A sense of inevitable
-gloom seemed to weigh down desire, and to drown hope in misery. Pelleas
-grew calmer at heart, though his thoughts were no less woeful. Love's
-voice, stifled and wistful, came like an elfin voice through woods,
-while the cry of conscience was like the thundering surge of the wind
-through trees. He grew less restless, more apathetic. Coming to a halt
-he leant against an oak's bossy trunk, and stood motionless as in a
-stupor for an hour or more. The blight of soul-sickness was on him, and
-he was like one dazed by a great fever.
-
-Presently he went back slowly to Igraine's shelter of boughs, and stood
-near it--thinking. Then he dropped on his hands and knees, crept up
-close, and parting the leaves looked in on her as she slept, wrapped in
-his red cloak. He could see her face indistinctly white in a wealth of
-shadows; he could hear her breathing. Then he crept away again like a
-wounded thing, and lay for a time with his face in his arms, grieving
-without a sound.
-
-Again, a second time, he crept to the bower, and listened there on his
-knees. Turning his face to the night he tried to pray, vainly indeed,
-for his heart seemed dumb. A corner of Igraine's gown lay near his
-hands at the entry; he went down on hands and knees and kissed it. Then
-he took the little gold cross from his bosom, the cross Morgan had
-held, and laid it on the grass at Igraine's feet. He also put a purse
-with a few gold coins in it beside the cross. When he had done this he
-crept away mutely, and began to arm in silence.
-
-Once, as he was buckling on his casque, he thought he heard Igraine
-stirring. He kept very still, with a sudden, wild wish in his heart
-that she would wake and save him, but the sound proved nothing. He
-finished buckling on his harness, girded his sword, and hung his shield
-about his neck. Then he went to the little pool, and, kneeling down,
-dashed water in his face, and drank from his palms. He felt faint and
-bruised after the night's battle.
-
-Once more he went and stood by the hazel shelter as though for a last
-leave-taking before the strong wrench came. The little pavilion of
-leaves seemed to hold all hope and human joy in its narrow compass.
-Pelleas stood and took long leave of the girl in his heart. He wished
-her all the fair fortune he could think of, prayed for her as well as
-he could in a broken, wounded way, and then with a great sob he turned
-and left her sleeping. His black horse was tethered not far away. As
-he went he staggered, and seemed blind for a moment. He soon had the
-girths tightened, and was in the saddle, riding away dry-eyed and
-broken-souled into the night.
-
-Presently the dawn came, redly, gloriously, like a marriage pageant.
-Igraine, reft from dreams, woke with a little shiver of joy in her
-pavilion of green boughs. She lay still awhile, and let her thoughts
-dance like the motes in the shimmer of sunlight that stole in between
-the branches. The day seemed warm and glorious, for that morning was
-she not to tell Pelleas of the secret she had kept from him so many
-days, the words she had hoarded in her heart like love? It would be a
-fitting end, she thought, to the rare novitiate each had passed in the
-heart of the other.
-
-Hearing no stir about her shelter, she thought Pelleas asleep, and
-peeped out presently between the boughs to bid him wake. Glade and pool
-lay peacefully in green and silver, but she saw no knight sleeping,
-no war-horse standing under the trees. Starting up, the gold cross
-glinting on the grass, with the purse beside it, appealed her with mute
-tragedy. She caught them up, trembling, and with sudden fear in her
-heart she went out into the glade and searched from brake to brake. It
-was barren as her joy. Pelleas had gone.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK II
-
-GORLOIS
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Radamanth the goldsmith was held in no little honour and esteem by the
-townsfolk of Winchester. Even the market women and the tavern loungers
-stood aside for him in the street as he made his stately march in black
-robe and chain of gold. He was a man possessed of those outward virtues
-so well suited to commend a character to the favour of the world. He
-was venerable, rich, and much given to charity. His coffers were often
-open to infirmary and church; his house near the market square was as
-richly furnished as any noble's, and he gave good dinners. No man in
-Winchester had a finer aptitude for pleasing all classes. He was smooth
-and intelligent to the rich, bland and neighbourly to his equals, quite
-a father to the poor, and moreover he had no wife. Every Sabbath he
-went at the head of his household to the great basilica church in the
-chief square, worshipped and did alms as a rich merchant should.
-
-Disinterestedness is a somewhat unique virtue, and it must not be
-supposed that Radamanth lived with his eye on eternity alone. It must
-be confessed that self-interest was often the dial of his philanthropy,
-and expediency to him the touchstone of action. Nothing furthers
-commerce better than a pious and merciful reputation, and Radamanth
-knew the inestimable value of a solid and goodly exterior. Wise in his
-generation, he nailed the Cross to his door, and plied his balances
-prosperously behind the counter.
-
-Thus when the girl Igraine trudged sad-eyed into Winchester in her gown
-of grey, and appeared before him as a homeless child of the Church,
-he took her in like the good uncle of the fairy tale, and proffered
-her his house for home. Possibly he pitied her for her plight after
-the burning of Avangel, for she seemed much cast down in mind and very
-deserving of a kinsman's proper comfort. Then she was of noble family,
-a coincidence that no doubt weighed heavily in Radamanth's opinion.
-It was good to have so much breeding in the house, to be able to say
-with a smirk to his friends and neighbours, "My niece, the daughter
-of Malgo, Lord of the Redlands, slain and plundered of the heathen in
-Kent." Igraine brought quite a lustre into Radamanth's home. He beamed
-on her with sleek pride and satisfaction, gave her rich stuffs for
-dress, a goodly chamber, and a little Silurian maid to wait. Moreover,
-he gave his one child and daughter Lilith a grave lecture on sisterly
-companionship, advised her to study Igraine's gentle manners, and to
-profit by her aristocratic and educated influence. Luckily Lilith was a
-quiet girl, not given to jealousy or much self-trust, and Igraine found
-as warm a welcome as her unhappy heart could wish.
-
-No few days had passed since that dawn on the hill above Winchester
-when Igraine had started up from under the green boughs to find
-Pelleas gone. They had been days of keen trouble to the girl. Often
-and often had she hated herself for her vain delay, her over-tender
-procrastination, that had brought misery in place of joy. The past
-was now a wounded dream to her, ripe and beautiful, yet fruited with
-such mute pain as only a woman's heart can feel. Igraine had conjured
-up love like some Eastern house of magic, only to see its domes faint
-goldly into a gloom of night. She felt as much for Pelleas as for
-herself, and there was a blight upon her that seemed as though it could
-never pass. She was not a woman given to tears. Her trouble seemed to
-live in her eyes with pride, and to stiffen her stately throat into a
-pillar of rebellious strength.
-
-Not a word, not a sign had come to her of Pelleas. Taken into
-Radamanth's house, served, petted, flattered, she went drearily
-through its daily round, sat at its board, talked with the guestfolk,
-while hope waited wide-eyed in her heart and kept her brave. Pelleas
-had told her that he was for Winchester, and assuredly, she thought,
-she might find him and confess all. She often kept watch hour by hour
-at her window overlooking the street. In her walks she had a glance
-for almost every man who passed on foot or horseback, till she grew
-almost ashamed of herself, and feared for her modesty. Her eyes always
-hungered for a red shield and harness, a black horse, a face grieving
-in dark reserve and silence. At night she was often quite a child in
-herself. She would take the little gold cross from her bosom and brood
-over it. She even found herself whispering to the man as she lay in
-bed, and stretching out her arms to him in the dark as in pain. For all
-her pride and courage she was often bowed down and broken when no one
-was near to see.
-
-It was not long before she found a confidant to befriend her in her
-distress of heart. Lilith, the goldsmith's daughter, had great brown
-eyes, soft and very gentle; her face was wistful and white under
-her straightly combed hair; she was a quiet girl, timid, but very
-thoughtful for others. The two appealed each other by contrast. Lilith
-had soon read trouble in Igraine's eyes, and had nestled to her in
-soul, ready with many little kindnesses that were like dew in a dry
-season. Igraine unbent to her, and suffered herself to be enfolded by
-the other's sympathy.
-
-One day she told her the whole distressful tale. It was in the garden
-behind the house, a green and pleasant place opening on the river, and
-flanked with stone. The two were in an arbour framed of laurels, its
-floor mosaicked with quaint tiles. Igraine sat on the bench with Lilith
-on a stool at her feet. They were both sad, for Lilith was a girl whose
-heart answered strongly to any tale of unhappy mood. Igraine had made
-mere truth of the matter, neither justifying nor embellishing. Her
-clear bleak words were the more pathetic for their very simpleness.
-Lilith had been crying softly to herself. Her brown eyes were very
-misty when she turned her white face to Igraine's with a grievous
-little sigh.
-
-"What can I say to you?" she said.
-
-"Nothing," said Igraine, taking her hands and smiling through misery.
-
-"I have never the words I wish for, and when I feel most I can say
-little."
-
-"You understand; that is enough for me."
-
-"Ah," said Lilith, with a fine blush and a shy look, "I think I can
-feel for you, Igraine, almost to the full, though I seem such an Agnes.
-I am woman enough to have learnt something that means all to a girl. I
-am very sad for your sake."
-
-"Child."
-
-"I will try to comfort you."
-
-Igraine's eyes burned. She kissed Lilith on the lips and was mute.
-For a while they sat with their arms about each other, not daring to
-look into each other's eyes. Then the girl kissed Igraine's cheek, and
-touched her hair with her slim fingers.
-
-"Perhaps I can help you," she said.
-
-"Help me?"
-
-Lilith flushed, and spoke very quickly.
-
-"Yes--to find Pelleas. I tell you what I will do. I will send a friend
-of mine to question all the guards at the gates whether they have seen
-such a one as you have described ride in."
-
-Igraine hugged the girl.
-
-"And then you say this Pelleas was in the King's service. I have never
-heard of a knight so named; but there are so many, and I hear only
-gossip. I know a girl in the King's household. I will go and ask her
-whether she knows of a tall, dark knight whose colour is red, who rides
-a black horse, and is named Pelleas. You do not know how much I may not
-learn from her. I feel wise already."
-
-Igraine plucked up heart and spirit. She felt sorry that she had
-not spoken of her trouble to Lilith before, for she had lost many
-days trusting to her own eyes and her little knowledge of the town.
-She kissed the girl again, and almost laughed. Then in a flash she
-remembered a speech of Pelleas's which she had forgotten till that
-moment.
-
-"Fool that I am," she said; "the very chain he wore he had it from your
-father, and here in my bosom I have the little cross that nigh lost him
-his life. Surely this may help us in some measure."
-
-Lilith looked at the cross that Igraine had taken from under her tunic,
-where it hung by a little chain about her neck.
-
-"We will show it to my father," said the girl, "and ask him thereof. He
-may have record of such a chain, and to whom it was sold. Who knows?
-Come, Igraine, we will show it him after supper if you wish."
-
-And again Igraine kissed her.
-
-It was Radamanth's custom, after the business of the day had been
-capped by an honest supper, to sit in his parlour and drink wine with
-certain of his friends. He had a particular gossip, an old fellow named
-Eudol, who had been a merchant in his time, and had retired with some
-wealth. These two would spend many an evening together over their wine,
-taking enough to make their tongues wag, but never exceeding the decent
-warmth of moderation. Eudol was a lean old gentleman with a white beard
-and a most patriarchal manner. He was much of a woman's creature, and
-loved a pretty face and a plump figure, and he would father any wench
-who came in his way with a benignity that often made him odious. He had
-a soft voice, and a sleek, silken way with him that made folk think him
-the most tender-souled creature imaginable.
-
-These two were at their wine together when Lilith and Igraine went in
-to them that evening. Radamanth since his spouse's death had grown
-as much a father as trade and the getting of gold permitted. In his
-selfish, matter-of-fact way he was fond of this timid, brown-eyed
-creature he called daughter. His affections boasted more of science
-than of sentiment. Lilith, unusually bold, went and sat on the arm of
-his chair, and patted his face in a half-shy, half-mischievous fashion.
-Eudol laughed, and shook his head with a critical look at Igraine.
-
-"More begging," quoth he. "So, cousin Igraine, you look fresh as a
-yellow rose in the sun."
-
-Igraine laughed, and sat down to talk to him, while Lilith questioned
-her father. The goldsmith bore his daughter's caresses with a sublime
-and patient resignation. She began to tell him about the chain, keeping
-Igraine and her tale wholly in the background. When she had said enough
-for the sake of explanation, she showed her father the cross, and
-waited his words.
-
-Radamanth fingered it, turned it this way and that, and found his own
-mark thereon.
-
-"I wrought and sold three such chains as you describe," he said; "but
-what is such a chain to you, child, and whence came this cross?"
-
-Lilith flushed, hesitated, and glanced at Igraine.
-
-"The cross is mine," quoth the latter.
-
-Radamanth eyed her as though he were not a little desirous of
-questioning her further, but there was a very palpable coldness on his
-niece's face that forbade any such curiosity. He had a most hearty
-respect for the girl's pride, and never dreamt of any degree of tyranny
-that might seem vulgarly plebeian to her more noble notions. The
-remembrance of her parentage and estate had always a most emollient
-effect upon his mind.
-
-"Well, well," he said, "I'll meddle discreetly, and go no further than
-I am asked."
-
-Eudol winked at the company at large.
-
-"Never ask a lady an uncomfortable question," quoth he.
-
-Lilith beamed at him shyly.
-
-"You are very wise," she said.
-
-Radamanth rose from his chair, and going to a great press took a book
-from it. He set the book on the table, and after much turning of pages,
-discovered the record that he sought. Following the scrawling lines
-with his finger, he read aloud from the ledger:
-
-"Gold chain of special weight, large links, two gold crosses pendant
-over either breast. Of such three were wrought and sold.
-
-"The first to Bedivere, knight of the King's guard.
-
-"_Nota bene_--unpaid for."
-
-Eudol set up a sudden brisk cackle.
-
-"The man, the very man, I'll swear."
-
-Igraine gave him a look that made his mouth close like a trap and his
-body stiffen in his chair. Radamanth continued his reading.
-
-"The second chain was sold to John of Glastonbury. The third to the
-most noble Uther, Prince of Britain."
-
-Radamanth closed the book, and returned it to the press--orderly even
-in trifles. Lilith and Igraine had exchanged a mute look that meant
-everything. Slipping away without a word to either man, they went to
-Igraine's bedroom, a great chamber hung with heavy red hangings and
-richly garnished. A carved bed stood in the centre. The two girls sat
-on it and stared into each other's eyes. Igraine was breathing fast,
-and her face was pale.
-
-"Know you Bedivere?" she said.
-
-Lilith shook her head.
-
-"Or John of Glastonbury?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Or Uther?"
-
-Lilith's brown eyes brightened.
-
-"Noble Uther I have often seen," she said, "riding through Winchester
-on a black horse. A dark man, and sad-looking. He would be much like
-your Pelleas."
-
-Igraine was very white. There seemed a race of thoughts in her as she
-played the statue with her eyes at gaze, and her lips drawn into a line
-of red. Her hands hung limply over the edge of the bed, and she seemed
-stiffened into musings. Lilith sidled close to her, and put her warm
-arms round her neck, her soft cheek to Igraine's.
-
-"We may learn yet," she said.
-
-"Uther," said Igraine as in a dream.
-
-"Can it be?"
-
-Igraine drew a long breath and sighed like one waking.
-
-"I must see him," was all she said.
-
-Lilith kissed her.
-
-"I will go to the King's house to-morrow," she said; "the girl may tell
-us something of use. I have heard it said that Uther has not been in
-Winchester for many a week. Ah, Igraine, if it should be he."
-
-They looked deep in each other's eyes, and smiled as only women can
-smile when their hearts are fast in sympathy. Then they went to bed in
-Igraine's bed, and slept the night through in each other's arms.
-
-Early next day they went together to the King's house that stood by
-the gardens and the river. At the kitchen quarters Lilith inquired for
-the girl who served as a maid in the household. Being constrained by a
-most polite lackey, she went in to see the woman, while Igraine kept
-her pride and herself in the porch, and watched the people go by in
-the street. Presently Lilith came out again with a frown on her mild
-face, and her brown eyes troubled. She took Igraine aside into the
-gardens that lined the great highway skirting the palace, and led her
-to where a fountain played in the sun, and stone seats ringed a quiet
-pool. White pigeons were there, coquetting and sweeping the ground with
-their spread tails, their low cooing mingling with the musical plashing
-of the water. An old beggar woman sat hunched in a corner, and three
-or four children were feeding the fish in the pool. All about them the
-gardens were thickly shadowed with great trees and glistening lusty
-laurels.
-
-Igraine looked into Lilith's face.
-
-"I see no news in your eyes," she said.
-
-Lilith brooded at the pool and the children, and seemed disquieted,
-even angry.
-
-"I have learnt little, Igraine," she said, "and am disappointed. I
-will tell you how it was. The old wretch who oversees the women found
-me talking with the girl Gwenith, read me a sermon on interfering with
-household work, scolded me for a young gossip, and had me packed off
-like a beggar."
-
-"What a harridan!"
-
-"I have learnt a little."
-
-"Quick!--I thirst."
-
-Lilith hurried on for sympathy.
-
-"The girl has never heard of a knight named Pelleas," she said, "and
-there are so many dark men about Court that your description was little
-guide. As for Uther, no one knows where he is at present. Folk are
-not disquieted, for he seems to be ever riding away into the woods on
-adventure. So much gossip could read me."
-
-Igraine's face clouded.
-
-"Did you ask of Bedivere?" she said.
-
-"Oh, yes; a silly, vain fellow, with a red beard and sandy hair."
-
-"And John of Glastonbury?"
-
-"Gwenith could tell me nothing of that man. Dame Martha caught us
-talking, and it was then she scolded--the ugly, red-faced old hen. She
-said"--and Lilith blushed--"that I was an idle, silly hussy to gad and
-gossip after Court gentlemen. Now that wasn't fair, was it, Igraine?"
-
-"No, dear. I should like to have a talk with Dame Martha."
-
-Lilith rose to the notion.
-
-"She would never scold you, Igraine. You look far too stately."
-
-"Simpleton! a scold would spatter Gabriel."
-
-"Well, if I were Gabriel I know what I should do to Dame Martha."
-
-"You quiet-faced thing--why, you are quite a vixen after all!"
-
-"Ah, Igraine, was there ever a woman without a temper?"
-
-"No, dear, and I wouldn't give a button for her either."
-
-Suddenly, as they sat and talked, the beggar woman lifted up her head
-to listen, and the children turned from feeding the fish in querulous,
-childish wonder. There was something strange on the wind. Igraine and
-Lilith heard a gradual sound rising afar off over the city--a noise as
-of men shouting, a noise that waxed and waned like the roar of surges
-on a beach. It grew--rushed nearer like a storm through trees,--deep,
-sonorous, triumphant. The girls sat mute a moment, and looked at each
-other in conjecture.
-
-"What can it be?"
-
-"God knows!"
-
-"The heathen?"
-
-"Not that shout."
-
-"Then--Uther."
-
-Igraine caught a deep breath.
-
-"Listen! it comes nearer. Come away, I must see."
-
-Passing through the gardens they came again to the highway skirting
-the palace. Men, women, brats, monks, all Christendom, seemed swarming
-up from the city, and there was already a great throng in the street.
-The breeze of shouting came nearer each moment. Igraine climbed the
-pediment of a statue that rose above the balustrading of the gardens;
-the ledge gave room to both Lilith and herself. Together they stood and
-looked down on the crowd that began to swarm at their feet--soldiers,
-nobles, dirty craftsmen, courtezans, fat housewives, churchmen--their
-small prides lost in one common curiousness. The street seemed
-mosaicked with colour. The broken words and cries of the crowd were
-flung up to Igraine like so much foam.
-
-"Gorlois, say you?"
-
-"Noble Gorlois."
-
-"A thousand heathen."
-
-"What--all slain!"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Under the walls of Anderida."
-
-"Come to my house and I will give you red wine, and play to you on the
-cithern."
-
-"Thank the Virgin."
-
-"Great Gorlois."
-
-"If it is true I'll burn twenty candles."
-
-"Give over trampling me."
-
-"A thousand heathen."
-
-"Ho! there--some rogue's thieved my purse."
-
-"They are coming."
-
-"Let's shout for him."
-
-"Great Gorlois."
-
-Up between the stone fronts of the palace and the dwindling houses and
-the rolling green of the gardens came a blaze of gold and purple, of
-white, green, blue, and scarlet, a gross glare of steel thundered on
-with the tramp of men and the cry of many voices. A river of armour
-seemed to flow with a brazen magnificence between the innumerable heads
-of the crowd. Clarions were braying, banneroles adance. The sun flashed
-on helmet and shield, and made a brave blaze on the flanks of the great
-serpent of war as it swayed through the thundering street, arrogant,
-triumphant, glorious.
-
-Well in the van rode a knight on a great white horse. His armour was
-all of gold, his trappings white with gold borders, and stars of gold
-scattered thereon. His baldric was set with jasper, his sword and
-scabbard marvellous with beryl and sardonyx. A coronet gemmed with one
-great ruby circled his casque, and shot red gleams at the archer sun.
-
-Behind him came a veritable grove of spears,--lusty knights, their
-saddles weighed down with the spoil of battle, with torque, bracelet,
-sword, and axe. Further yet came pikemen, mass on mass, bearing each on
-his spear-point a heathen head,--pageant of leers, frowns, scowls of
-red wrath, wild eyes, blood, and blood-tangled hair.
-
-The great knight on the white horse rode with a certain splendid
-arrogance, and his eyes were full of fire under the arch of his casque.
-It was easy to see that the noise and pomp were like wine to him, and
-that his pride blazed like a beacon in a wind.
-
-"Gorlois, great Gorlois!" thundered the crowd.
-
-By the palace there was such a press that the white horse came to a
-halt, hemmed in by a sea of vociferous faces. Igraine, in a gown of
-violet, was leaning from her statue, and looking at Gorlois. Her glance
-seemed to magnetise him, for he turned and stared full at the girl as
-she stood slightly above him in the glory of her beauty and her pride.
-
-Long looked Gorlois, like a man smitten with a sudden charm. Then he
-wrenched the coronet from his casque, and spurring his horse through
-the crowd, rode close to the statue whose knees were clasped by
-Igraine's arm. It was the statue of Fame crowned by Love with a wreath
-of laurels. So, Gorlois, with head bowed, held up the coronet on the
-cross of his sword, and gave Igraine his glory.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Splendid in arms, magnificent in fortune, Gorlois of Cornwall held high
-place in the war lore and romances of the green isle of Britain. Ask
-any pikeman or gallowglass whose crest he would have advance in the van
-in the tough tussle of a charge home, and he would tell you of Gorlois
-or of Uther. Question any merchant as to the most prolific purse in the
-kingdom, and he would beam seraphically and talk to you of Gorlois. So
-much for the man's reputation.
-
-Physically he was tall, big-chested, lean-limbed, with a square jaw and
-eyes that shone ever alert, as though watching a knife in an enemy's
-hand. You could read the swift, soaring, masterful spirit of him in
-the bleak lines of his handsome face, and the soldierly carriage of his
-head. He was quick as a hawk, supple and springy as a willow, keen and
-eager in his action as a born fighter should be. When you saw him move,
-the lean hard fibre of him seemed as tense and tough as the string of a
-five-foot bow. Though he might seem to the eye all impulse, there was a
-leopard reason in him that made him the more formidable. He was no mere
-fighting machine--rather a man of brain and sinew whose cunning went
-far to back his strength.
-
-Meliograunt ruled in Cornwall in those days, Meliograunt who was to
-rear young Tristram for the plaguing of Mark, and the love of the fair
-Isoult. Gorlois was Meliograunt's nephew, holding many castles, woods,
-and wild coastlands towards Lyonesse, lording it also over other lands
-in Britain, houses in London and Winchester, and some mountainous
-regions in Gore, where Urience held sway. Mordaunt had been his father,
-a great knight who had done many brave deeds in his day. His grandsire,
-Gravaine, famed for his wisdom, had fought abroad and died in battle.
-Gorlois had ancestry enough to breed worship in him, and after
-Ambrosius and black Uther he held undoubted precedence of all knights
-in Britain.
-
-Unblemished fortune is not always the nurse best suited to the dandling
-of a man's mind. It had been so with Gorlois. He was one of those
-beings whose life seemed to promise nothing but triumphal processions
-and perpetual bays of victory. Selfishness is such a glittering garment
-that it needs a great light to reveal its true texture to the wearer.
-Flattered, praised, obeyed, bent to, it became as natural for Gorlois
-to expect the homage of circumstance as to look for the obedience of
-his cook. There was much that was Greek about him in the worst sense, a
-certain sensuous brilliancy that aimed at making life a surfeit of rare
-sensations, with an infinite indifference for the hearts of others.
-Gorlois liked to see life swinging round him like a dance while he
-stood pedestalled in the centre, an earthly Jove.
-
-The man had given Igraine his coronet on the cross of his great sword.
-That meant much for Gorlois. He was not a gentleman who had need to
-trouble his wits about women, for there were many enough ready to ogle
-their eyes out in his service. Yet in his keen way he had conceived a
-strong liking for the girl's face. A species of sudden admiration had
-leapt out on him, and brought him in some wonder to a realisation of
-the power of a pair of eyes. Igraine was such a one as would attract
-the man. In the first place she was very fair to look upon, a point
-of some importance. She was tall, big of body, and built for grace
-and strength, things pleasant to Gorlois's humour. Above all she was
-proud and implacable, no giggling franion hardly worth the kissing, and
-Gorlois had grown past the first blush of experiences of heart. He was
-sage enough to know that a woman lightly won is often soon lost, or not
-worth the winning. Let a man's soul sweat in the taming of her, and
-there is some chance of his making an honest bargain.
-
-Moreover, like many a man of restless, soaring spirit, Gorlois ever
-hungered for romance, and the mysterious discomforts and satisfactions
-that hedge the way into a woman's bosom. Certain men are never happy
-unless they have the firebrand of love making red stir for them in
-heart and body. Of some such stuff was Gorlois. He had a soul that
-doted on nights spent at a window under the moon. All the thousand
-distractions, the infinite yet atomic cares, the logical sweats of
-reasoning were particularly pleasant to his fancy. He loved the colour,
-the exultation, the heroism, the desperate tenderness of it all.
-Battle, effort, ambition, lost half their sting for Gorlois when there
-was no woman in the coil.
-
-Igraine's home was soon known to him, thanks to the apt vigilance of
-a certain page much in favour with Gorlois for mischief and cunning.
-The boy had Igraine's habits to perfection in a week or two. By making
-love to the girl who served her, he put himself into the way of getting
-almost any tidings he required. Every morning he would slip out early,
-meet Igraine's girl, Isolde, under the shadow of the garden-wall,
-and, under cover of a kiss, he would inquire what her mistress might
-be doing that day, pretending, of course, that his interest on such a
-subject merely arose from his desire to have Igraine out of the way,
-and her girl free. The lad quite enjoyed the game, Isolde being a
-giggling, black-eyed wench, who loved mischief. Of course he ended by
-falling in love with the reckless earnestness of a boy, but that kept
-him well to business. Betimes he would run home and tell his master
-where Igraine would probably be seen that day.
-
-Gorlois's proud face began to come into the girl's life at every turn.
-Igraine would see him often from her window as he rode by on his white
-horse, looking up, and very eager to greet her. He would pass her in
-the aisles of the great basilica in the market, walking in gold and
-scarlet, amid silks and cloths from the East, vases, armour, skins
-of the tiger and camelopard, flowers, fruit, wine, and all manner of
-merchandise. On the river which ran by the end of Radamanth's garden
-his barge often swept past with the noise of oars and music, and a
-gleam of gold over the hurrying water. In the orchards without the
-walls his face would come suddenly upon her through a mist of green,
-and she would be conscious of his eyes and the nearness of his stride.
-
-One Sunday morning she found him laving his hands in the labrum beside
-her before entering the long narthex porch of the church, and he was
-near her all through the service, watching her furtively, noting the
-graceful curves of her figure as she knelt, the profusion of her hair,
-a thousand little things that are much to a man. When the sacrament
-was given, he knelt close beside her, and touched the cup where her
-lips had been. Apparently Gorlois was content for a while with the
-rich delight of gazing. His bearing was courteous enough, and he never
-exposed her to any public rudeness that could warrant her in resenting
-his persistent, though distant, homage.
-
-The great baths of Winchester stood in a little hollow near the
-southern gate of the city, a white pile of stone set about with quiet
-gardens. They had fallen into some decay and disrepute, but still in
-the summer-time girls and men of the richer classes went thither to
-bathe. On sunny mornings, in the great marble bath of the women, girls
-would flash their white limbs, and sport like Naiads in the laughing
-water. Afterwards they would have their hair dressed and perfumed, and
-then go to sun themselves in the rose-walks like eastern odalisques.
-The music of flute and cithern might often be heard in the grass-grown
-peristyles. The library attached to the place had once boasted many
-scrolls and tomes, but it had long ago been pillaged by the monks of
-the great abbey.
-
-Lilith had taken Igraine there more than once. One morning Igraine had
-bathed, tied her hair, and had passed out into the garden alone. The
-place was of some size, boasting twenty acres or more, full of winding
-paths, grass glades, and knolls of bushy shrubs, where one might lose
-one's self as soon as think. Children often played hide-and-seek there,
-and idling up some green walk you might catch a giggling girl, with
-hair flying, bursting out of some thicket with a lad in full chase. Or
-in some shady lawn you might come upon a company of children dancing as
-solemnly as little elves to the sound of a pipe.
-
-Nooks and grass walks were almost deserted at this hour, the gardens
-being most favoured towards evening, when the day was marked by a
-deepening discretion. Igraine had no purpose in the place. She knew
-that Lilith was somewhere within its bounds. She also knew that Lilith
-had no particular need of her that morning, and as the day was hot and
-slothful, Igraine's only ambition was to waste her time as pleasantly
-as possible till noon.
-
-Turning round a holly hedge that hid a statue of Cupid, she came
-full upon a woman seated on the stone bench that ringed the statue's
-pedestal. The woman wore a light blue tunic, and a purple gown that ran
-all along the seat in curling masses. She was combing her fair hair
-as though she had only lately come from the bath. Her white glimmering
-arms were bare to the elbow, and she was humming a song to the sway of
-her hair, while many rings laughed on her slim white fingers. She had
-not heard Igraine's step upon the grass, but saw suddenly her shadow
-stealing along in the sun. Lifting her face, she stared, knew on the
-instant, and went red and grey by turns. Her comb halted, tangled in a
-strand of hair, and she was very quiet, and big about the eyes. Igraine
-remembered well enough where she had seen that would-be innocent stare,
-and that loose little mouth that seemed to bud for lawless kisses.
-
-Morgan, with her face as white as her bosom, drew the comb from
-her hair, and flourished it uneasily betwixt her fingers. She was
-frightened as a mouse at the tall girl standing big and imperious so
-near, and her eyes were furtive for chance of flight. Igraine in her
-heart was in no less quandary than was dead Madan's wife. She could
-prove nothing against the woman, for Pelleas was lost and away, and
-even the man's name might be a myth likely to involve further mystery.
-She had as much to fear too from Morgan's tongue, as Morgan had from
-her knowledge of that night in the island manor.
-
-Morgan, too flurried for sudden measures, sat biting her lips, while
-her blue eyes were fixed on Igraine with a restless caution. Neither
-woman said a word for fully a minute, but eyed each other like a couple
-of cats, each waiting for the other to move. The shrubs around were so
-still that you might imagine they were listening, while Cupid, poised
-on one foot, drew his bow very much at a venture.
-
-"Good-morning, holy sister."
-
-Igraine said never a word.
-
-"I am glad to see you so improved in dress, that olive-green gown looks
-so well on you."
-
-Still no retort.
-
-"By the saints, sister, you are very silent. I hope you were not kept
-long on that island?"
-
-Igraine arched her eyebrows and gave the girl a stare. She knew what
-a coward Morgan was, and guessed she was in a holy panic, despite her
-cool impudence and seeming ease of mind. Woman-like, she conceived a
-sudden strong desire to have Morgan whimpering and grovelling at her
-feet, for there is some satisfaction in terrorising an enemy, even if
-one can do no more.
-
-"I presume, madame," she said, "you thought me safely packed away in
-that island, and likely to die of hunger, or be taken by heathen."
-
-Morgan forced a smile, and began to bind her hair for the sake of
-having something to do in the full glare of Igraine's great eyes.
-
-"You did not think I could swim."
-
-"Madame, I could think anything of you. Nuns are so clever."
-
-"After all, I am not a nun."
-
-"Of course not. You could not be bothered with vows in summer-time. I
-turned nun myself once for a month, it being convenient."
-
-Igraine began to fret and to lose patience.
-
-"You are over venturesome, madame," she said, "in coming to Winchester."
-
-"So!"
-
-"I believe they hang folk here at times; they might even break your
-slim white neck."
-
-Morgan's lips twitched, but she did not blench from the argument.
-
-"You speak of hanging," she said, "and the inference is rather
-peculiar. Listen a moment, my good convent saint: your knight on the
-black horse would most certainly have needed the rope, if my man had
-not mended vengeance with that poniard."
-
-"Pelleas and the gallows! You're a fool!"
-
-Morgan smiled back at her very prettily.
-
-"After all, your man did first murder," she said.
-
-"On a traitor cur in Andredswold!"
-
-"Madame, my husband."
-
-The woman's contention was not so illogical when Igraine came to
-consider it in a less personal light. Morgan may have loved the man
-Madan for all she knew, and she could feel for her in such a matter.
-She looked at her with less scorn for the moment, and less injustice of
-thought.
-
-"Perhaps you have grieved much," she said.
-
-Morgan gave a blank stare.
-
-"Grieved?"
-
-"You loved your husband?"
-
-"I did, while he lived."
-
-"And no longer?"
-
-"What is the use of wasting one's youth on a corpse?"
-
-Igraine retracted her late sympathy, and returned to enmity. Morgan had
-risen, and was ruffling herself like a swan in her part of the great
-lady, and gathering her purple gown round her slim figure with infinite
-affectation.
-
-"I cannot see that we have cause to quarrel further," she suggested.
-
-"Indeed!"
-
-"Seemingly we are quits, good Sister Morality. I have lost my man, you
-yours."
-
-"You are very logical," said Igraine.
-
-"Why should we women grieve?"
-
-"Why indeed?"
-
-"There are many more men in the world."
-
-"Madame, I do not understand you."
-
-Morgan gave a malicious little laugh that ended in a sneer. She
-touched her hair with her jewelled fingers, blew a kiss to Cupid,
-and again laughed in her sly mischief-making way. In a moment words
-were out of her lips that set Igraine's face ablaze, her heart at a
-canter, and mulled all further parley. Morgan saw trouble, dodged,
-and ran round the statue. Igraine was too quick for her, and winding
-her fingers into the woman's hair, gave her a cuff that would have
-set a helmet ringing. Morgan tripped and fell, dragging Igraine with
-her, and for a moment there was a struggle, green and purple mixed.
-Igraine, the heavier and stronger, came aloft on the other soon. Then a
-knife flashed out. Morgan got two quick strokes in, one on the girl's
-shoulder, a second in her left forearm. Igraine lost her grip, and
-fell aside in a stagger of surprise and pain, while Morgan, taking her
-chance, squirmed away, slipped up, and ran like a rabbit. She was out
-of sight and sound before Igraine had got back her reason.
-
-Here was a pretty business. The girl's sleeve was already red and
-soaked, and the slit cloth showed a long red streak in the plump white
-of her flesh. Blood was welling up, and dripping fast to the grass at
-her feet. Despite the smart of her wounds and her temper, she saw it
-would be mere folly to chase Morgan. Following instinct, she ran for
-home, holding her right hand pressed over the gash in her shoulder.
-
-In the main avenue who should she meet but Gorlois, carried in a
-litter, and looking out lazily from behind half-drawn curtains. His
-quick eyes caught sight of Igraine as she passed. He saw the blood and
-the girl's white face, and he was out of the litter like a stag from
-cover, and at her side, with spirited concern. Igraine was white and
-half dazed, her green gown soaked and stained. Her eyes trembled up at
-Gorlois as she showed him her gashed arm, with a smile and a little
-whimper that made him storm.
-
-"Who did this?"
-
-He had stripped his cloak off, and was tearing it into strips, while
-his jaw stiffened.
-
-"An old foe of mine."
-
-"Describe him."
-
-"A woman, my lord."
-
-"The damned vixen. Her dress?"
-
-"Blue tunic, and gown of purple."
-
-Gorlois turned to certain servants who stood round gaping at the girl
-in her blood-stained dress, and their lord tearing his cloak into
-bandages with characteristic furor.
-
-"Search the gardens--a woman in blue and purple; have her caught. By my
-sword, I'll hang her."
-
-He rent Igraine's sleeve to the shoulder, and wound the strips of his
-cloak about her arm with a strength that made her wince.
-
-"Pardon," he said in his quick, fierce way; "this will serve a season;
-stern heart, good surgeon."
-
-Igraine smiled, and made light of it, while he knotted the bandage.
-Some of his men had scattered among the shrubs and into the dark alleys
-of the place, for Igraine could hear them trampling and calling to each
-other. While she listened, and before she could hinder him, Gorlois had
-lifted her as though she had been but a sheaf of corn, and laid her in
-the litter. He drew the curtains. The bearers were at the poles, and
-setting off at a good stride they were soon in the town.
-
-By the time they reached Radamanth's doorway Igraine, despite her
-spirit, was faint from loss of blood, and all atremble. Gorlois,
-tersely imperious, lifted her up as she lay half dazed and stupid,
-carried her in his arms into the house, and taking guidance from a
-white-faced maid, bore Igraine above to her chamber, and laid her on
-her bed. Then he kissed her hand, and leaving her to the women, hurried
-off to send skilled succour.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-It was not long before Gildas, the court physician, a dear old
-scoundrel with a white beard and a portentous face, came down in state
-to attend on Igraine. He was an old gentleman of most solemn soul. His
-dignity was so tremendous a thing, that you might have imagined him a
-solitary Atlas holding the whole world's health upon his shoulders.
-
-He soon dabbled his fingers in Igraine's wounds that morning, dropped
-in oil, and balmed them with myrrh and unguents under a dressing of
-clean cloth. He frowned all the time, as was his custom in the sick
-chamber, as though wisdom lay heavy on his soul, or at least as though
-he wished folk to think so. The only time you saw Gildas smile was when
-you payed him a fee or complimented him upon his knowledge. Tickle
-his pocket or his vanity, and he beamed on you. That morning he told
-Radamanth that his niece's wounds were serious, but that he trusted
-that they would heal innocently, treated as they had been by credited
-skill. Gildas always pulled a long face over a patient's possibilities;
-such discretion kept him from pitfalls, and enabled him to claim all
-the credit when matters turned out happily.
-
-The streaks of scarlet in the white waste of skin soon died cleanly
-into mere bands of pink, and Igraine had little trouble from her
-wounds, thanks to the great Gildas. In fact, she was in bed but three
-days, while Lilith played nurse, chatted and sang to her, or leant at
-the open window to tell her of those who passed in the street. Master
-Gildas came and went morning and evening with the prodigious regularity
-of the sun. The girls aped him behind his back, and Igraine, with some
-ingratitude to science, made Lilith empty the ruby-coloured physic
-out of the window. It happened to spatter a lean booby of a man as
-he passed, who, looking up, flattered himself that Lilith must have
-sprinkled him with scented water by way of showing her affection. So
-much for Gildas's rose-water and flowers of dill.
-
-The man of physic marched each day like a god into Gorlois's house to
-tell how the Lady Igraine fared at his hands. Such patronage was worth
-much to Gildas, and knowing how the wind blew, he puffed religiously
-upon the new-kindled fire. The girl's glamour had caught up Gorlois in
-a golden net. He had loved to look upon her and to dream, but now the
-perfume of her hair, the warm softness of her body, the very odour of
-her shed and scarlet blood were memories in him that would not fade.
-
-One evening a posy of flowers came tumbling in at Igraine's window.
-
-Lilith looked out, and saw Gorlois.
-
-"For the Lady Igraine," were his words.
-
-Lilith smiled down, and ventured to tell him that Igraine was much
-beholden to his courtesy and succour, and would thank him with her own
-lips when well of her wounds. She took the flowers to Igraine, who was
-listening in bed in the twilight.
-
-"Shall I throw a flower back?" asked the girl.
-
-"It would be courteous."
-
-Lilith did so. The bloom struck Gorlois on the mouth like a blown kiss.
-The man put the thing in his bosom with a great smile, and went home to
-spend some hours like a star-gazer in his garden, while his musicians
-tuned their strings behind the bushes. At such a season Gorlois loved
-sound and colour. The voices, sweetly melancholic, thrilled up into the
-night--
-
- "Her head is of brighter gold than the broom-flower,
- Her breast like foam under her green tunic;
- Like a summer sky at night are her glances;
- Her fingers are as wood anemones in a daze of dew;
- Of her lips,--who shall tell!
- The gates of a sunset
- Where love dies.
- Her limbs are like May-blossoms
- Bedded on a green couch:
- The night sighs for her,
- And for the touch of her hand."
-
-Of course Morgan had escaped capture. Gorlois's men had hunted an hour
-or more, and had caught nothing, not even a glimpse of the purple
-gown for which they searched. Radamanth, who had had the affair from
-Gorlois's own lips, came and told Igraine, and began to ask her who
-this woman foe of hers was. Igraine put him off with a fable. She had
-no thought of letting him have knowledge of her love for Pelleas, and
-she was glad in measure that Morgan had escaped capture, and so left
-her secret in oblivion. The woman might have proved troublesome if
-brought to bay, for she had as much right to claim the truth as had
-Igraine. Better let a snake go than take it by the tail.
-
-In a week or so there was nothing left to mark the incident save the
-red lines in Igraine's white skin. Flowers and fruit came daily in from
-Gorlois, and every evening there was music under the window, till she
-began to consider these perpetual courtesies. She was woman enough to
-know whither they all tended. As for Radamanth, he was more kind to
-her than ever, seeing how the wind might blow favours into his ready
-lap. Gorlois was a great and noble gentleman, and the goldsmith had an
-intense respect for the nobility.
-
-The very first day that Igraine walked abroad again after her
-seclusion, she fell in straight with Gorlois. By Gildas's advice, she
-had gone, presumably for her health's sake, to the baths with Lilith;
-and Gorlois, warned by the leech himself, followed alone, and overtook
-them near the porch. He was very gracious, very sympathetic, very
-splendid. He begged a meeting with Igraine after she had bathed, and
-since the girl had something in her heart that made her wish to speak
-with him, she consented, and left him in the laconicum, proposing to
-meet him in the rose-walk an hour later. Truth to tell, she intended
-questioning him as to Pelleas, whether Gorlois had heard of a knight so
-named; and also as to Uther, whether he had yet been heard of in any
-region of Britain. She knew Gorlois would take her consent as favour.
-Still, she imagined she could venture a little for her heart's sake
-without much prick of conscience.
-
-An hour later, true to her word, she went alone into the rose-walk,
-a grassy pathway banked with yews, and hemmed with a rich tangle of
-red blooms. Gorlois was there waiting as for a tryst. He was full of
-smiles and staunch glances as he led her to a seat that was set back in
-an alcove, carved from the dense green of the yews, where they might
-talk at leisure, and out of sight. Igraine's hair lay loosened over her
-shoulders to dry in the sun. It had been perfumed, and the scent of it
-swept over Gorlois like a violet mist. He sat watching her for a while
-in silence, as she plied her comb with the sun-shaken masses pouring
-over her face like ruddy smoke.
-
-"Lady Igraine," he said at length.
-
-The girl's eyes glimmered at him slantwise from behind her hair.
-
-"I knew your father, Malgo, before his death."
-
-Igraine merely nodded.
-
-"I am claiming to be the friend of his daughter, seeing that I have
-learnt the very colour of her several girdles, the number and pattern
-of her gowns since I rode into Winchester."
-
-The venture in flattery was perhaps more suggestive than Igraine could
-have wished.
-
-"You must waste much time, my lord."
-
-"But little."
-
-"I am sorry I have so poor a wardrobe, that you have fathomed the
-whole of it in less than a month. To tell the truth, when I came into
-Winchester, I had only one gown, and that rather ragged."
-
-"They did not give you green and gold at Avangel?"
-
-"No, the good women wore grey to typify the colour of their souls."
-
-Gorlois laughed in his keen quiet fashion. The girl's eyes were
-wonderfully bright and subtle, and he had never seen such a splendour
-of hair. He longed to finger it, to let it run through his fingers like
-amber wine. Leaning one elbow on the stone back of the seat, and his
-head on his palm, he watched the silver comb rippling at its work, with
-a kind of dreamy complacency.
-
-The girl's voice broke out suddenly upon him.
-
-"My lord?"
-
-Gorlois attended.
-
-"You know many of the knights and gentlemen famed for arms in Britain?"
-
-"I may so boast myself."
-
-"I was once befriended, a piece of passing courtesy, yet I have always
-been curious to learn the character and estate of the man who did me
-this service. Have you heard of a knight named Pelleas?"
-
-Gorlois fingered his sharp-peaked black beard, and looked blankly
-irresponsive.
-
-"I have never known such a knight," he said.
-
-"Strange."
-
-"Never so. We men of the woods and moors often ride under false
-colours, sometimes to try our friends on the sly, sometimes to escape
-cognisance. The man who befriended you may have been Pelleas in your
-company."
-
-Igraine cut in with a laugh.
-
-"And Ambrosius at home," she said; "even Princes love masquerading in
-strange arms. Meadow-flower that I am, I have never seen the stately
-folk of the court--Ambrosius or Uther. I have heard Uther is an ugly
-man."
-
-"If strength makes a man ugly, Uther may claim ugliness."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Picture a dark man with black hair, eyes packed away under heavy
-brows, a straight mouth, and a great clean-shaven jaw that looks sullen
-as death."
-
-"Not beautiful in words."
-
-Gorlois stretched his shoulders, and half yawned behind his hand.
-
-"Uther is a man with a conscience like a north wind," he said; "always
-lashing him into tremendous effort for the sake of duty. He has the
-head and neck of a lion, the grip of a bear. You have never known Uther
-till you have seen him in battle. Then he is like a mountain thundering
-down against a sea, a black flood plunging through a pine forest. A
-quaint, gentle, devilish, God-ridden madman; I can paint him no other
-way."
-
-Igraine laughed softly to herself.
-
-"A man worth seeing," she said.
-
-"I should judge so."
-
-"Tell me, is it true that Uther has gone into the wilds, and been seen
-of no man many days?"
-
-"Uther left Winchester more than two months ago, and no word of him has
-come to Ambrosius."
-
-"Curious."
-
-"Madame, nothing is curious in Uther. If I were to hear some day that
-he had ridden down to Hades to fight a pitched battle with Satan, I
-should say, 'Poor Satan, I warrant he has a sore head.'"
-
-"Indeed!" quoth Igraine.
-
-She shook her hair, tilted her chin, and looked at Gorlois out of the
-corners of her eyes. She guessed her power, was young, and a woman. It
-tempted her to read this creature called "man" in his various forms and
-phases, and hold his heart in the hollow of her hand. Her interest in
-Gorlois was no discourtesy to her love for Pelleas. She had seen few
-men in her time; they seemed strange beings, strong yet weak, wise yet
-very foolish, sometimes heroic, yet utter children.
-
-Gorlois, who had the sun in his eyes, beheld her as in an unusual
-mist. He was warming to life, for his brain seemed full of the sound
-of harping, and his blood blithe with summer. Stretching out a hand he
-touched Igraine's hair as it poured over her shoulders, for the red
-gold threads seemed magnetic to his fingers, and the glimmer of her
-eyes made his tough flesh creep.
-
-"You have wonderful hair," he said.
-
-"I learnt that long ago," drawing the strand away.
-
-"The dawn of knowledge."
-
-"It reaches not so very far from my feet."
-
-Igraine hung out a flag, as it were, to try the man. She knew the look
-of Pelleas's eyes, and she wanted Gorlois for comparison. Standing
-up, she shook the glistening shroud about her while it seemed to drop
-perfumes and to spark out passion. The man's malady showed plainly
-enough on his face, but his eyes did not please Igraine. There was too
-much selfishness, not enough abasement. She knew Pelleas would have
-looked at her as though she was a saint in a church, and he but a lad
-from the brown ploughland. Igraine thought that she loved mute devotion
-far better than the bold impatient hunger on Gorlois's face.
-
-The man leant back and tilted his beard at her, while his eyes were
-half shut for the sun.
-
-"I have heard it told that women are ambitious. Is it truth?"
-
-Igraine, all gravity again, with her tentative mischief banished,
-looked at her knees, and said she could not tell. Gorlois waxed subtle.
-
-"Are you ambitious, Igraine?"
-
-"Ambitious, my lord?"
-
-"Have you never wished to stand out like a bright peak above the world?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Or to have the glory of your beauty filling the gate of fame like a
-scarlet sky?"
-
-Igraine forced a titter.
-
-"I suppose you are a poet, sir."
-
-"Only a fool, madame."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"All poets are fools."
-
-"How do you contrive that?"
-
-"Because they are for ever praising women."
-
-"And yet you are a poet, my lord!"
-
-"How could I be else, madame, since I am a man?"
-
-Gorlois took a deep breath, and smiled at the dark yews, sombre and
-mysterious behind their belt of glowing roses. Igraine was watching his
-face in some uneasiness. It gave the profile of a strong, stark man,
-whose every feature spelt alert daring and great hardihood of mind.
-There was a keen, half-cruel look about the tight lips and impatient
-eyes. She was contrasting him with Pelleas in her heart, and the dark,
-brooding face of lion-like mould that so haunted her left little glory
-for Gorlois's lighter, leaner countenance.
-
-They were both strong men, but she guessed instinctively which was the
-stronger.
-
-Gorlois turned suavely again, with his courage strung like a steel bow.
-
-"I am a queer fellow," he said.
-
-Igraine began to bind her hair.
-
-"If I ever loved a woman--"
-
-"Well, my lord?"
-
-"She could be ambitious to her heart's content. The more her pride
-flamed, the better I should like her."
-
-Igraine frowned.
-
-"She would be intolerable."
-
-Gorlois arched his eyebrows, and covered his convictions with a laugh.
-
-"Shall I tell how I should win her?"
-
-"It would be a quaint tale."
-
-"In the beginning, I should half-kill any man who braved it out that
-she was not the comeliest woman in Britain."
-
-"Somewhat harsh, my lord, but emphatic."
-
-"I should make her the envy of every lady, dame, and damoselle in the
-land."
-
-"Not wise."
-
-"Like a golden Helen should she rise in the east; blood should flow
-about her feet like water; I would tear down kingdoms to pile her up a
-throne. Such should be my wooing."
-
-Igraine looked at her lap, and said never a word for a minute or more.
-All these heroics were rather hollow to her ear, though she did not
-doubt the man's sincerity towards himself, and his earnest mind to
-please her. Then she asked Gorlois a very simple question.
-
-"Imagine, my lord, that the woman loved some other man?"
-
-Gorlois's answer came swift off his tongue.
-
-"I should meet him in open field, sword to sword, and shield to shield,
-and kill him."
-
-Igraine started suddenly, grave and grey as any beadswoman. She did not
-think Pelleas would have taught any such doctrine.
-
-"To you, that is love?" she asked.
-
-"What else!"
-
-Igraine thrust her silver bodkin into her hair with some vigour; there
-was no mirth or patience in her.
-
-"I name it murder."
-
-"Madame!"
-
-"Stark, selfish murder."
-
-Gorlois spread his hands and laughed.
-
-"What is love?" he asked.
-
-"Should I know!"
-
-"Stark selfishness,--nothing more."
-
-Igraine thought of Pelleas, and the way he had left her for knowledge
-of her imagined vows. Something in her heart told her that that was
-love indeed that had clasped thorns in the struggle to embrace truth.
-Therewith she wished Gorlois a very formal good-morning, refused his
-escort, and went straight home with the clear conviction that she
-had learnt something to her credit. Her talk with Gorlois had set a
-brighter halo about Pelleas's head.
-
-Gorlois of Cornwall was nothing if not subtle. A selfish man of
-diplomatic mind may reach the very zenith of unselfishness to work his
-ends. Gorlois had so studied the expediencies and discretions of his
-purpose that even his love, headstrong though it may have been, was
-for the time being harnessed to the chariot of circumspection, whence
-intellect drove with steady hand. He had discovered for himself that
-Igraine was of sterner, prouder stuff than the general mob of women,
-and that he could not count much upon her vanity. She was to be won
-by honour, stark, unflinching honour, and by such alone, and Gorlois,
-thanks to the no mean wit that was in him, had judged that to his
-credit. He set about winning her at first with a consistency that was
-admirable, and a wisdom that would have honoured Nestor.
-
-Naturally enough, Radamanth was amazed. Gorlois, one of the first
-men in Britain, sitting in a goldsmith's parlour and soliciting his
-patronage and countenance with a modest manliness! Radamanth stroked
-his beard, strove to appear at ease under so intense an obligation,
-struggled to wed servility with a new-found sense of importance. The
-whole business was most astonishing; not that Gorlois should love the
-daughter of Malgo of the Redlands, but that he should come frankly to
-a Winchester merchant and make such a Minos of him. Radamanth beamed,
-stuttered, excused himself, crept, condescended, in one breath. When
-Gorlois had gone, the good man sat down to think in a sweat of wonder.
-Probably he would find himself feasting with the king before long, and
-certainly it might prove excellent for trade.
-
-After a cup of wine and a biscuit to restore his faculties, he sent for
-Igraine, who was in the garden, and prepared to parade his news with a
-most benevolent pleasure. He took a most solemn and serious mood, bowed
-her to a chair in magnificent fashion, and began in style.
-
-"My dear niece, I have great honour to lay before you."
-
-Igraine, who had heard nothing of Gorlois's visit, merely waited for
-Radamanth to unfold, with a mild and silent curiosity. The old man was
-big and benignant with the news he had, and when he began to speak he
-rolled his words with the sonorous satisfaction of a poet reading his
-verses to patrons in some Roman peristyle.
-
-"Lady Igraine," he said, "honour is pleasant to an old man, and
-reverence welcome as savoury pottage. Yet, honour to those he loves is
-even sweeter to him than honour to himself. In honouring a kinswoman of
-mine, a certain noble gentleman has poured oil of delicious flattery on
-my grey head, and treated me to such an exhibition of grace, frankness,
-and courtesy, that my heart still warms to him. Perhaps, my dear niece,
-you can guess to whom I refer."
-
-Igraine thrilled to a sudden thought--a thought of Pelleas. "I cannot
-tell," she said.
-
-Radamanth could have winked, only in his present exalted frame of
-mind he remembered that such an expression was neither dignified nor
-courtly. If he were to become the associate of noble folk, it behoved
-him to raise up new ideals, and so he contented himself with a most
-ingenuous smile.
-
-"Hear, then," he said, "that my noble visitor was the Count Gorlois."
-
-"Gorlois!"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-Radamanth believed Igraine wholly overwhelmed. He waxed more and more
-patriarchal, till his very beard seemed to grow in dignity.
-
-"Believe me, a most honourable man. Gentlemen of his position might
-well fancy other methods--well, never mind that. Count Gorlois came to
-me, like a man, to frankly crave my sanction for a betrothal."
-
-Igraine stared, admired Gorlois's excellent plan for netting Faith,
-Hope, and Charity at one swoop, but said nothing. Radamanth prosed on.
-
-"Count Gorlois besought me in most courtly and flattering fashion to
-countenance him in his claims. He would have everything done in the
-light, he said, in honourable, manly, and open fashion--no secret
-loitering after dark, or sly kisses under hedges. Mark the gentleman,
-dear niece."
-
-The goldsmith idled over the words as though they were fat morsels
-of flattery, and Igraine had never seen him look so eminently happy
-before. She understood quite well that Gorlois's move had inspired him
-into complete and glowing partisanship, and that she was to have those
-sage words of advice that young folk love so much. Radamanth climbed
-down, meanwhile, to material things, and began to knock off Gorlois's
-possessions in practical fashion on his fingers.
-
-"A grand match," he said. "There are the castles in Cornwall--Terabil
-and Tintagel; the lands in Gore and elsewhere; the palace in London;
-and the great house here by the river. In Logria he has lands, I have
-heard,--miles of fat pastures, woods, and many manors, lying towards
-the great oaks of Brederwode. The man is as rich as any in Britain, and
-if death took Ambrosius or Uther--"
-
-Igraine cut in upon his verbosity.
-
-"What did you tell him, uncle?"
-
-Radamanth stared at her, with his fingers still figuring.
-
-"Tell him, child?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What a thing to ask. Of course I promised to further his cause with
-you in every way possible. I said we should soon need the priest."
-
-Igraine groaned in spirit.
-
-"It is all useless," she said.
-
-"What!"
-
-"I have no scrap of love for this man."
-
-Now Radamanth had never heard a word of Pelleas, for Igraine had
-cautioned Lilith never to speak to her father on the matter. Like many
-old people who have spent their lives in getting and possessing, he
-had lost that subtle something that men call "soul." Sentiment to him
-was a foolish and troublesome thing when it interfered with material
-advantage or profit, or barred out Mammon, with its rod twined with red
-roses. Consequently he was taken aback by Igraine's cool reception of
-so momentous a blessing. He sat bolt upright in his chair and stared at
-her.
-
-"My dear niece."
-
-There was such chagrin in his voice that Igraine, remembering his many
-kindnesses, hung her head and felt unhappy.
-
-"Do not be angry," she said; "I do not wish you to speak of this more."
-
-"But, my dear child, the honour, the fame, the noise of it!"
-
-Igraine almost smiled at his palpable dismay, for she knew that her
-words must have flustered him not a little. Radamanth mopped his bald
-head, for the season was sultry.
-
-"I am astounded," he said.
-
-"Uncle!"
-
-"Let me reason with you."
-
-"Love is not reason."
-
-"No, niece, it is prejudice. Yet I assure you Gorlois is a most noble
-soul."
-
-"If he were a seraph, uncle, I could not love him."
-
-"You women are all fancy. Why, you have hardly seen the colour of him.
-Come, now!"
-
-"I do not need to see more of Gorlois."
-
-"Why, bless my soul, my wife never loved me till we had been married a
-month, and she had learnt my fibre."
-
-Igraine thought a moment. Then she asked Radamanth a question.
-
-"Do you love Lilith?"
-
-"Why, girl, what a question."
-
-"Would you marry her to a man she did not love or trust, simply because
-it brought gold?"
-
-Radamanth saw himself rounded in the argument like a rat in a corner.
-He sat stroking his beard, and striving to look pleased.
-
-"Think over it, my dear," he said presently.
-
-"There is no need."
-
-"Gorlois will woo you like a hero."
-
-"Let him. He will accomplish nothing."
-
-"It would be a grand match."
-
-Igraine jumped up, kissed him to show she bore no ill will, and ran
-away much troubled to find Lilith in the garden. She flung herself down
-beside the girl in the bower of laurels, and told her all that passed
-that morning in Radamanth's parlour. Lilith listened with her brown
-eyes deep with thought, and a quiet wonder. When Igraine had finished,
-Lilith took both her hands in hers, and, kneeling before her, looked up
-into her face.
-
-"What will you do, Igraine?"
-
-"Need you ask, dear?"
-
-"Forgive me."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"You love Pelleas."
-
-Igraine put her arms round Lilith's neck, and kissed her.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Radamanth's words to the girl proved very true before many days
-had gone; his prophetic belief in Gorlois's mood found abundant
-justification in the event. Gorlois had the warm imagination of his
-race, an imagination that found extravagance and rich taste ready
-ministers to work his purpose. Igraine, met by all manner of devices
-on all possible occasions, began to realise the cares of those whom a
-purblind world insists on smothering with limitless favours.
-
-Flowers were poured in upon her, worked into posies, garlands, shields,
-harps, crosses,--all bearing with them some mute plea for mercy. It
-might have been perpetual May-day in Radamanth's house, so flowered
-and scented was it. Flowers were followed by things more tangible,
-a pearl-set cithern, a great white hound, a gold girdle, a pair of
-doves in a cage of silver wire, a necklet of rich stones gotten from
-some Byzant mart. Gorlois seemed ready to send her all the finery in
-Winchester despite her messages and her words to him,--"My lord, I can
-suffer none of these things from you." Servants and slaves came down to
-Radamanth's house as though they had been sent from Sheba, while one of
-Radamanth's men went back from Igraine like an echo, bearing back the
-unaccepted baubles. It was a patient game, and rather foolish.
-
-These were but small flutters in Gorlois's sweep for the sun. Had not
-Igraine been stabbed in the public gardens! Gorlois put the incident
-to use. He formed a bodyguard of certain of the noble youths who were
-under his patronage, and warned Igraine with all reverence that he
-had acted for her sanctity, and that a dozen gentlemen would follow
-near her when she walked abroad, or went to bath or church. Even her
-humblest stroll in the street began to partake of the nature of a
-triumphal progress. Children would gather to her in the gardens and
-throw flowers and laurel branches at her feet, or she would be followed
-by music and some sweet love ditty to the harp. A hundred quaint
-flatterers seemed to dog her from door to door, till she hardly dared
-to stir out of Radamanth's garden.
-
-Naturally enough, her name was soon the one name in Winchester. The
-good folk with their Celtic beauty-loving souls spoke of her with
-quaint extravagance; her skin was like the apple-bloom in spring, and
-her lips like rich red May; her feet moved soft and swift as sunlight
-through swaying branches; her hair was a cloud of gold plucked from
-the sky at dawn. She was gaped at and pointed at in the street like a
-prodigy. When she went into church on Sunday half the folk turned to
-stare at her, and a clear circle was left about her where she sat in
-the nave. She was for the season the city's cynosure, its poem, its
-gossip. Aphrodite might have stepped out of mythology and taken lodging
-at Radamanth's, to judge by the curiosity displayed by the people,
-and doubtless many a comfortable piece of business came to Radamanth
-thereby.
-
-Many women would have gloried for self's sake in such a pageant of
-flattery. It was not so with Igraine. She was a woman who mingled much
-warmth of heart with strength of will, and fair measure of innate
-wisdom; her feelings were too staunch and vivid to be swayed or
-weakened by any fresh circumstance, however strange and magnificent it
-might appear. Her love, once forged, could bend to no new craft. Her
-thoughts were all for Pelleas, and any glory her beauty received she
-kept it in her heart for him. Igraine was so eternally in love that
-even worldly prides seemed dead in her, and she had not vanity enough
-to be tempted by Gorlois's great homage.
-
-The whole business troubled her not a little. There was a certain
-mockery in it that hurt her heart. It was as if she had panted in
-thirst for water, and some rude hand from heaven had thrown down
-gold. Gorlois had her in measure at his mercy. He seemed to take all
-her rebuffs with a sublime stoicism, and she had no one to whom she
-could appeal. She wished to bide in Winchester, for the city seemed to
-promise her the best chance of seeing Pelleas or Uther, and of learning
-if these twain were one.
-
-One night there was music under her window. Flute, harp, and cithern
-with deep voices were pleading for Gorlois under the stars. Igraine
-listened, lying quiet, and thinking only of Pelleas.
-
- Take then my heart,
- My soul, my shield, my sword,--
-
-sang the voices under the window. Igraine kissed the gold cross that
-hung at her bosom, and longed till her heart seemed fit to break for
-yearning. If only the song had come from Pelleas, how fair it would
-have sounded in the night. As it was, the whole business made her feel
-desperately weary.
-
-Gorlois had begun by holding somewhat aloof. It was part of his purpose
-to work behind a glowing and fantastic screen, serving Igraine more at
-a distance, in a spirit of melancholy that should web him round with a
-mystery that was more splendid than truth. He bore Igraine's passive
-antagonism for a while with a spirit of enforced fortitude, going
-cheerfully by the old and somewhat foolish saying that a woman's looks
-lie against her heart, and that persistence wins entry in the end. To
-do credit to Gorlois's self-favour, he never considered the ultimate
-shipwreck of his enterprise as possible. He had fame, gold, bodily
-favour on his side, and what woman, he thought, could gainsay such a
-chorus. There are some men who never fail in anticipating success, and
-Gorlois possessed that quality of mind.
-
-As the days went by, and the girl was still stone to him, he began
-to chafe and to look for stauncher measures. The gay gentlemen who
-served him suggested various expedients; one, a more passionate appeal;
-another, sly bribery of servants; a third, who was young in years,
-hinted at humble despair that might evoke pity. Gorlois laughed at them
-all, and swore he would win the girl, hook or by crook, in a month or
-less, or lose all the honour his sword had won. He was tired of mere
-courtesies that ran contrary to his more stormy spirit. He had a liking
-for insolent daring, for a snatch at love as at an enemy's banner in
-the full swing of a gallop on some bloody field. Mere mild homage was
-all very well for a season. Gorlois loved mastery, and believed there
-was no wine like success.
-
-About this time a horde of heathen ships came from the east, sailed
-past Vectis, and began to pour their wild men into the country 'twixt
-Winchester and the sea. Hamlets and manors were burnt, peasant folk
-driven to the woods, the crops fired, the cattle slain. The noise of it
-came into Winchester with a rabble of frightened fugitives who had fled
-to the city for refuge. Ambrosius the king was in Caerleon, and Uther
-errant, so that the chance fell to Gorlois of driving the heathen into
-the sea.
-
-No man could have been more heartily glad of this innovation. Igraine
-should see him swoop like a hawk in his strength; she should hear how
-he led men, and how his sword drank blood. In making war on the heathen
-he would boast himself before her eyes, and show her the merit of
-manhood, and the glory of a strong arm. Winchester bustled like a camp.
-Troops poured in from Sarum, and the sound of war went merrily through
-the streets. Folk boasted how Gorlois would harry the heathen. He rode
-out one night with picked men at his back, and held straight for the
-coast, while Eldol of Gloucester, a veteran knight, marched southward
-before dawn with five thousand footmen. It was Gorlois's plan to cut
-the heathen off from their ships, and crush them between his knights
-and the spearmen led by Eldol.
-
-It was such a venture as Gorlois loved,--keen, shrill, and full of
-hazards. Riding straight over hill and dale they saw the glimmer of
-waves as the sun rose, and knew they had touched the sea. Gorlois's
-scouts had located the main mass of the Jutes camped in a valley about
-a nunnery they had taken, and the British knights coming up through
-the woods saw smoke in the valley and men moving like ants about the
-reeking ruin of the holy house. Looking north they saw a beacon burning
-on a hill,--Eldol's signal that he had closed the woods, north, east,
-and west, with his footmen, and that he waited only for Gorlois to
-sweep up and drive the heathen on to the hidden spears.
-
-Never was there a finer light in Gorlois's eyes than at such a season.
-He loved the dance and noise of steel, the plunging hustle of horses at
-the gallop, the grand rage of the shout that curled like the foam on an
-ocean billow. His courage sang with the wind as his knights rode down
-over the green slopes in a great half-moon of steel, a moving barrier
-that rolled the savage folk northwards, and rent them like a harrow of
-iron. By the blackened walls of the nunnery Gorlois caught sight of
-a line of mutilated bodies tied to posts,--dead nuns, stripped, and
-still bleeding. The sight roused the wolf in him. "Kill! kill!" were
-his words as they rode in upon the skin-clad horde. It was savage work,
-bloody and merciless. Eldol's men closed in on every quarter, and the
-heathen were cut down like corn in summer.
-
-Very few went back to their ships that day. Scores lay dead with their
-fair hair drabbled in the blood about the ruins, and on the quiet
-slopes of the dale. As they had measured out violence to the peasant
-folk and women, so it was meted to them in turn,--vengeance, piled up,
-great measure, running over with blood. Some sixty maimed men were
-taken alive, but mere death was too mild for Gorlois when he remembered
-the slain nuns. He had certain of the captured burnt alive, others
-hacked limb from limb, the rest crucified near the river for the birds
-to feed upon. Then he buried the nuns, and made a great entry into
-Winchester, taking care to ride past Igraine's window with his white
-horse bloody to the saddle, and his armour splashed as he had come
-from the field. She should see his manhood, if she would not have his
-presents.
-
-This single slaughter, however, did not end matters on the southern
-shores. Bands of Saxons were forraying from Kent, where they had
-established themselves, and Gorlois rode out again and again to crush
-and kill. There would be battles in the woods, bloody tussles in the
-deep shadows of Andredswold, wild flights over moor and waste, triumph
-cries at sunset. Three times Gorlois rode out at the head of his
-knights from Winchester; three times he came back victorious, hacked
-and war-stained, thundered in by the people, past Radamanth's house to
-the church in the market-square. Igraine sat at her window and watched
-him go by, lowering his spear to her with all his proud love ablaze on
-his face. Had he not driven the barbarians into the very heel of Kent,
-and left many a tall man from over the seas rotting in sun and rain?
-
-It was customary year by year in Winchester to hold a water pageant
-on the river, depicting legendary and historic things that had passed
-within the shores of Britain. August was the pageant month, and in
-this particular year the display was made more elaborate in order
-to celebrate the rout of the heathen by Gorlois, and to please the
-common folk who had made him their idol. The pageant was of no little
-splendour. Great galleys, fittingly decorated, were rowed down the
-narrow stream amid a horde of smaller craft, each great barge bearing
-figures famed in British legend lore. The first barge portrayed Brute
-the Trojan voyaging for Britain; others, Locrine's death by the river
-Severn, Rudhudibras, mythical founder of Winchester, the reunion of
-Leyr and Cordelia, Porrex the fratricide done to death by damsels.
-One barge, draped in white and purple, moralised the reconciliation
-of Brennius and Belenus at the intercession of their mother. A great
-galley in red and white bore Joseph of Aramathy and the Holy Grail, and
-a choir of angels who sang of Christ's blood. Last of all came Alban
-the protomartyr, pictured as he knelt to meet his death by the sword.
-
-The day was blue and quiet, with hardly the shimmer of a cloud over the
-intense gaze of the sky, while banners of rich cloth were hung over the
-balustrades of the river terraces, and the gardens themselves were full
-of gay folk who kept carnival, and watched the boats go by. The great
-pageant galleys had hardly passed, and the small craft that had kept
-the bank were swarming out into mid-stream, where a great barge with
-gilded bulwarks and a carved prow came sweeping down like a swan before
-the wind. It was driven by the broad backs of twenty rowers clad in
-scarlet and gold. In the stern sat Gorlois, holding the tiller, with a
-smile on his keen lips as a quavering clamour went up from the gardens
-and the boats that lined the shallows.
-
-By Radamanth's house Gorlois held up a hand, and the blades foamed as
-the men backed water. The great barge lost weigh and lay motionless on
-the dappled silver of the stream. Slowly it was poled in to the steps
-that ran from the water's edge to the terrace of Radamanth's garden. A
-light gangway was thrown ashore, and a purple carpet spread upon the
-steps, while the men lined the stairway with their oars held spearwise
-as Gorlois went up to greet Igraine.
-
-Clad in white and gold, with a rose over her ear, she was sitting
-between Radamanth and Lilith on a bench at the head of the stairway.
-There was an implacable irresponsive look on her face as Gorlois came
-up the steps and stood in front of her like a courtier before a queen's
-chair. Radamanth and the merchant folk present were on their feet, and
-uncovered; only Igraine kept her seat in the man's presence, and looked
-him over as though he had been a beggar.
-
-They were left alone together on the terrace, Radamanth shepherding
-his merchant friends aside for the moment with the discreet desire
-to please the count. Gorlois stood by the stairhead and told Igraine
-the reason of his coming, as though she had not guessed it from the
-moment his barge had foamed up beside the steps. He told her frankly
-that he wished to speak to her alone, and that his barge gave her an
-opportunity of hearing him without his having the advantage of her in
-solitude, while the noise of oars would drown their words. Igraine
-listened to him with a solemn face. She began to feel that she must
-face her destiny and give the man the truth for good. Procrastination
-would avail nothing against such a man as Gorlois. Being so minded, she
-gave Gorlois her hand and hardened herself to satisfy him that day.
-
-Away went the great barge before the strong sweep of the long oars.
-Igraine watched the water slide by--foaming like a mill race as the
-blades cut white furrows in the tide. The river gleamed with colour as
-innumerable galleys, skiffs, and coracles drifted in the shallows or
-darted aside to give passage to Gorlois's barge. Fair stone houses,
-gardened round with green, slid back on either side. They passed the
-spectacular galleys one by one, and the wooden wharfs packed with the
-mean folk of the city, and foaming on under the great water-gate, drew
-southward into the open country and the fields.
-
-Igraine looked at Gorlois, and found his face impenetrable with
-thought. A fillet of gold bound his hair, and he was wearing his
-great sword, and an enamelled belt over his rich tunic. The cushions
-of the barge had been sprinkled with perfumes, and the floor covered
-ankle deep with flowers. Igraine groaned in spirit, and read the old
-extravagance that had persecuted her so long, and made a mockery of her
-love for Pelleas.
-
-Gentle meads lapped greenly to the willows, giving place anon to woods
-that seemed to stride down and snatch the river for a silver girdle.
-The festival folk and their skiffs were out of sight and hearing, yet
-Gorlois's barge ran on, to plunge into emerald shadows, tunnels whose
-floors seemed of the blackest crystal webbed with nets of green and
-blue, whose vaultings were the dense groinings of the trees. Not a
-wind stirred. The great curving galleries in the woods were dark and
-mysterious, the water like glistening basalt, the trees dreaming over
-their own images in an ecstasy of silence. The foam from the oars was
-very white, and the moist swish of the blades made the silence more
-solemn by contrast, while the water seemed to catch a golden flicker
-from the flanks of the barge.
-
-Igraine knew well enough what was in the man's heart as he sat handling
-the tiller, and watching her with his restless eyes. She was quite
-cold and undisturbed in spite of her being at his mercy, and the
-consciousness that in her heart she did not trust him vastly. Gorlois
-had spoken only of the town, and they were running on under dense
-foliage into the forest solitudes that edged the river. Yet Igraine had
-faith in her own wit, and believed herself a match for Gorlois, or any
-man, for that matter, save Pelleas. Gorlois passed the time by telling
-her of his battles in Andredswold, how he had driven the heathen into
-Thanet, and freed Andred's town from leaguer. Igraine began to wonder
-how long it would be before he would turn to matters nearer to his
-heart. She had marshalled up her courage for the argument, and this
-waiting under arms for the bugle-call did not please her.
-
-The day had already slipped into evening, for the water pageant was
-ordered late, so that it might merge into a lantern frolic on the river
-after dusk. Igraine, seeing how the light lapsed, told Gorlois to have
-the barge turned for Winchester. She had hardly spoken when the boat
-ran out from the trees into open water. In the west the sky was already
-aflame, ridged tier above tier with burning clouds, while the blaze
-fainted zenithwards into gold and azure. A queer cry as from a man
-weary of torture came down from the west. On a low hill near the river,
-bleak against the sky, stood a black concourse of beams set upright in
-the ground, looking like the charred pillars of a burnt house. They
-were crosses, and the bodies of men crucified.
-
-Gorlois pointed to them with the evening glow on his face, and taking
-a horn that hung at his belt, blew a loud call thereon. At the sound a
-vulture rose from a crossbeam, and went flapping heavenwards--a black
-blot against the scarlet frieze of the west. Others followed, like evil
-things driven from their food. Again the cry, the wail from one who had
-hung torn and wracked in the parching sun, came down from the darkening
-hill.
-
-Igraine shuddered and felt cold at the sound, and watched the figures
-against the sky with a kind of awe.
-
-"Who are these?" she said.
-
-"Dogs from over the sea."
-
-"Some are still alive."
-
-"These pirates are hard; they die slowly, despite beak and claw. Such
-be the death of all who burn holy houses and homes, and put women and
-children to the sword."
-
-"Take them down, or let them be killed outright."
-
-"Never."
-
-"At my prayer."
-
-"What I have done, I have done."
-
-"Cruelly."
-
-"Cruelly, madame! You should have seen twenty dead nuns tied to stakes
-as I have seen, and you would gloat and be glad as I am. By God, little
-mercy had this offal at my hands in the glades of Andredswold. I burnt,
-and crucified, and tore with horses. Mere steel is too good for such as
-these."
-
-"My lord!"
-
-"What is hate unless it is hate? I can never brook an enemy to Britain."
-
-Igraine had sudden insight into the core of Gorlois's nature. She
-understood, in a vague, swift way, what primæval instincts were hid in
-him ready at the beck of baser feelings such as jealousy or smitten
-pride. Woman-like, she recoiled from a man whose strength was so
-inflexible that it owned no pity or leavening kindness where malice
-or anger was concerned. She loved strength, and the natural wrath of
-a man, but she had no touch of the Semiramis about her, and her heart
-could not echo Gorlois's wolf-like cry.
-
-The rowers had turned the barge, and they were soon back again under
-the shadows of the trees. It was dim and ghostly with the onrush of
-night, while a faint fire flickered through the trees from the west
-and touched the sullen water with a reddish flame. Gorlois's face was
-in the shadow. He was leaning over the tiller towards Igraine, and
-his eyes seemed to burn out upon her face and to make her heart beat
-faster. She sat as much away from him as the gunwale suffered, and
-looked ahead over the misty river, or up into the dense, black bosoms
-of the trees.
-
-The foamy rush of the oars and the grind of the looms in the rowlocks
-half drowned Gorlois's words as he spoke to her.
-
-"Igraine."
-
-"My lord."
-
-"You have read me to the heart."
-
-Igraine turned and looked him full in the face. Now that the brunt had
-come, she was strong and ready to tell the man the truth, though it
-might be bleak and bitter to his pride. Gorlois was very near her, and
-she could see his white teeth between his lips, and the glint of his
-eyes as he leant towards her in the shadows.
-
-"Are you ambitious, Igraine?"
-
-"No, my lord."
-
-"Not even a little?"
-
-"My lord, I have no more ambition in me than one of those dead men
-hanging athwart the sunset."
-
-"You are a queer woman."
-
-"Pardon, I have a conscience."
-
-Gorlois bit his lip, stared in her face, and set a hand upon her wrist.
-
-"You can never shirk me," he said.
-
-"I never shirk the truth."
-
-"Come now, give me the word."
-
-"My lord, may I save you pain in the telling of it! You can never come
-near my heart."
-
-"Woman, never be so sure."
-
-Gorlois drew back, and said never another word. Igraine watched him
-furtively as his keen profile hung near her in the dusk clear as
-marble. Now and again his eyes gleamed out upon her and made her fear
-the moment, while the oars swung out over the smiling stream, and the
-black woods started by like night.
-
-Soon the lights of Winchester showed up against the northern sky,
-and far ahead over a straight stretch of water they could see the
-lanterns and torches of the folk who kept festival. A golden mist and
-the noise of music came down to them, as they surged under the great
-water-gate and ran on through the city amid a glimmering web of lights
-and laughter. Soon the barge found the shallows under white walls, and
-Igraine was standing on the steps leading to Radamanth's garden, with a
-starry sky sweeping like a wheel above the world.
-
-Gorlois went slowly from her down the steps, with a face that was dark
-and brooding. Torchlight glimmered on the fillet of gold about his
-hair, on the splendid setting of his baldric, and the scabbard of his
-sword. At the water's edge he lifted up his face to her out of the
-night.
-
-"It shall be life or death," he said.
-
-Then he was swept away with a red flare of torches over the river, and
-Igraine went solemn-eyed to bed.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-Not a word of Uther yet, no sound of his name in Winchester, though
-Igraine lived on in Radamanth's house, and hoped for light in the dark.
-
-Gorlois had had the truth, and she wondered what would come of it.
-Lulled by an ingenuous reasoning into the belief that she would be
-free of the man, she began to breathe again and to take liberty in her
-hand. She did not think Gorlois could plague her longer after the blunt
-answer she had given him. His pride would drag him aside, make further
-homage impossible, and there the matter would end.
-
-If Igraine believed this, then she was in very gross error. Many men
-never show their true fibre till they are given the blunt lie, and
-Gorlois was never more himself than when baffled. There was much of the
-hawk about him, and Igraine had underrated his pride if she expected it
-to take league with her against its kinsman passion. Her measure only
-uncovered the darker side of the man's nature, and sounded the doom of
-a lighter, gayer chivalry. Gorlois's pride and self-love never dragged
-in the wind, but held him taut to the storm, as though determined to
-weather all the perversities of which a woman's heart is capable.
-In truth, Igraine had done the very thing least likely to free her
-from the man's thought; she had taunted his passion and thrown down a
-challenge to his pride.
-
-Gorlois kept his own counsel, and frowned down the mischievous
-curiousness of his friends when they laughed at him and asked how the
-girl framed for a wife. He struck Brastias his squire to the ground for
-daring to jest sympathetically on the subject. Those who went about
-his house and hunted and diced with him soon found that he was in no
-temper for light raillery or the sly privileges of an intimate tongue.
-The fabric of a mere nice romance had stiffened into sterner, darker
-proportions. There was the look of a dry desire in the man's eyes, a
-lean hungry silence about him that made his men whisper. Some of them
-had seen Gorlois when he hunted down the heathen. They knew his temper,
-and the cast of his features when there was some lust of enterprise in
-his heart.
-
-About that time a knight came from Wales thrusting a woman's beauty
-upon every man with the point of his spear. As had been his custom
-elsewhere, he set up a green pavilion outside the walls, and daily rode
-out armed to the sound of a trumpet to declare a certain Amoret of
-Caerleon the fairest gentlewoman in Christendom. He was a big man, red
-and burly, and had overthrown every like fanatic for love's sake on
-this particular adventure. Gorlois heard of the fellow with no little
-satisfaction. Every finger of him itched to spill blood, and he took
-the deed on him, vowing it should be the last peace-offering to Igraine.
-
-Arming one morning, he rode down and fought the Green Knight in his
-meadow outside the walls. It took them an hour to settle the matter. At
-the end thereof the errant from Wales was lying impotent and bloody in
-his tent, and the name of Amoret aped the ineffectual moon. Afterwards
-Gorlois rode into the town, war-stained as he was, found Igraine at her
-window, and presented her the Green Knight's token on the point of his
-spear.
-
-It was a woman's sleeve in green silk, and edged with pearls. Igraine
-saw a crowd of upturned faces about the man on the white horse.
-His bright arms seemed to burn in upon her, and to light a sudden
-impatience in her heart. She took the green sleeve from the spear, and
-looking Gorlois full in the face, in reckless mood she threw the thing
-down under his horse's hoofs.
-
-There was a great hush all through the street at the deed, and Gorlois
-started red as a man struck across the face with a whip. His eyes
-seemed to grow large, like the eyes of an angry dog. Never had folk
-seen him look so black. He stared up a moment at Igraine, shook his
-spear, and trampling the green sleeve under the hoofs of his horse,
-rode away without a word through the glum and gaping crowd.
-
-Igraine had thrown down the glove with a vengeance. It was a mad enough
-method of beating off the pride of a man such as Gorlois, whose temper
-grew with the blows given, and who knew no moderation in love or in
-hate. Gorlois had ridden home through the town that day to have his
-wounds dressed, and to spend half the night in a fury of cursing. Yet
-for all his bitterness he had the power of level thought, and of taking
-ground for the future. He would read this woman a lesson; that much he
-swore on the cross of his sword; and the early morning saw him again at
-Radamanth's, strenuous to speak his mind.
-
-The goldsmith happened to know that Igraine was alone in the garden.
-Without noise or ceremony he sent Gorlois in to her, locked the door
-on them both, and went to watch from a narrow window on the stairs. He
-swore that Gorlois should have his own way, and not go balked for a
-woman's whim.
-
-Igraine was sitting sewing in the arbour of laurels with the little
-gold cross hanging down over the bosom of her dress. A grass walk led
-to the arbour between beds of flowers. As she sat stitching she heard
-the sound of feet in the grass, and saw a shadow slanting across the
-entry. She expected Lilith, but looking up, found Gorlois.
-
-He was white from his wounds of yesterday and the blood he had lost
-by the Green Knight's sword. His left arm lay in a sling of red silk.
-Igraine noted in her sudden half-fear how his eyes were very bright,
-and that his beard looked coal-black below his bloodless cheeks. There
-was something in his face too that made Igraine cautious.
-
-She rose and folded her embroidery in the most unperturbed and quiet
-fashion, though she was thinking hard all the same. Gorlois watched
-her, and held back for her to speak, with a hollow fire creeping
-into his eyes, for the girl's passionless mood chafed him. He had no
-gentleness towards her for the moment; such love as he knew had been
-blown into a red beacon by starved and covetous desire.
-
-"A word with you," he said.
-
-The speech was rough and pertinent, showing the trend of the man's
-purpose. He had abandoned superficialities. Igraine, gathering up her
-silks, turned and faced him with the frankness of a full moon. Gorlois
-saw her lips tighten, and there was a temper swimming in her eyes that
-promised abundant spirit and no shirking. If he had launched out to
-rouse her from passive antagonism, he could not have chosen a better
-method.
-
-Igraine made a step towards the house, but two strides put Gorlois in
-her path.
-
-"Make way--"
-
-"Not a foot till you have the truth out of me."
-
-"Have a care,--I will be stormed at by no man."
-
-"Woman, look at me."
-
-Igraine was looking at him with all the temper she could summon. If
-Gorlois thought to ride straight over her courage, he was enormously
-mistaken. She would match him for all his hectoring.
-
-"If you are not a fool," she said, "you will end this nonsense, and go."
-
-"Am I a scullion?"
-
-"You should know, my lord."
-
-"I have not bled for nothing."
-
-"As you will."
-
-"What have you to say to me?"
-
-Igraine lost all patience, tossed her embroidery aside, and simply
-flashed out at him with all her soul.
-
-"Say!" she said; "I have somewhat to say, and that bitter; listen if
-you will. You, Gorlois of Cornwall, who bade you make my name a byword
-in Winchester? Listen to me,--hear the truth, and profit--you who
-pestered me with mad tricks till I hated it all and held it insolence.
-Who asked you to make me gossip for a city, did I? Who took your
-presents? Who told you the truth? Who threw your token under the hoofs
-of your horse to shame you? I have mocked you enough, now leave me in
-peace, or rue it."
-
-"By God, madame--"
-
-"Don't echo me. Go, get out of my sight; I hate you!"
-
-Gorlois flushed to the temples in this wind of passion. The girl looked
-splendid to him in her great anger, her head thrown back and her eyes
-steady on him as stars. The scorn of her beauty leapt over him like
-crimson light, and he was more a sensation than a man. He had a great
-thirst in him to grip her with his hands, to bend her straight body
-as he would bend a bow, to strangle up the scorn in her throat with his
-own breath. He went near her, stooping and staring in her face.
-
-[Illustration: "A SUDDEN MADNESS WHIRLED GORLOIS AWAY"]
-
-"Igraine."
-
-"Mark my words."
-
-"You golden shrew, you temptation of tempers--"
-
-"Hold off--"
-
-"By God! I'll tame you, don't doubt me."
-
-Igraine, very watchful, slipped past him suddenly like light, and
-walked for the house with a sweeping air that bade him keep his
-distance. Coming to the door of the house, she tried it but found the
-lock shot. The red badge of a new anger showed upon either cheek. She
-turned on Gorlois; her eyes blazed out at him.
-
-"A pretty trick!"
-
-"What now, madame?"
-
-"You had this door locked."
-
-"Never."
-
-"You lie in your throat."
-
-"Radamanth--"
-
-"Open it."
-
-"I have no key."
-
-Igraine's figure seemed to dilate and grow taller, and her eyes shone
-well-nigh as bright in colour as her hair.
-
-"Obey me."
-
-"Not if I had the key."
-
-"Obey me."
-
-"I will be master before the sun is at noon."
-
-"You dog!"
-
-A sudden madness whirled Gorlois away. He went red from the neck,
-clutched at Igraine's wrist and held it. For a moment they stood rigid.
-The girl could not shake him off although he had but one hand to hold
-her. His breath was hot upon her face as he pressed her back against
-the wall, and held her there till his lips touched her neck. Igraine,
-breathing fast and straining from him with all her strength, set a
-hand on his face and thrust him away. She twisted her wrist free,
-and slipped from between him and the wall. Then the door opened, and
-Radamanth stood by them.
-
-Igraine slipped away with a white face, and running above to her
-chamber threw herself down on the bed, and cried for Pelleas. She heard
-Gorlois stride through the house, heard the gate crash as he went out
-into the street. Shame and loneliness were on her like despair, and
-she was weak and shaken after her anger, and very hungry for love and
-comfort. The world seemed a dull blank about her, cold, irresponsive,
-and grey as a November evening. Every hand seemed against her. Even
-Radamanth, the man of serious years, had turned the key upon her, more
-kind to Gorlois than herself. Her thoughts were very bitter as she lay
-and brooded over it all.
-
-Presently she heard some one coming up the stairs. Darting to the door,
-she bolted it, and went back to the bed, while a hand rapped out a
-somewhat diffident summons, and Radamanth's voice came in to her.
-
-"My dear niece," it said.
-
-Igraine made no answer.
-
-"My dear niece, let me have a word with you."
-
-Still no answer. Radamanth tried the door and found it fastened.
-
-"Gorlois is gone," he said.
-
-Igraine remained obdurate, with face drawn and sullen-eyed. She heard
-him shuffle down the stairs again, go into his parlour, and shut the
-door very gently, like a man who is ashamed. Then all was quiet save
-for casual footsteps in the street, and the garrulous chatter of a
-starling on the tiles.
-
-Noon had come and gone a long while, and still Igraine lay in her room
-and moped. She felt sore and grieved to the heart, all her sanguine
-courage was at low ebb. Winchester seemed a prison-house where she was
-shut up with Gorlois. The man's greed and power of soul seemed to stare
-upon her till white honour folded its hands over its breast and turned
-to flee. Oh for Pelleas and the brave look of those honest eyes, the
-staunch touch of those great hands. He seemed to stand up above the
-world, above the selfishness, the lust, the violence, like a pine on
-some lonely hill. She could trust, she could believe. To find him would
-give her peace.
-
-As she lay there that noontide a new purpose came to her, and lighted
-up hope. It was frail and flickering enough, but still, it burned. She
-would leave Radamanth's house and go afoot into the world to find a
-shadow. Anything was better than lying cooped in the place for dread of
-Gorlois. She had long contemplated such a measure, and that morning in
-Radamanth's garden gave her decision and made her strong.
-
-She rose up from the bed and hunted out her old Avangel habit from a
-cupboard in the wall. Then she set to to doff the rich stuffs Radamanth
-had given her, the embroidered tunic, the coloured leather shoes,
-the goodly enamelled girdle. In their stead she stood again in the
-old grey gown, hood, and sandals, with a little thrill of delicious
-recollection. It was like stepping back into the dream of an enchanted
-past.
-
-She had hardly ended the transformation when there came a shy tap at
-her door, and a mild voice calling to her from the landing. It was the
-girl Lilith. Igraine felt a sudden warmth at her heart as she let her
-in and barred the door again. Lilith stood and stared at her, her great
-brown eyes wide with astonishment.
-
-"Why this old dress, Igraine?"
-
-"I will tell you, dear."
-
-"And you have been crying, for your eyes are red."
-
-Igraine took the soft-voiced little woman to the window-seat and told
-her sadly enough all the doings of the morning. Even Lilith looked
-ashamed and showed her anger openly. Radamanth had confessed nothing of
-what had passed in the garden.
-
-"I never loved my father less before," she said. "I should never have
-thought this mean trick of him. I am ashamed, Igraine."
-
-"Never trouble, dear, you are my joy in Winchester."
-
-"And why this old nun's habit?"
-
-"I am going to leave you, child."
-
-Lilith clutched at her with both hands, her face suddenly white and
-almost piteous.
-
-"Oh, no, no, Igraine!"
-
-"I must, dear."
-
-"Forgive--"
-
-"It is not that alone. I cannot rest here longer. Gorlois and the city
-have crushed the heart out of me."
-
-Lilith lifted up her child's face to her, and then began to sob
-unrestrained on Igraine's bosom.
-
-"It seems cruel," she whimpered.
-
-"No, no, it is best for me after all."
-
-"But where will you go, Igraine?"
-
-"Heaven knows, dear. I cannot rest here longer after this morning. I
-feel as if I should stifle."
-
-"Don't go, Igraine."
-
-"Hush, dear, don't weaken me. I am hard put as it is."
-
-They were both weeping now. Lilith's slim body shook as she lifted up
-her face to Igraine's, and looked at her through her tears. She had
-learnt to love Igraine, and jealousy of her tall and splendid kinswoman
-had had no place in her heart. Lilith possessed to perfection the power
-of sympathy, and being a simple little soul who lived wholly for the
-present, she perhaps felt the more for that very reason. She could not
-say evil enough of Gorlois, nor put too much kindness into her kisses
-as she sat with her head on Igraine's shoulder.
-
-"You cannot go out alone in the world," she said presently.
-
-Igraine was silent.
-
-"I know father would never forgive himself."
-
-"There are convents, child. They would guard and give me harbour for a
-time."
-
-"A convent--but you hate the life."
-
-"If I could only hear of Uther, I would--"
-
-"Yes, yes, I know. But will you go, Igraine?"
-
-"My mind is made up; nothing can change it."
-
-"Then let me come with you."
-
-Igraine kissed her, but shook her head at the suggestion.
-
-"I love you for the wish, dear, but I could never drag you into my own
-troubles, and it would be very wrong to Radamanth."
-
-That afternoon they had many words together in Igraine's room, and
-dusk caught them still talking. Igraine had made Lilith promise that
-Radamanth should know nothing of her flight till the following morning.
-Lilith proved a little obstinate at first, but yielded in the end
-for fear of grieving Igraine. With the dusk she crept downstairs and
-brought up food. Igraine made a meal, while Lilith, with her tears
-still falling, put up food and a few trifles into a bundle, slipping in
-all the little store of money she had. Then she ran softly downstairs
-to see if the way were clear. Radamanth had gone to supper with a
-merchant friend, and the house seemed quiet and very lonely. In the
-passage-way the two girls took leave of each other, Lilith clinging to
-Igraine for a moment with all her heart. With sad eyes Igraine left
-her, and went out into the night.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Igraine found lodging that night in the great abbey of St. Helena that
-Pelleas had spoken of on their ride from the island manor. Posing
-to the portress as one who had wandered long after her escape from
-Avangel, she was taken to the refectory, where supper was being spread
-by the juniors. The women of the place gathered round her, and Igraine
-inquired with some qualms for any chance news of Malt, Claudia, and
-the rest, but getting nothing she felt more confident. She told them
-her name was Melibœa, and she recounted at length the burning of
-Avangel and her subsequent wanderings, carefully purging the tale of
-all that might seem strange to their virgin ears, or set their tongues
-a-clacking. The women were very kind to her, partly for her own sake,
-and partly for the interesting gossip she had brought them.
-
-At supper she sat next a young and merry nun who shared her misericords
-with her. The good women of the place were suffered to talk between
-vespers and complines, and Igraine, sly at heart, edged the talk to a
-tone for which she thirsted, and began to speak to her neighbours of
-Gratia, Abbess of Avangel.
-
-"Did any of you know her?" she asked.
-
-"Only by fame," said a fat nun opposite Igraine.
-
-"I have heard she was near of kin to the King," said another, who
-drooped her lids in very modest fashion.
-
-Igraine started in thought.
-
-"Aurelius?" she said.
-
-The nun nodded.
-
-"How were they related?"
-
-"I have heard Gratia was his aunt."
-
-"And aunt to Uther also?"
-
-"Of course, seeing they are brothers."
-
-Igraine looked at her wooden platter, and pressed the little gold cross
-to her bosom with her hand. And now a strange thing happened. The old
-nun opposite Igraine, who was the Mistress of the Novices, brought out
-news that she had heard in the Abbess's parlour that very morning.
-
-"Uther has been seen again," she said.
-
-"Uther?"
-
-The word snapped out like a bolt from a bow, and brought the nuns' eyes
-on Igraine across the table.
-
-"The man comes and goes like a shadow. He is ever riding alone to do
-some great deed against the beasts, or against the heathen. A great
-soul is Uther."
-
-Here were tidings dropped like dew out of heaven at the very hour she
-stood in need of them. Igraine felt the mist lighten appreciably in her
-brain. She popped an olive into her mouth and spoke almost carelessly.
-
-"Where is Uther?"
-
-"At Sarum town. He rode, they say, to the great camp there looking like
-a ghost, or as though he had been playing Simeon on a pillar."
-
-Igraine merely nodded.
-
-"Uther always looks a serious soul. Have you ever seen him, sister?"
-
-"Never. A dark man?"
-
-"With a face like a sun and a thunder-cloud rolled into one."
-
-"A good man!"
-
-"So they say; he has a clean look."
-
-A little bell began to sound to call them away to complines. Igraine
-went with the rest into the solemn chapel, and let the chant sweep into
-her soul, and the prayers take her heart to heaven. Incense floated
-down, colours shone and glimmered on the walls, the dim lamps shivered
-like stars under the roof. Igraine felt her hollow heart warm as a rose
-in the full blaze of a golden noon. She said her prayers very fervently
-that night, for love was awake in her and glad of her new-blossomed
-hope. She would go to the great camp at Sarum and see this Uther for
-herself.
-
-She had little comradeship with sleep in the great dormitory that
-night. When the matins bell rang she was up and ready for her flight
-like a young lark in the day. After chapel she begged a pittance from
-the cellaress and stowed it with her bundle in the little wallet Lilith
-had given her, excusing her early going on the plea that she had far to
-walk that day. She set out briskly from the grey shadows of the abbey.
-The place lay quite close by the western gate, so that she was soon
-beyond the walls and in the fields and orchards where all was goldly
-quiet at that early hour.
-
-Winchester stood like a prison-house, void and fooled, in the east.
-Igraine turned and looked down at it awhile huddled in its great girdle
-of stone, a medley of towers, roofs, and mist-wrapped trees. She shook
-her fist at it with a noiseless little laugh when she thought of
-Gorlois. Further yet to the east she could see the blue pine-smirched
-ridge where Pelleas had built her that little bower on the night he
-had left her sleeping. Her eyes grew deep with desire as she thought
-of it all, even as she had thought of it a thousand times since then.
-Pelleas's dark face was garlanded with green in her memory, and
-trouble, as it ever does, had made love take deeper root in her bosom.
-
-Cheeriness comes with action. Igraine, fettered no longer, footed it
-along the road with snatches of song on her lips, and her eyes full of
-summer. A quiet wind came up from the west, and the clear morning air
-suited her courage. All the wide world seemed singing; the trees had
-an epithalamium on their whispering tongues, and the sky seemed strewn
-with white garlands. The tall corn in its occasional cohorts bowed down
-to her with murmuring acclaim as though it guessed her secret.
-
-When she had gone a league or so she sat down under a tree and made a
-meal from the stuff in her wallet. Country folk went by on the road,
-for it was market-day in Winchester. One apple-cheeked lad seeing a nun
-sitting there came devoutly with his palms full of fruit taken from his
-ass's pannier, and made his offering with a shy smile and a bend of the
-knee. Igraine, touched, blessed him most piously, and gave him a kiss
-to cap it. The lad blushed and went away thinking he had never seen
-such a pretty nun before, and wondering if there were many like her in
-the great abbey. Igraine watched him towards Winchester, and wished
-some country girl joy of a good husband.
-
-Presently she held on again in great spirits, nor had she gone very far
-when a tinkling of bells came up behind her with a merry clatter of
-hoofs. Turning aside to give passage, she looked back and saw an old
-gentleman riding comfortably on a white mule with two servants jogging
-along behind him on cobs. The old man's bridle was fringed with
-little silver bells that made a thin jingle as he rode; he was solidly
-gowned in plum-coloured cloth turned over with sable, and seemed of
-comfortable degree, judging by his trappings. Igraine looked up in his
-face as he passed by, while the old gentleman stared down to see what
-sort of womanhood lurked under a nun's hood. The man on the mule was
-Eudol, Radamanth's bosom gossip.
-
-"Hey now, on my soul," said the little merchant, reining in with
-a will; "what have we here, my dear, gadding about nunwise on a
-high-road? My faith, I must hold a catechism."
-
-Igraine, knowing the old man's vulnerability, answered with a smile.
-
-"Ah, Master Eudol, you are a very lady's man, a gem of discretion."
-
-"So, and truth," said the merchant, with a chuckle.
-
-Igraine went close to him and patted the white mule's neck, while the
-serving men held at a wise distance.
-
-"I am running away from Winchester," she said.
-
-"Strange sport, my dear."
-
-"Now you must not tell a soul, on your honour."
-
-"Not a living soul, on my honour."
-
-Igraine let her eyes flit a laughing look up at him.
-
-"Why then, Master Eudol," she said, "if you will order one of your men
-to walk, I will get up and ride along with you for a league or two.
-There is trust for you."
-
-Eudol appeared entranced with the suggestion. He ordered one of his
-fellows to dismount, to spread a cloak over the saddle, to shorten a
-stirrup leather and give Igraine his knee. The girl was soon mounted,
-seated side fashion with one sandalled foot in the stirrup and one hand
-on the pommel to steady her. She flanked Eudol's white mule, and they
-rode on side by side at a level tramp, with the henchmen some twenty
-paces in the rear.
-
-Eudol soon waxed fatherly, as was his custom. He twitted Igraine on the
-temerity of her venture with the senile and pedantic jocosity of an
-old man. He said things that would have been impertinent on the tongue
-of a youngster, and exerted to the full that eccentric fad of age, the
-supposition that youth needs pleasant patronage and nothing more. Old
-men, holding young folk to be fools, reserve to their rusty brains the
-privilege of seeming wise. They are content to straddle the crawling,
-leather-jointed circumspection that they call knowledge. The bird
-flutters to his mate, sings, soars, and is taken before night by the
-fowler. The snail creeps his rheumy round covered with the slime and
-slobber of prudence, to rot in the end under a tree-stump, unless some
-good throstle cracks him prematurely on a stone. Eudol had something of
-the snail about him, but he assayed none the less to ape the soaring
-of youth with a very ragged pair of wings. That morning he flew with a
-senile eagerness for Igraine's favour, and thought himself a match for
-any young man in the matter of light chivalry.
-
-"Come now, my dear," he said, "let us have a good look at you."
-
-"Well, sir?"
-
-"My word, you make a gorgeous nun. Who ever saw such eyes under a hood
-before! My dear, you are quite foolhardy to go pilgrimaging alone; men
-are such rogues, and you have such a pretty face."
-
-There was a cringing tone about the old sinner that made Igraine
-thoroughly despise him. He seemed to combine elderly bravado with
-smooth servility, qualities peculiarly obnoxious to the girl's spirit.
-She had never liked or trusted Eudol overmuch in the past, but she
-was at pains to be civil to him now, seeing that he might serve her
-in sundry ways. She took his speeches with outward graciousness, and
-laughed at him hugely in her heart.
-
-He began to lecture her in rather egotistical fashion.
-
-"You must remember, my dear," he said, "that I am a man of the world,
-and one whose experience may be relied upon. I may tell you that my
-judgment is much valued by your good uncle Radamanth, a man of much
-sagacity, but yet one who lacks just that subtle insight into events
-that I may say has always been my special characteristic. I am so
-experienced that I may deserve the infinite honour of advising you if
-you care to tell me where you are going. I have had so much to do with
-the world, that I can tell you the best tavern in any town this side
-of the Thames where clean and honest lodging may be had. I can inform
-you as to tolls, prices, customs, bye-laws. Are you soon returning to
-Winchester?"
-
-Igraine shook her head at him.
-
-"Who have you been quarrelling with, my dear?"
-
-"Myself most."
-
-"To think of it, syrup quarrelling with honey! What will your Lord
-Gorlois do?"
-
-Igraine stifled the question on the instant.
-
-"Master Eudol, leave that name alone if you want more of my company."
-
-"Pardon, my dear, pardon. I did not know it was so unpleasant a topic."
-
-"I hate the very name of him."
-
-"My dear, such a splendid fellow."
-
-"Detestable boaster."
-
-"Tut, tut,--a very popular nobleman; just the very man for you, and
-vastly rich. Now when I heard that he--that gentleman--"
-
-"For God's sake, Master Eudol, leave your chatter."
-
-The old merchant for the moment looked a little taken aback. Then he
-smiled, pulled his goat's beard, and grew epigrammatic.
-
-"She who wears a gilded shoe," he said, "will find it pinch in the
-wearing. Stick to your sandals, my dear, and let your pretty white feet
-go brown in the sun. Better breathe in the open than freeze in a marble
-house. Just play the savage and let ambition go hang."
-
-Igraine thanked him as though she held his counsel to be of the most
-inestimable value to herself. She was wise enough to know that to
-please an old man you must take his words in desperate earnest, and
-appear much caught by his supreme sagacity. Eudol smacked his lips and
-was comfortably warm within himself. He went on to tell the girl that
-he was riding to a little country manor that he owned some few leagues
-from Winchester. He informed her sentimentally that he was a very
-Virgil over his farm and garden. Igraine thought "Virgil" might well be
-Greek for "fool," but she hid her ignorance under her hood. Eudol ran
-on to dilate on the subtleties of husbandry, making a fine parade of
-expert phraseology in the doing of it.
-
-"I see you do not follow me," he said presently. "Young folk are not
-fond of turning over the sods; they love grass for a scamper, not clay
-and dull loam. Shall we talk of petticoats or sarcenet that runs down a
-pretty figure like water? Eh, my dear? You set the tune, I'll follow."
-
-Igraine contented herself with keeping him to his hobby.
-
-"My father loved his violet beds," she said.
-
-"Wise man--wise man. A garden makes thoughts sprout as though they
-would keep time to the leaves. You shall see my garden. Let me see,
-what road are you for following?"
-
-"The road to fortune, Master Eudol."
-
-"Truth, then, it must run near my doorway. The good woman who keeps
-house for me will make you most welcome. You must rest on your journey."
-
-"You are very good."
-
-"Not a bit of it, my dear. I shall call you St. Igraine--hee, hee!--and
-you will ripen all the apples in my orchard by looking at 'em. Faith,
-am I not a wag?"
-
-"You ought to be at court, sir."
-
-"Hee, hee!"
-
-"You would make all the young squires red with envy."
-
-"My dear, my dear!"
-
-"Truth."
-
-"To flatter an old man so--"
-
-"But you are really such a courtier."
-
-Eudol squirmed and chuckled in the grotesquest fashion.
-
-"Assuredly we make very good friends," he said.
-
-Eudol's manor nearly halved the mileage between Sarum and the royal
-town of Winchester, and Igraine found his suggestion quite a happy help
-to her plans. If needs be, she could bide the night there and make
-Sarum next day with but trivial trouble. She was glad in a way that
-she had fallen in with Eudol, for the ride had proved quite a charity
-to her, and his antique vanities had passed the time better than more
-modest characteristics could have done. Her only fear was lest he
-should cheat her, and send word to Radamanth. Accordingly she spoke to
-him again about her flight, and made him promise on the Cross that he
-would not betray her whereabouts. Eudol, silly soul, was ready enough
-by now to promise her almost anything.
-
-About noon they halted and made a meal, with a flat stone lying under
-the shade of a tree for table. Eudol drank quite enough wine to quicken
-his failings, and to lull what common sense he had to sleep. He became
-so maudlin, so supremely sentimental, that Igraine had much ado to
-throttle her laughter. She quite feared for him when they had to get
-to horse again. His men had to hoist him into the saddle between them.
-Once there he seemed quite arrogantly confident of his seat, and being
-a hardy old gentleman at the pot he soon steadied down into comparative
-docility, managing his mule as though there had been no such luxury as
-dinner. He was more garrulous and fatherly than ever; now and again he
-had to quench a hiccough; otherwise he was only an exaggerated portrait
-of himself.
-
-An hour's ride brought them to Eudol's own pastures. He pointed out his
-sheep to Igraine amid the clanking of their diverse bells, and told her
-the profits of the last shearing. Soon the house edged into view, a
-homely place set back an arrow's flight from the road, and ringed round
-with a score or so old trees. It was a green and quiet spot, mellow
-with the warm comfort of pastureland and wood. A pool twinkled in the
-meadows, through which ran a small stream.
-
-There was no bridge over the brook; the track crossed it by a shallow
-ford where the water gurgled over pebbles. The banks were loose and
-crumbling, and the trackway littered with stones. Eudol's mule went
-over sure-footed as a goat, but Igraine's horse, slipping on the slope,
-set a fore-hoof on a shifting stone, and rolled down with a crash. The
-girl did not avoid in time, and the brute's body pinned her ankle. She
-felt the sinews crack, and the stones bruise her flesh. For a moment
-she was in danger of the animal's plunges to rise, but one of the men
-came up and seized the bridle, while his fellow drew Igraine clear.
-
-Eudol climbed down, splashed through the water, and came up puffing
-sympathy. Igraine tried to walk, but gave up with a wry face. The men
-helped her to the grass bank, where she sat down, with Eudol fussing
-round her like an old woman. He sent the men on to the manor to bring
-a bed; and seeing that Igraine had grown white from the wrench, he ran
-for the wine-flask at his saddle-bow and urged her to drink. The girl
-had more fear of a spoilt journey than a cracked bone, and feeling
-faint for the moment, she suffered Eudol, and took the wine. The old
-man was on his knees by her stroking her hand, his thin beard wagging,
-and his glazed eyes vinously sympathetic. When the men came back with
-the bed they laid Igraine thereon, and bore her through the meadows to
-the house, Eudol following like a spaniel at their heels.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-While Igraine slept in the abbey dormitory and dreamt of Pelleas, the
-man Gorlois burnt on the grid of his own passions, and found no peace
-for his soul.
-
-The night sky was not a whit more black than his spirit, and his
-sinister cogitations were chequered ever with palpitating points of
-fire. The restless fever of an unfed leopard seemed his, and he was
-in and out of his tumbled, sleepless bed ten times before dawn. Only
-a boar-hound kept him company, a savage red-eyed brute whose temper
-suited that of his master; the dog followed Gorlois as he wandered from
-bed-chamber to atrium, out from the peristyles to the garden, down
-walks of yew and cypress, between the beds of helicryse and asphodel,
-over the smooth lawns clear in the eye of the moon. There was an evil
-thing in Gorlois's thought, a thing fit for beggarly disrelish, yet
-very white and lovely to look upon. He stalked like a ghost in the
-night, biting his lips, looking into the dark with red and eager eyes.
-How often he reached out in naked thought and clasped only the air. He
-cursed himself and the woman, honoured and abused her in one breath,
-grew hot and cold like a live coal played upon by a fickle wind.
-
-As soon as dawn came he had a plunge and a swim in a pool in the
-garden, and having suffered the ceremony of a state toilet, went out
-unattended into the town. It was the very hour when Igraine was shaking
-her fist at Winchester for thought of him, but Gorlois was spared the
-prick of self-knowledge and the frank truth of the girl's distaste. He
-thought her nothing more than a shrew, and the possessor of a splendid
-temper. His long legs and the heat at his heart soon took him down
-through the quiet streets and the market square to Radamanth's house.
-
-Early as was the hour, the goldsmith had escaped sloth and was busy at
-his ledgers in his little counting-house behind the parlour. Gorlois
-came in in great state, with the serving wench who announced him
-feasting her curiosity on his face with a sheepish giggle. Radamanth,
-fetched from his figures, bowed very low, and made the gentleman a
-most obsequious welcome. He was wondering what Gorlois's humour might
-be after the repulse of yesterday. To tell the truth, Radamanth felt
-somewhat ashamed of the trick he had served Igraine, and he was none
-too eager to meet his niece, seeing that she still seemed determined to
-hide her anger in her room. His doubts as to Gorlois's mood were set at
-rest by that gentleman's somewhat saturnine opening.
-
-"Radamanth!"
-
-"Your honour's servant."
-
-"I have come to make peace."
-
-"Your lordship's magnanimity is phenomenal."
-
-"Was I over hasty, goldsmith?"
-
-"A young man's way, my lord; no fault at all. Many's the time I had my
-face smacked as a youngster, and was none the worse in favour. Take no
-serious view, sir, but press her the harder. She'll give in--my faith,
-yes, being young and full of bone. You are troubled, my lord, with too
-much conscience."
-
-"Have you seen the woman since?"
-
-Radamanth raised his eyebrows and shrugged.
-
-"Well, no," he said. "I am afraid my niece has rather a hot
-spirit--breeding, my lord--proud blood in her."
-
-"I know that part of her nobleness well enough."
-
-Radamanth refrained a moment from a sense of discretion.
-
-"My lord would see her?"
-
-"I'll not budge till I have done so."
-
-"You understand women?"
-
-Gorlois smiled a peculiar smile.
-
-"I have wit enough," he said. "I have my plan."
-
-"If it please you, sir, to go into the garden, I will endeavour to send
-her to you."
-
-"No more locking of doors, goldsmith."
-
-"Sir, I contemn my late indiscretion in your service."
-
-Gorlois passed out by a long passage into the gardens, with its green
-leaves shelving to the river, while Radamanth, half a coward at heart,
-went towards the stair that led to Igraine's chamber. Halfway up he
-met the girl Lilith coming down, very white and frightened looking, as
-though she dreaded her father's face. Radamanth kissed her, and asked
-for Igraine. Then her distraught look dawned on him in the twilight of
-the stairway, and made him suddenly suspicious.
-
-"Is Igraine awake?"
-
-Lilith hid her face in his sleeve.
-
-"Speak, girl, what's amiss?"
-
-"The room is empty."
-
-"What!"
-
-"Igraine has left us," said the girl with a stifled whimper.
-
-Radamanth, sage and solemn soul, lapsed into the sin of blasphemy.
-
-"When did you learn this, girl?"
-
-"Father--"
-
-"Quick now, don't lie."
-
-He shook her by the shoulder.
-
-"Father, be gentle with me."
-
-"Quick, hussy."
-
-"I can't, I can't."
-
-Radamanth took her firmly by the wrist and brought her with no very
-considerate care into the parlour.
-
-"Now," he said, thrusting her into a chair, "you atom of ingratitude,
-tell me what you know."
-
-Lilith began to sob. She hid her face behind her fingers and dared not
-look at Radamanth. The goldsmith chafed and paced the room, hectoring
-her.
-
-"Don't think to fool me," he said; "you know more yet; you would have
-answered before if there had been any truth in you."
-
-Radamanth's harshness seemed certainly to calm the girl, and to conjure
-up some passing antagonism in her heart.
-
-"The blame is yours, father."
-
-"Impertinent child."
-
-"Igraine was angry with you."
-
-"Well, have I not treated her like a daughter?"
-
-"She fled away last night."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"You do."
-
-"I don't, father; 'tis truth."
-
-The girl's brown eyes appealed to him tearfully; she was honest enough,
-and Radamanth knew it. He took her sincerity for granted and proceeded
-to question her further.
-
-"How was she clothed, child?"
-
-Lilith looked at the floor and plucked at her gown with her fingers.
-
-"Do you hear me?"
-
-"Yes, father."
-
-"Then answer at once."
-
-"I can't."
-
-"Upon my soul--"
-
-"Igraine made me promise."
-
-Radamanth lost his temper again and began to bluster like a March wind.
-Lilith's cheeks were wet with her tears; they ran down and dropped into
-her lap like little crystals. She shook and sobbed in her chair, but
-answered not a word, a martyr to her promises. Then Radamanth, man of
-money-bags and craft, found something wherewith to loose her tongue.
-
-"Listen," he said; "a certain lad never enters this house again, and
-you never again have speech with him, unless you answer me this at
-once."
-
-The mean measure triumphed. Lilith's tears never ceased, but she gave
-way at last, and hating herself, told Radamanth what he wanted. Then he
-left her there to whimper by herself, and went into the garden to speak
-with Gorlois.
-
-The Count of Cornwall guessed from the merchant's face that matters had
-fallen out ill for him somewhere. He forestalled Radamanth's confession
-with an impatient gust of words.
-
-"She is still in a deuce of a temper?"
-
-"My lord, it is otherwise."
-
-"Then why so glum--man, have I not uncovered ingots of gold for you if
-I wed?"
-
-Radamanth held his hands up like a priest giving a blessing. Any one
-might have thought him grieved to death by the ingratitude of his
-niece's desertion. The goldsmith dealt in coarser sentiment.
-
-"My lord, the girl has forsaken my house and fled."
-
-Gorlois had half expected some such news. He said nothing, but merely
-stared at Radamanth with dark masterful eyes, while his fingers played
-with the tassels of his belt. His heart was already away over moor and
-dale chasing the gleam of a golden head of hair.
-
-"When did you miss her, goldsmith?"
-
-"She crept away at dusk yesterday."
-
-"Whither?"
-
-"Heaven knows, my lord."
-
-"How dressed?"
-
-"As a grey nun."
-
-"Has she gone back to the Church?"
-
-"She did not love such a life, my lord."
-
-"By God, no."
-
-Gorlois frowned a moment in thought. The scent of the girl's dress was
-still in his nostrils, and her eyes haunted him. Then he turned past
-Radamanth to go, hitching up his sword belt, a significant habit he had
-learnt long ago.
-
-"I shall find her," he said.
-
-"Good, my lord."
-
-"I have your countenance."
-
-"Be kind to the girl, sir."
-
-"I could go to hell for her."
-
-"My lord, why not try heaven?"
-
-"A good jest."
-
-"Men always go to hell for things," said the goldsmith.
-
-There was life and stir enough in Gorlois's great house when its master
-came back that morning. Gorlois's orders were like a torch to tinder.
-Men went to every wind, some to the gates, some to the market, others
-to the religious houses and the inns, all bent on striking the trail of
-a nun's grey gown. The men knew their master's mood, and the measure of
-his pulse on such occasions. Gorlois bided quiet in his garden, more
-like a leopard than a lover. He had made up his mind to catch Igraine,
-and to win mastery of her, hook or by crook, since she chose to play
-the shrew and mar his wooing. It was not likely that one of the first
-men in Britain should be baffled by the temper of a goldsmith's niece.
-
-About noon a certain slave who had gone out to net news came back with
-much elation and claimed his lord's ear. Brought in before Gorlois, he
-told how he had talked with a boy selling fruit in the market-place,
-and how the boy, when questioned, had told him of a nun he had seen
-sitting under a tree by the road to Sarum that very morning. The lad
-had described her as a very beautiful lady with large eyes, and a cloud
-of red-brown hair, and that she wore a grey nun's habit somewhat torn
-and travel-stained. Gorlois thought he recognised Igraine, and gave the
-slave fifty acres and his freedom on the instant. Waiting for further
-news, word was brought him that a grey nun had been marked by the guard
-going out of the western gate not very long after dawn. Later still
-Gorlois heard of such a nun, calling herself Melibœa, having lodged the
-night at the great abbey of St. Helena.
-
-Gorlois held himself in leash no longer. He buckled on his richly gilt
-armour, and his great white horse was saddled and brought into the
-court. Not a knight would he have at his back, neither groom nor page.
-Getting to horse in the full welt of the afternoon sun, he rode out
-of Winchester alone by the western gate, watched of many people. Once
-clear of the town he pricked incontinently for Sarum, lusting much to
-catch Igraine upon the way.
-
-About that very same hour Eudol was exerting himself in Igraine's
-service in the manor farm in the meadows.
-
-The men had carried her up from the ford and set her at her own seeking
-in a shady place in the garden where she might lie at peace. It was
-a pleasant nook enough where they had set her bed, a patch of bright
-green grass with a bank of flowers on one hand and dense laurel hedge
-hiding it from the track to the house on the other. A vine trained upon
-poles raised a pleasant pavilion there. Autumn would soon be whispering
-in the woods, and already some few leaves were ribbed with gold and
-maroon.
-
-Eudol played the physician and made a very critical examination of her
-ankle. He prided himself, among his other vanities, on having studied
-Galen, and since the healing craft is often a matter of phenomenal
-words and wise nothings, Eudol might have outphysicked Gildas at his
-own game. The art of medicine is the art of hypocrisy, and the sage
-apothecary is often a broken reed trembling in the wind of ignorance.
-Eudol, having no reputation at stake, pronounced Igraine's hurt to be
-a mere strain of the ankle-joint, and, as it happened, he was right.
-He swathed her foot in wet linen and set it on a pillow, while the
-woman who kept house for him, a red-cheeked piece of buxomness, brought
-wine and food-stuff on a tray. Seeing a nun's habit the good woman was
-comforted, and indulged Igraine with many smiles and much motherly care.
-
-Eudol came and sat beside her with a great book on his knee, Virgil's
-Bucolics, as he told her, and writ most learnedly for the edification
-of the wise. Eudol read very little of the book that afternoon. The
-volume abode with him for effect, but he preferred rather to dwell upon
-the more Ovidian interest of the girl beside him, and to talk to her
-in his familiar and fatherly fashion. He made many sly attempts to get
-the purpose of her pilgrimage from her, but Igraine had enough wit to
-keep him discreetly mystified on the subject. She was wondering all the
-while how long her strained ankle would keep her to her bed.
-
-Eudol smothered her with offers of hospitality.
-
-"On my word you shall not be dull," he said, "though there is only an
-old man to entertain you. One day you shall ride out in a litter to my
-vineyards, another you shall be carried out a-hunting. I have a little
-wench here who can harp and sing like a mermaid. By the poets, I can
-make you quite a merry time."
-
-Igraine made the best smile she could, and thanked him.
-
-"You must not put yourself out for me."
-
-"Nonsense."
-
-"You are very good."
-
-Eudol shook his finger with most earnest expression.
-
-"My dear lady, it is duty, duty," he said.
-
-They had not been so very long in the garden when Igraine's quick
-ear caught the sharp and rhythmic smite of hoofs on the stony track
-across the meadows. The sound disquieted her, for she was in the mood
-for dreads and suspicions. Listening to make sure that the sound
-approached, she appealed to Eudol and asked him to look and see who
-rode for the manor. There was a little wicket-gate some way down the
-laurel hedge carefully screened by shrubs. Eudol went to it, and
-scanned the meadows under his hand. He came back somewhat flustered to
-Igraine, and told her that a knight in gilded armour mounted on a white
-horse was riding up the track to the house.
-
-Igraine started up on her bed with her eyes very big and suspicious.
-
-"It is Gorlois," she said.
-
-"Heavens, my dear!"
-
-"You have not been lying to me?"
-
-"On my soul--no."
-
-Igraine touched her forehead with her hand, and looked askance at the
-sun.
-
-"Master Eudol, if you would serve me, go and fool the man--send him
-away."
-
-"My dear child--"
-
-"He must not see the servants or have speech with them."
-
-"But--"
-
-"I command you, go and speak to him; he is very near."
-
-Eudol looked at her with his lower lip a-droop. His grey-green eyes met
-Igraine's, gleamed, and faltered. He bent over the bed.
-
-"I will do my best. Give me a kiss, my dear. By Augustus, I will get
-rid of Gorlois if I can."
-
-He went out quickly by the wicket-gate, and closing it after him,
-waited for the knight to approach. There were no slaves about, and
-Eudol remembered with confidence that his men were in the corn fields,
-well away to the north. Gorlois came up with the splendid arrogance
-that so suited him, his rich armour glowing above the white flanks of
-his horse, his spear balanced on his thigh. Eudol went forward some
-paces to meet him, as though to learn his business. Igraine, listening
-behind the laurel hedge, heard their words as plainly as though the two
-men were but three paces away.
-
-"Greeting, sir," said Eudol's thin voice.
-
-Then she heard Gorlois's clear sharp tenor questioning him. She heard
-him ask whether a grey nun had called for food, or whether Eudol had
-seen or heard of such a person. She heard the old man's meandering
-negative, and Gorlois's retort that a grey nun had been seen riding
-beside a merchant on a white mule. Igraine's heart seemed to race and
-thunder. Eudol, rising to the event, suggested that the merchant might
-be a certain fabulous person from Aquæ Sulis; a man of means, he said,
-who often came by Sarum to Winchester in the fur trade. He hinted that
-the knight might overtake them on the road, or discover them at Sarum
-that evening. Gorlois fell to the suggestion. Igraine heard him inquire
-further of Eudol, speak to his horse, and ride away with a ringing
-clatter. She sat on her couch behind her laurel rampart and laughed.
-
-Eudol came back to her, pleased as possible.
-
-"How was that done,--sweeting?"
-
-"Nobly," laughed Igraine.
-
-"The Virgin pardon me; what perjury for a pair of lips."
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Nothing is more chafing to the patience than to lie abed crippled,
-knowing the while that coveted hours are slipping through one's fingers
-like grains of gold. To Igraine, her maimed ankle was a very thorn
-in the flesh. Her thoughts were tugging to be at Sarum, and she was
-in continual fear lest Radamanth or Gorlois should track her to her
-temporary refuge, and attempt to mar her freedom. She was not a woman
-who could take hindrance with perfect philosophy, comforting herself
-with the reflection that care never yet salved unrest. She chafed at
-delay, and even blamed Eudol with great unreason because he had obliged
-her with a horse not proof against stumbling.
-
-The knowledge that Gorlois rode in search of her did not tend to the
-easing of her mind. She began to understand Gorlois to the full. He had
-betrayed so much of himself in Radamanth's garden that her dread grew
-nearly as great as her disrelish.
-
-Eudol had made her comfortable enough in his manor, she had no need to
-find fault with his hospitality. She had her own room, a little girl to
-wait and sing to her, fruit and food of the best. She spent the greater
-part of each day in the garden, her bed being set under the vine
-leaves; two of Eudol's slaves would carry her down in the morning and
-bear her back again at night, so that she should not be too venturesome
-in trying her ankle. The old merchant kept his folk close on the farm
-and suffered none to go to Winchester or Salisbury, for fear lest the
-knowledge of Igraine's whereabouts should leak into interested channels.
-
-The more the girl saw of Eudol the less she relished him in her heart.
-The lean look of him, his little green eyes, his thin goat-like beard,
-reminded her much of the picture of some old Satyr she had seen in
-the frescoes on the walls of the triclinium at Winchester. He grew
-more fatherly and kind to her, would smile like some old saint as he
-sat and read moralities to her from the lives of some of the Fathers.
-He was very fond of holding her hand and stroking it while he purred
-sentiment, and made her colour to hear his nonsense. He was quite
-wickedly delighted when he had fetched a blush to her face. He would
-sit and chuckle and hug himself, while his little eyes glistened and
-his beard shook. Igraine, though her cheeks often tingled, did her
-best to suffer him, knowing well enough that she was greatly dependent
-for her peace of mind upon his good-will. She would laugh, turn his
-senile flatteries into jest, and assume his humour as the most vapoury
-and fanciful piece of fun possible. She often hinted that Eudol must
-be neglecting his farm for her sake, though her suggestions were
-absolutely to no purpose, seeing that Eudol had forgotten all about
-such mundane matters as harvesting or the pressing of cider.
-
-One afternoon they had a shrewd fright, and the incident led in its
-final development to Igraine's leaving the manor in the meadows. She
-was in the garden with Eudol when two horsemen wearing Gorlois's livery
-rode up to the gate and demanded entertainment with much froth and
-bombast. They were sturdy hot-tongued rogues, quick at liquor, quicker
-still at blasphemy. Eudol, much flustered, had them brought into the
-house and set loose upon a wine flask while he smuggled Igraine out of
-the garden. There was a barn standing on the other side of a little
-meadow near the house, and the building was screened by a fringe of
-pines and a thorn hedge. Eudol hurried Igraine to the barn, saw her
-couched on a pile of hay, closed the door on her, and scampered back to
-take great care of Gorlois's gentlemen.
-
-Eudol proved a most obsequious and attentive host. He kept the men
-primed with wine, watched them like a lynx, forbade his slaves and
-servants the room so that there should be no chance of gossip. The
-fellows thought themselves well harboured. Eudol, hardy old tipster,
-kept them going with a will, till they swore he was the best old
-gentleman at his cups they had met this side of the Thames. He
-out-drank, out-yarned, out-jested the pair of them. Grown very mellow
-towards evening, they vowed by all the calendar that they loved him so
-much they would make a night of it, and not go to bed till they were
-carried. Eudol could have denied himself their great esteem, but there
-was nothing for it but to humour them.
-
-He got rid of the fellows next morning, when they went away sadly, very
-glazed about the eyes, swearing they would pay him another visit at
-their very earliest opportunity. Eudol, when they were out of sight,
-went out to the barn and found Igraine comfortably couched there on
-a mass of hay. The little maid who served her had brought her supper
-on the sly the night before, and she had fared well enough in her new
-quarters.
-
-As a matter of fact Eudol had had a parting cup with the men that
-morning, and had hardly outbreathed as yet the maudlin heritage gotten
-the previous night. He kissed Igraine's hand, mumbled his usual
-courtesies, excused his long absence with a warmth that nearly brought
-him to tears. He was somewhat flushed over the cheek bones; his eyes
-were bright, and his breath pregnant with the heavy scent of wine.
-Igraine wiped the hand he had kissed on her gown, looked at him with
-little love or gratitude, and told him that she had been trying to
-walk, and that her ankle bore her passably.
-
-Eudol, edging near, proceeded to narrate at preposterous length how
-he had kept Gorlois's men employed, made them drunk as cobblers, and
-packed them off innocently to Winchester that morning. He was hugely
-sly over it all. He came and climbed up beside Igraine on the hay, and
-pinched her arm with his lean fingers as he talked. There was a gaunt,
-red, eager look about his face. It was quite twilight in the great
-barn, and a mingled smell of hay and pitch-pine filled the air, while
-dusty beams of light filtered through in steady streams.
-
-Eudol's vinous and fatherly solicitude developed abruptly into an
-absurd revelation of his inner self. He had hold of Igraine's arm with
-one hand. Leaving go suddenly, he reached for her waist, poked his grey
-beard into her face, and made a clumsy dab at her cheek. In a moment
-the girl's arm had swept him backwards like an impotent bag of bones.
-She saw him overbalance and roll off the haycock on to the edge of a
-scythe. Without waiting for more, and with a glimpse of the old fool's
-slippers still in the air, she slipped down from the hay and out of the
-barn, and shutting the door, pegged the catch with a piece of wood.
-Then she went laughing half resentfully towards the house, and told
-Dame Phœbe that her master had gone to the fields to oversee his slaves.
-
-The woman had taken a remarkable dislike to Igraine, being sulky-eyed
-and dumb-saucy in her presence as far as she dared. The grey nun told
-her that she was ending her sojourn at the farm that morning, and was
-going on foot for the west. The woman's face changed as suddenly as a
-spring sky. She was suave and smiling instanter, ready with queries
-as to Igraine's ankle, very eager to pack her wallet with stuff from
-Eudol's larder. Igraine, with an inward flush, saw how the wind blew.
-She was keen to be gone before Eudol should be loosed from the barn;
-even the woman's changed mood seemed a tacit insult in itself.
-
-She was soon treading the meadows where the backs of Eudol's sheep
-stood out like white boulders on the solitary stretch of green. The
-country began to be as flat as a table, though there were still masses
-of woodland piled on either side the great white road. Igraine kept in
-among the trees with just a glimpse of the highway to keep her to her
-mark. Her grey gown passed almost unperceptibly among the mould-grown
-trunks as she went in the chequered light like a grey mouse through
-green corn. Her ankle bore her better than she had prophesied, and
-she made fair travelling at a modest pace. Later in the afternoon the
-strain began to tell in measure, and her ankle ached and felt hot, as
-though she had done enough. Sitting down on a fallen tree she watched
-the road, and waited for some one to pass.
-
-A charcoal burner went by with a couple of asses panniered up with a
-comfortable load. Then came two soldiers and a couple of light wenches
-who haunted camp and castle and lived to the minute. Next, a great wain
-half ladened up with faggots came lumbering along, drawn by a pair of
-sleepy horses, and driven by a peasant in a green smock and leather
-breeches. Igraine took her choice, and going down from the trees, stood
-by the roadside, and begged of the man a lift.
-
-Seeing a nun looking up at him the man reined in, climbed down cap in
-hand, and louted low to her. There was some clean straw spread over
-the boards at the bottom of the cart. The man helped her up on to the
-tail-board and raked the straw into a heap to make her a seat. Then
-they lumbered on again towards Sarum.
-
-In due course she began to talk to the man as he sat on a couple of
-faggots and held the ropes. He was an honest, ignorant fellow, with a
-much whiskered face that wore a perpetual look of kindly stupidity.
-Igraine sought to know whether he was going as far as Sarum. The man
-shook his bushy head like an amiable ogre, and told her that he was for
-his lord's manor some two leagues distant, where he served as woodman
-and ranger, or soldier when there was need of steel. He commended his
-lord's house to her for lodging, with a solid faith in the generosity
-of its board. Questioned as to other habitations, he told her of a
-hermit's cell set in a little dale in the woods, a cell where wandering
-folk often found harbour for the night. Igraine made up her mind to
-choose the ascetic's bread and water, having had enough of the world's
-welcome. Possibly in some dim and distant way she began to realise the
-intense and engrained selfishness of the human heart.
-
-The man of faggots, believing her a holy woman, soon began to relate
-his domestic troubles to her with a most touching reverence. He told
-her how his wife had been abed two months from her last childbirth, and
-how sad and dirty his little cabin was for lack of her hands. He asked
-Igraine to put the woman in her bede-role, a simple favour that she
-granted readily enough. Then the fellow with some stolid pathos went
-on to describe how his eldest lad, a boy of eight, had caught a fever
-through sleeping in the woods after rain, and how he had fallen sick.
-
-"I went to a good monk," said the man, "and bought holy water and a
-pinch of dust from a saint's coffin. Pardy! but it cost me a year's
-savings. The good father bade me pour the water on the boy's head and
-shake the dust over his body. Glad I was, holy sister; I ran five miles
-home to cure the lad."
-
-"And he is well?"
-
-The man gave a doleful whistle.
-
-"The boy died," said he with pathetic candour, and a short catch in his
-voice. "I didn't sleep two whole nights. Then I kissed my woman, mopped
-her eyes, and went and told the priest."
-
-Igraine merely nodded.
-
-"Ah, the dear father, he told me 'twas God's will, and that the blessed
-dust had drifted the lad straight to heaven, where he would be singing
-next King David like any lord. So he came and buried the boy, and there
-was an end on't."
-
-Igraine for the moment felt heavy about the eyes.
-
-"I should like to see him there in his little white stole," she said.
-"Do you know, goodman, why so many children die?"
-
-"Faith, madame, I have no learning," said the fellow with a dumb stare.
-
-"Because the great God loves to have children laughing for love of him
-in heaven."
-
-"Is't so?"
-
-"That is why he took your boy."
-
-The man's face brightened with a new dignity.
-
-"Little Rual was ever a gentle child," he said. "I must tell my woman;
-it will just make her happy."
-
-"I will pray for her health."
-
-"God bless you, holy lady, you have a wise, kind heart."
-
-Igraine blushed, but said nothing.
-
-Presently the man stopped his horses, and pointed her to a little path
-that led, he said, to the hermitage. He helped Igraine out of the cart,
-and knelt on the road for her to give him a blessing. Igraine had
-a Latin phrase or two from Avangel, and the benediction was earnest
-enough in spirit, though it lacked genuine authority. Then she took
-the path through trees, and left the man standing cap in hand by his
-waggon. Her brief ride with him had done her heart good.
-
-A mile's walk through unkempt pastures and straggling thickets brought
-her to an open dale set beneath the shoulder of a wooded hill. On the
-grass slope over against her she saw the hermitage--a grey cell of
-unfaced stone standing in a garden in a grove of ancient thorns. By the
-rivulet that ran half hid by undergrowth a figure in a brown cassock
-was drawing water. Passing down over the water, Igraine overtook the
-recluse halfway up the slope to the hermitage garden. She remarked
-his bald head fringed with a mournful halo of hair, his stooping
-shoulders, his ungainly weak-kneed gait. Hearing her tread behind him
-he turned a tanned face to her, a face that brought forth a smile of
-brotherly greeting at sight of a nun. Igraine, by way of creating good
-feeling, took his water pot and carried it for him, pleading youth in
-extenuation of the service.
-
-There was a keen yet kindly sapience about the old man's big-nosed face
-that caught her fancy. He was a bit of a cynic on the surface, but warm
-as good earth at heart. Igraine confessed her need of a lodging for the
-night, and the man retorted bluntly with the remark that the hermitage
-was not his house,--but only a refuge to bury strangers in. Pointing to
-a great slab of stone that stood near the little cell, he told her that
-the stone had been his bed, summer and winter, these fifteen years, and
-that dew, rain, frost, and snow had worked their will upon his body
-and found it leather. The confession, pithily--almost humorously--put,
-without a trace of rodomontade, set the girl smiling. She looked at the
-man's brown buckram skin and congratulated him, embodying her flattery
-in a little jest that seemed to catch the ascetic fancy. He commended
-it with a patriarchal twinkle, and throwing open the door of his cell
-surrendered her its shelter.
-
-Igraine soon fathomed the shallow compass of the hermitage. It held
-two pallet beds, some rude furniture and crockery, and such things as
-were necessary to the old man's craft, namely a scourge, a calthrop set
-on the end of an iron chain, a coat made of furze, a garland of thorn
-twigs, and a pair of spiked sandals. Gardening tools were piled in a
-corner. Over the doorway hung a rusty suit of harness and a red crusted
-sword. Here in this narrow place the war tools of world and church were
-mingled.
-
-Igraine turned back into the hermitage garden. It was a quiet spot,
-webbed with the faery tracery of flowers and flowering shrubs, golden
-with helichryse, full of the mist of unshorn grass, bright with the
-water of its little fish-pool, where the ferns grew thick. A low wattle
-fence, climbed about by late-seasoned roses of red, shut the whole
-within its rustic pale. Some of the herb beds were cut into symbols of
-holy things, and a bay tree had been laboriously pruned into the rude
-image of a cross. A number of doves peopled the place, flocking about
-the hermit as he worked, often lighting on his hands or shoulders,
-while an old hound dozed in the sun, or followed at his heels. Peace
-seemed over the little refuge like a tranquil sky.
-
-The hermit handed Igraine a hoe, as a matter of custom, and set her
-to work on the weeds in a neglected corner, while he busied his hands
-with pruning some of his rose trees, and removing the clay and linen
-from his grafts. He was by no means the solemn, dismal soul or the
-kindly simpleton Igraine might have expected. He had a keen, world-wise
-air about him that made him seem a sort of Christian Diogenes, and it
-was plain that he had lived much among men. The mingled austerity and
-happiness of his habits, when set beside his inwardly sympathetic yet
-somewhat cynic humour, gave a strong interest to his personality that
-quite commanded Igraine's liking. Despite the vast responsibilities of
-man, as he himself put it, he was not above having a jest at life in
-general. "For," said he, as he pruned his rose bushes, "he who knows
-and obeys the truth can of all men afford to be merry."
-
-Igraine, smiling through the boughs, agreed with him from her heart.
-
-"There are no sour faces in heaven," she said.
-
-"Assuredly not," said the hermit almost fiercely.
-
-"Then why such mortifications of the flesh, father?"
-
-Looking up from his pruning, he beamed over the world.
-
-"I am a very human rogue."
-
-"Human!"
-
-"Well, you see, sister, _mea culpa_, I loved the world when I was in it
-like my own life, and even now if I did not gnash upon myself I should
-grow frivolous at times. When I have spent a night in the rain, or
-plied my scourge, it is marvellous how swiftly vain the fabrics of a
-vaunting pride become. 'I am dust, I am dust,' I cry, and am sound at
-heart again. I look upon bread and olives and a draught of river water
-as true godsends. Having endured exceeding discomfort of the flesh, I
-am as happy in the sun here among my flowers as a mortal could be."
-
-Igraine rested on her hoe, and put her head back, while the evening
-light gave her hair a rare metallic lustre.
-
-"You believe in a life of contrasts, father?"
-
-The old man became suddenly more serious.
-
-"To tell you the truth," he said, "I have found that by making myself
-fanatically uncomfortable so many hours a day, I can attain for the
-rest of it that simple, contented, and heaven-soaring mood that belongs
-to the honest Christian. Man's great peril is apathy, and my customs
-save me from sleepy ease. There is such a thing as living to pander
-to the flesh; it is the creed of the majority. In order to enjoy a
-truly spiritual end, I annihilate the appetites of the body, and _ecce
-homo_,--merry, conscience whole, clean."
-
-Igraine resumed her harrowing of reprobate green-stuff.
-
-"I suppose your doctrine is right for yourself," she said.
-
-An answer came back to her leisurely over the rose bush.
-
-"To the backbone, sister. Yet I am not one who would thrust my habits
-down other men's throats simply because the said habits happen to suit
-my soul. All religious methods are a matter of individual experiment.
-One man may feel more Christian if he drinks wine instead of water;
-if so--by all the prophets--let him have his wine. I hold doctrinal
-tyranny to be the greatest curse in Christendom."
-
-Igraine agreed with him like a sister.
-
-Soon the sun went down with a flood of gold over the trees, the little
-pool put off sheeny samite for black velvet, and the doves flew up to
-roost. The hermit in a genial mood went to his vesper meditations.
-Igraine saw him kneel down before the great stone with his scourge and
-crucifix beside him. She was still carnal enough to prefer the thin
-comfort of a pallet bed in the hermitage to stone or mother earth.
-When it had grown dark and very still she heard the swish of the steel
-scourge, and the man's mutterings mingled with the occasional baying
-of his dog. This phase of mind was, at her age, quite incomprehensible
-to her. She remembered to pray that night for the peasant's wife who
-had been sick in bed so long, and for the little lad who lay under the
-green grass. Then she went to sleep thinking of Pelleas.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Radamanth the goldsmith had not wasted the hours since his niece had
-fled Winchester and his house in the dark. He was a man who did not let
-an enterprise slip into the limbo of the past till he had attempted
-honestly, and dishonestly, for that matter, to bring it to a successful
-issue. He had set his heart on getting Igraine married to one of the
-first lords in the island, and he also had skew ideas as to brimming up
-his own coffers. Taking it for granted that Lilith and the girl had
-not been close friends for weeks together without sharing secrets, and
-being also strongly of the opinion that Igraine's perversity arose out
-of some previous affair, he laid methodical siege to his daughter's
-confidences, and cast a parental dyke about her that should compel her
-to open every gate and alley to his scrutiny.
-
-Lilith, amiable, but weak as milk, was soon worn into surrender by her
-father's methods. He had an unfailing lash wherewith to quicken her
-apprehension, in that young Mark, the armourer's son, should be barred
-the house unless she bent to the parental edicts. Lilith soon brought
-herself to believe that after all there could not be so much disloyalty
-in telling certain of Igraine's adventures to her father. Radamanth,
-bit by bit, had the whole tale of the way from Avangel to Winchester.
-Seeing how often Igraine--woman-wise--had pictured her man to Lilith,
-the goldsmith won a clear perception of the strange knight's person,
-how he rode a black horse, wore red armour, bore a red dragon on a
-green shield, and was called Pelleas. Radamanth made a careful note
-of all these things, and laid the knowledge of them before Gorlois.
-Various subtleties resulted from these facts--subtleties carefully
-considered to catch Igraine.
-
-To turn to Eudol. That lean old satyr had fallen gravely into error
-in the conviction that he had fooled Gorlois's men so cleverly over
-the wine-pot. The deceit had been deeper on the other side, and more
-effectual, seeing that there had been a kirtled traitor in the manor
-camp. If Eudol had been stirring just after daybreak on the morning
-after the carouse, he might have caught one of Gorlois's men coming
-down a little winding stair that led to a certain portion of the
-house. A little earlier still he would have found the fellow with his
-arm round Dame Phœbe's waist in a dark entry on the stairs. The woman
-did not love Igraine, nor did she want her in the house; moreover,
-Gorlois's man was young, and had fine eyes, and a most wicked tongue.
-Eudol, like most diplomats, was far from being infallible when there
-was a woman in the coil, and Dame Phœbe was very much a woman.
-
-Gorlois's fellows had no sooner cleared the meadows that morning than
-they were away for Winchester at a dusty rattle. It was fast going over
-the clean, straight road, and the grey walls were not long in coming
-into view. The pair swung through the western gate, and went straight
-through the streets in a way that set the city folk staring and dodging
-for the pathway. At the gate of Gorlois's house the porter had a
-vexatious damping for the spirits of these fiery gentlemen. Gorlois had
-ridden out. The men swore, off-saddled, and made the best of the matter
-over a game of dice in the kitchen.
-
-There was great bustle when Gorlois had heard the men's tale. They
-excused their not having taken Igraine on the plea that Gorlois had
-forbidden any to approach her save himself. The man was in a smiting
-mood, and he swore Eudol should rue giving him the lie and sending him
-a wild chase miles into the west. Getting to horse at once, and taking
-the two men with some ten more spears, he rode out and held for Sarum.
-
-There was a swirl of dust before Eudol's gate, and a sharp scattering
-of shingle as Gorlois and his troop rode up. A slave, who had seen them
-from the garden, and had taken them for robbers, was prevented from
-closing the gate by a brisk youth wedging it with his foot. There was
-a short scuffle at the tottering door. Then Gorlois and his men burst
-it in, and cut down those slaves on the threshold who had tried to
-close the door. The women folk were herded screeching into the kitchen,
-and penned there like sheep. Out of a cupboard in an upper room they
-dragged the woman Phœbe, limp with fright, and hurried the truth out of
-her that Igraine had gone that very morning, and that Eudol was still
-in the fields. Gorlois, believing her a liar, had the house searched,
-beds overturned, cupboards torn open, every nook and cranny probed.
-Then they tried the garden and the stables, with like fortune. One of
-the fellows catching sight of the barn across the meadows, half-hidden
-by pines, they made a circle round it, closed in, and forced the door.
-A blinking, red-eyed face came up out of the shadows, its beard and
-thin thatch of hair whisped with hay.
-
-Eudol, collared with little kindness, began to wonder after his drunken
-sleep who these rough folk could be. A word as to Igraine brought him
-to his senses. He saw Gorlois, a dark-bearded, black-eyed man, with
-a frown that he did not like the look of. He began to shake in his
-slippers, to excuse himself, and to deny all knowledge of the girl
-since the morning. Matters were against Eudol. Gorlois thought that
-he had plucked the old man from hiding, and that he was a liar to the
-bone; his shrift was short, measured out by the man's hard malice. They
-struck him down at the door of his own barn, covering his grey head
-with his hands, and screaming for mercy. His blood soaked the hay, and
-shot black streaks into the dusty floor. Then they cast back to the
-manor, and half-throttled the woman Phœbe, till Gorlois was satisfied
-that he had got all the truth from her he could. In half an hour they
-were at gallop again for Sarum.
-
-Gorlois reined in cruelly more than once to fling hot questions at
-the folk they passed upon the road. His horse was all sweat and foam,
-and its mouth bloody with the heavy hand that played on the bridle.
-Wayfarer after wayfarer looked up half in awe at the iron-faced man
-towering above them in the stirrups. Their blank, irresponsive faces
-chafed Gorlois's patience to the bone. Not a word did he win of Igraine
-and her grey gown. Waxing sullen as granite, and very silent, he looked
-neither to right nor left, but plodded on like a baffled sleuth-hound
-with the rest of the pack trailing at his tail. The girl's hair seemed
-tossing over the edge of the world, like a golden hue from the west,
-and there was a passionate wind through the man's moody thought.
-
-It was towards evening when Gorlois with his men--a bunch of
-spears--came upon the peasant in the green smock driving his wain-load
-of faggots slowly towards the setting sun. Gorlois drew up and hailed
-him, and began his catechism anew. The fellow pulled in his team,
-and eyeing the horseman with some caution, acknowledged curtly that
-he had carried in his cart a league or more such a woman as Gorlois
-had pictured. To further quick queries he proved stubborn and boorish.
-Gorlois had lost his temper long ago. "Speak up, you devil's dog!"
-
-The man looked sullen. Gorlois's sword flashed out. He spurred close
-up, and held three feet of menacing steel over the peasant's head.
-
-"Well, you be damned!" he said.
-
-"What want you with the woman, lording?"
-
-"Am I to argue with a clod of clay? The woman is marked for great
-honour, and must be taken. Will you spoil her fortune?"
-
-The man fingered the reins, looking hard at Gorlois with his stupidly
-honest face. He guessed he was some great lord, by his harness and his
-following. It was not for him to gainsay such a gentleman, especially
-when he flourished a naked sword.
-
-"I would do my best for the good nun, lording," he said.
-
-"Then speak out."
-
-"She promised to pray for my woman."
-
-Gorlois gave a laugh, and scoffed at the notion.
-
-"Let prayers be," he said; "tell me where she went."
-
-The man told Gorlois of the hermitage in the dale where Igraine had
-gone for a night's lodging. He described how the path could be found,
-a mile or more nearer Winchester. Gorlois threw a gold piece into the
-cart, and let the man drive on. Then he sat still on his black horse
-with his sword over his shoulder, and looked into the wood with dark,
-glooming eyes. For a minute he sat like a statue, staring on nothing in
-keen thought. His men watched him, looking for some swift swoop from
-such a pinnacle of pondering; they knew his temper. His sword shot back
-into its scabbard, and he was keen as a wolf.
-
-"Galleas of Camelford."
-
-A man with a hooked nose and high cheek bones heeled his horse forward,
-and saluted.
-
-"Ride hard, find the hermitage, be wary, watch at a distance for sight
-of the Lady Igraine. If she is at the hermitage, gallop back to Sarum
-before nightfall. I shall be in Sir Accolon's house. Attend me there."
-
-The man saluted again, turned his horse instanter, and rode hard into
-the east. Gorlois, with a half smile on his lips, rode on with his
-troop for Sarum.
-
-In Sarum town there was a queer house of stone, very dark and very
-saturnine. It was hid away behind high walls, and hedged so blackly
-with yews and hollies that it seemed to stand in the gloom of a
-perpetual twilight. After dark a sullen glow often hung above the
-trees; casements would blaze blood-red light into boughs creaking and
-clutching in the wind; or there would be a moony glimmer on the glass,
-and belated folk passing near might hear voices or elvish music about
-them as though dropped from the stars. It was the house of Merlin,--the
-man of dreams,--wrapped in the gloom of immemorial yews.
-
-That night Gorlois sat in a room hung with black velvet, where a
-brazier held a dying fire, and a bowl thereon steamed up perfumes in
-a heavy vapour. A man with a face of marble and eyes like an eternal
-night was chaired before him, with his long, lean, restless fingers
-continually touching the cloud of hair that fell blackly over his
-ears. His fingers were packed with rings gemmed with all manner of
-stones--jasper, sardonyx, chrysolite, emerald, ruby, and the like. His
-gown was of black velvet, twined all about with serpent scrolls of
-white cloth. On his breast was brooched a great diamond that blazed and
-wavered back the glow from the fire.
-
-Gorlois sat in his carved chair stiff as any image. His strenuous
-soul seemed mewed up by the psychic influence of the man before him.
-He spoke seldom, and then only at the other's motion--at a curious
-gesture of one of those long, lean hands. The room was as silent as the
-burial hall of a pyramid, and it had the air of being massed above by
-stupendous depths of stone.
-
-Presently the man in the black robe began to speak with deliberate
-intent, holding his voice deep in his throat so that it sounded much
-like the voice of an oracle declaring itself in the noise of a wind.
-
-"The woman is beautiful beyond other women."
-
-"Like a golden May."
-
-"And true."
-
-"As a sapphire."
-
-"Yet will not have you."
-
-"Not a shred of me."
-
-The man with the rings smiled out of his impenetrable eyes, and
-fingered the brooch on his breast.
-
-"The woman has great destiny before her."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"I have seen her star in the night. You dare take her fate on you?"
-
-"Like ivy holds a tree."
-
-"As a wife?"
-
-Gorlois laughed.
-
-"How else?"
-
-"As a wife--by the church."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"Or no help of my hand."
-
-Again there was silence. A coal fell in the brazier, and seemed like
-a rock down a precipice. The black eyes that stared down Gorlois were
-full of light, and strangely scintillant. Gorlois listened, with his
-limbs asleep and his brain in thrall, while the man spoke like a
-very Michael out of a cloud. The clear glittering plot given out of
-Merlin's lips came like a dream vivid to the thought of the dreamer.
-If Gorlois obeyed he should have his desire, and catch Igraine to a
-white marriage-bed by law and her own willing. The fire died down in
-the brazier, and the bowl ceased to smoke perfumes. Gorlois saw the
-man gather his black robe with his glittering fingers, and move like
-a wraith round the room, to stand beckoning by the door. In another
-minute Gorlois was under the stars, with the house and its yews a black
-mound against the sky. Like a sleeper half wakened he took full breath
-of the night air, and stretched his arms up above his head. But it was
-not to sleep that he passed back through the void streets to the house
-of the knight Accolon.
-
-To return to Igraine housed for the night in the little hermitage. At
-the first creep of dawn, when daffodils were thrown up against the
-eastern sky, she left her pallet bed in the cell and went out into
-the hermit's garden. The recluse was down at the brook drawing water,
-whither the dog and the doves had followed him. Igraine passed through
-the garden--spun over as it was with webs of dew. To her comfort she
-found her ankle scarcely troubling her, for she had feared pain or
-stiffness after the walk of yesterday. Going down the dale, she patted
-the old dog's head, and picked up the pitcher as the recluse gave her
-good-morning.
-
-"You are an early soul, sister. My dog and I come down to the brook
-each morning as the sun peeps over the hill."
-
-"You are not lonely," said Igraine.
-
-The old man tightened his girdle, looked over the solemn piers of the
-woods, sniffed the air, and hailed an autumn savour.
-
-"Not I," he said. "I have my dog and my doves, and folk often lodge
-here, and I have word of the world and how the Saxons vex us. The good
-people near bring me alms and pittances, or come to ask prayers for
-their souls, and"--with a twinkle--"for their bodies, too."
-
-Igraine remembered the peasant's little son.
-
-"Was it you," she said, "who gave a peasant fellow near here a saint's
-dust to scatter over a sick child?"
-
-The old man shook his head and smiled enigmatically.
-
-"I have no dealings in such marvels," he said.
-
-"The boy died."
-
-"Of course."
-
-"They will sell your dust some day."
-
-A keen look, cynical with beaming scorn, spread over the man's gaunt
-face.
-
-"Much good may it do them," he said; "death is monstrous flatterer of
-mere clay. I may feed a rose bush with my bones; a better fate than the
-cheating of superstitious women."
-
-He made a sign with his hand, and the birds went wheeling in circles
-above him. The dog crept up and thrust his snout into the old man's
-palm. The garden lay above them, ripe with an autumn mellowness; yet
-there was no regret though winter would soon be piping, and the man's
-hair was grey.
-
-"What think you of life?" said Igraine.
-
-"You should know, sister, as well as I."
-
-"But you see, father, I am not a nun,--only a novice."
-
-He stared at her a moment with a slight smile.
-
-"Remain a novice," he said.
-
-"You advise me so!"
-
-"Why subordinate your soul to chains forged of men."
-
-"These seem strange words."
-
-He patted his dog's head, and, half stooping, looked at her with keen
-grey eyes.
-
-"Have you ever loved a man?"
-
-"Yes," she said, with a clear laugh and a slight colour.
-
-"Is he worthy?"
-
-"I believe him a noble soul."
-
-"Naturally."
-
-"He ran away and left me because he thought I was a nun."
-
-The hermit applauded.
-
-"That sounds like honour," he said critically.
-
-"I am seeking him to tell him the truth."
-
-"And I will pray that you may soon meet," said the old man, "for there
-is nothing like the love of a good man for a clean maid. If I had
-married a true woman, I should never have taken to the scourge or the
-stone bed. Marry wisely and you are halfway to Heaven."
-
-They broke fast that morning in the garden, it being the man's custom
-to make his meals on the granite slab that served him as a bed. The
-little dale looked very green and gracious in the tranquil light, with
-its curling brook and dark barriers of trees. Igraine, as she sat on
-the great stone and ate the hermit's bread, followed the brook with
-her thoughts, wondering whether it became the stream that ran through
-Eudol's meadows. She was for Sarum that day, where she would throw off
-her grey habit and take some dress more likely to baffle Gorlois. She
-had enough money in her purse. Worldling again, she could give herself
-to winning sight of this Uther, and to learning whether he was the
-Pelleas she sought or no.
-
-As she sat and fingered her bread, something she saw down the dale made
-her rigid and still as a priestess smitten with the vision of a god in
-some heathen oratory. Her eyes were very wide, her lips open and very
-white, her whole air as of one watching in a sudden stupor of awe.
-Another moment and she had broken from the mood like a torrent from a
-cavern. With eyes suddenly amber bright, she touched the hermit's hand
-and pointed down the dale, gave him a word or so, then left him and ran
-down the hill.
-
-A man on a black horse had ridden out from the trees, and was pushing
-his horse over the brook at a shallow spot not far away. His red armour
-glowed in the sun with a metallic lustre. Even at that distance Igraine
-had seen the red dragon rampant on a shield of green. As she ran down
-the grass slope she called the man by name, thinking to see him turn
-and come to her. Pushing on sullenly as though he had not heard the
-cry that went after him like winged love, he drew up the further slope
-without wavering, and sank like a red streak into the dense green of
-the trees.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Igraine forded the brook and followed the man by the winding path that
-curled away into the wood.
-
-She was ever a sanguine soul, and the mere sinister influences that
-might have discouraged her in her purpose that morning were impotent
-before the level convictions of her heart. She had seen Pelleas ride
-in amid the trees; she was sure as death as to his cognizance and his
-armour. Now Pelleas, she could vow, had not heard her call to him,
-and if he had heard he had not understood; if he had seen he had not
-recognised. Doubts could have no place in the argument before such a
-justification by faith.
-
-It was not long before she caught sight of the red glint of armour
-going through the trees. It came and went, grew and disappeared, as
-the path folded it in its curves or thrust out a heavy screen of green
-to hide it like a heavy curtain. The man was going as he pleased, now
-a walk, now a casual jog, now a short burst of a canter over an open
-patch. One moment Igraine would see him clearly, then not at all.
-Sometimes she gained, sometimes lost ground, yet the knight of the red
-harness never seemed to come within lure of her voice.
-
-In due course she reached the place where the path ended bluntly on the
-Winchester high-road, and where the way ran straight as a spear-shaft,
-so that she could see Pelleas riding for Winchester with a lead of a
-quarter of a mile. The distant ringing tramp of hoofs came up to her
-like a mocking chuckle. Putting her hands to her mouth, she hallooed
-with all the breath left her by her run through the wood; yet, as far
-as she might see, the man never so much as turned in the saddle, while
-the smite of hoofs died down and down into a well of silence.
-
-Another halloo and no echo.
-
-"He's asleep, or deaf in his helmet."
-
-She forgot the distance and the din of hoofs that might well have
-drowned the thin cry that could have reached the rider. Maugre her heat
-and her flushed face Igraine had no more thought of giving in than she
-had of marrying Gorlois. With Pelleas so near she had made her vow to
-follow him, and follow him she would like a comet's tail. If needs be
-she would wear her sandals to the flesh, but catch the man she must in
-the end.
-
-A mile more on the high-road, with her feet and the hem of her gown
-dust-drenched, and she was still little nearer the man in the red
-harness for all her hurrying. She could have vowed more than once that
-he turned in his saddle and looked back at her as though to see how
-near she had come to him on the road. A mile from the hermitage path
-he turned his horse southwards from the track into a grass valley
-headed by a ruined tower and hedged densely on either hand by pine
-woods. Igraine, seeing from a slight rise in the road this change of
-course, cut away crosswise with the notion of getting near the man or
-of intercepting him before he should win clear law again. After all,
-the effort added only more vexation. She saw the black horse pressed to
-a canter and cross the point where she might have cut him off, while a
-great stretch of furze that rolled away to the black palisading of the
-pines came down and threw a promontory in her path. Pelleas was a mile
-to the good when she had skirted the furze and the bend of the wood,
-and taken a straight course southwards down the valley between the
-pines.
-
-All that morning the sport of hunter and hunted went on between the
-novice in grey and the man on the black horse. For all her trouble
-Igraine won little upon him, lost little as the hours went by; while
-the rider in turn seemed in no wise desirous of being rid of her for
-good. They passed the pine woods with their midnight aisles, forded a
-stream, climbed up a heath, went over it amid the heather. From the
-last ridge of the heath Igraine saw the country sloping away into
-undulating grasslands, piled here and there with domes of thicketed
-trees. Far to the south a dense black mass rose like a rounded hill
-against the sky. The man in red was still about a mile in front of her,
-riding slowly, a red speck in a waste of green. Igraine, having him in
-view from her vantage point, lay down full length to rest and take some
-food. She was tired enough, but dogged at heart as ever. She vowed that
-if the man was playing with her she would tell him her mind, love or no
-love, when she came up with him in the end.
-
-As the sun swam into the noontide arc she went on again downhill,
-and found in turn that the man had halted, for he had been hidden by
-trees, and getting view of him suddenly she saw him sitting on a stone
-with his horse tethered near. As soon as Igraine was within measurable
-distance she took advantage of a hollow, dropped on her hands and
-knees, and began to crawl like a cat after a bird. Edging round a
-thicket she came quite near the man, but could not see his face. His
-spear stood in the ground by his horse, and he had his shield slung
-about his neck, and a bare poniard in his hand. It was clear that he
-was watching for Igraine, for despite her craft he caught sight of her
-face peering white under the hem of a bush, and climbed quickly into
-the saddle. Igraine started up, made a dash across the open, calling
-to him as she ran. Perverse as hate his horse broke into a canter
-and left her far in the rear. The girl shook her fist at him with a
-sudden burst of temper. She was standing near the stone where the man
-had been sitting. Looking at its flat face she saw the reason of the
-naked poniard in his hand, for he had been carving out thin straggling
-letters in the stone.
-
-"Sancta Igraine," she read--
-
-"Ora pro nobis."
-
-The screed dispelled the doubts in Igraine's mind on the instant.
-Palpably the man knew well enough who was following him, and was
-avoiding her of set purpose; but for what reason Igraine racked her wit
-to discover. She ran through many things in her heart, the possible
-testing of her devotion, a vacillating weakness on Pelleas's part
-that would not let him leave her altogether, a freakish wish to give
-her penance. Then, she knew that he was superstitious, and the thought
-flashed to her that he might think her a wraith, or some evil spirit
-that had taken her shape to have him in temptation. Maugre her vexation
-and her pride she held again on the trail, eating as she went some
-dried plums that she had in her wallet. The man had slackened down
-again and was less than half a mile away, now limned against the sky,
-now folded into a hollow or shut out by trees. Like a marsh-fire he
-tantalised her with a mystery of distance, holding steadily south at a
-level tramp, while Igraine plodded after him, her hair down and blowing
-out to the casual wind, her eyes at gaze on the red lure in the van.
-
-So the mellower half of the day passed, and towards evening they neared
-the mount of trees Igraine had seen from the last ridge of the heath
-at noon. The black horse was heading straight for the cloudy mass in a
-way that set Igraine thinking and casting about for Pelleas's motive.
-Perhaps he had some quest in the solitary place that needed his single
-hand. Would he take to the wood and let her follow as before, or had he
-any purpose in leading her thither? Drowned in conjecture she gave up
-prophecy with a vicious sense of mystification, and accepted inevitable
-ignorance for the time being as to the man's moods and motives. She was
-no less obstinate to follow him to the death. If she only had a horse
-she would come near the man, pride or no pride, and tell him the truth.
-
-Pressing on, with her strained ankle beginning to limp, she topped
-the round back of a grass rise and came full in view of the wood she
-had long seen in the distance. It looked very solemn in the declining
-light. The great trunks of giant beeches were packed pillar upon pillar
-into an impenetrable gloom. The foliage above, densely green, billowy,
-touched with red and gold, rolled upwards cloud on cloud as the ground
-ascended to the south and east. A great bronze carpet of dead leaves
-swept away into the night of the trees. There was an eternal hush, a
-gross silence, over the glooming aisles that seemed to beckon to the
-soul, to draw the heart into the night of foliage as into a cavern.
-Over all was the glowing ægis of the setting sun.
-
-Igraine saw the man on the forest's edge where an arch of gloom struck
-into the inner shadows. He was facing the west, motionless as stone on
-his black horse, with the slanting light plucking a dull red gleam from
-his harness. There was a mystery about him that seemed to harmonise
-with the stillness of the trees and the black yawn of the forest
-galleries. Igraine imagined that he might be in a mood at last to speak
-with her if he believed her human. At all events, if he took to the
-trees, and she did not lose him, she would have the vantage of him and
-his horse in such a barricaded place.
-
-It began to grow dark very quickly as she passed down the gradual slope
-towards the forest. The trees towered above her, a black mass rising
-again towards the east. Keen to see the man's mood, she hurried on
-and found him still steadfast in the great arch, that seemed like the
-gate of the wilderness, ready to abide her. A hundred paces more and
-her heart began to beat the faster, and the moil of the day's march
-dwindled before the influx of a rosier idyl. Every step towards Pelleas
-seemed to take her higher up the turret stair of love till her lips
-should meet those that bent at last from the gloom to hers. Pride and
-vexation lay fallen far below, dropped incontinently like a ragged
-cloak; a more generous passion shone out like cloth of gold; she was no
-longer weary. Her eyes were very bright, her face full of a splendid
-wistfulness, as she neared the man under the trees, looking up to see
-his face.
-
-Twilight lay deep violet under the wooelshawe, while horse and man were
-dim and impalpable, great shadows of themselves. Igraine could not see
-the man's face for the mask over the mezail of his helmet, and he was
-silent as death. She was quite close to him now and ready to speak his
-name, when he wheeled suddenly, looked back at her, and pointed into
-the wood with his long spear. She ran forward and would have taken hold
-of his bridle, but he waved her back and slanted his spear at her in
-mute warning. Igraine, heart-hungry, could hold herself no longer.
-
-"Man--man, are you stone?"
-
-He rode straight ahead into the night of the trees and said never a
-word. Igraine drew her breath.
-
-"Pelleas."
-
-"Ah, Igraine."
-
-The voice that came to her was muffled like the voice of a mourner, yet
-the girl thought she caught the old deep tone of it like the low cry of
-the wind.
-
-"Why do you vex me?"
-
-"Follow!"
-
-"Pelleas, Pelleas, I am no nun!"
-
-"Follow!"
-
-"I kept this truth from you too long."
-
-"Follow!"
-
-"Pelleas, would you hurt my heart more?"
-
-"Follow; God shall make all plain and good."
-
-She gave in with a half-sob, and bent quietly to the man's mood, though
-she had no notion what he purposed in his heart, or what his desires
-were in mystifying her thus. No doubt it would be well in the end if
-Pelleas bade her follow like a penitent and promised ultimate peace. At
-least he had not turned her away, and she trusted him to the death. He
-was a strong, deep-sensed soul, she knew, and her deceiving may have
-made him bitter in measure, and not easily appeased. In this queer
-trial of endurance, this tempting of her temper, she thought she read a
-penance laid upon her by the man for the way she had used his love.
-
-They were soon far into the wood, with the western sky dwindling
-between the innumerable pillars of the trees. It began to be dark and
-utterly silent save for the rustle of the dead leaves as they went, and
-the shrilling chafe of bridle or scabbard, or the snort of the great
-horse. Wherever the eye turned the forest piers stood straight and
-solemn as the columns in a hypostyle hall in some Egyptian temple. The
-fretwork of boughs roofed them in with hardly a glimmering through of
-the darkening sky above. There was a pungent autumn scent on the air
-that seemed to rise like the incense of years that had fallen to decay
-on the brown flooring of the place, and there was no breath or vestige
-of a wind.
-
-Presently as the day died the wood went black as the winter night,
-and Igraine kept close by the man, with his armour giving a dull
-gleam now and again to guide her. They were passing up what seemed to
-be a great arcade cut through the very heart of the wood, as though
-leading to some shrine or altar, relic of Druid days, or times yet more
-antique. The tunnel ran a curved course, bending deeper and deeper as
-it went into the dense horde of trees. So dark was the wood that it
-was possible to see but a few paces in advance, and Igraine wondered
-how the man kept the track. She was close at his stirrup now, with the
-dark mass of him and his horse rising above her like a statue in black
-basalt. Though he never spoke to her, and though she touched no part of
-him, his horse, or his harness, she felt content with the queer sense
-of trust and proximity that pervaded her. There was magic in the mere
-companionship. As she had humbled her will to Pelleas's the night when
-he had taken her from the beech tree in Andredswold, so now in like
-fashion she surrendered pride and liberty, and became a child.
-
-Suddenly the trackway straightened out into a great colonnade that
-ran due south between trees of yet vaster girth. Igraine felt the man
-rein in and abide motionless beside her as she held to the stirrup
-and waited for what next should chance. Silence seemed like depths
-of black water over them, and they could hear each other take breath
-like the faint flux and reflux of a sea. Igraine saw the man lift his
-spear, a dim streak less black than the vault above, and hold it as a
-sign for her to listen. Her blood began to tingle a very little. There
-was something far away on the dead, stagnant air, a sort of swirl of
-sound, shrill and harmonious, like a wind playing through the strings
-of a harp. It was very gradual, very impalpable. As the volume of it
-grew it seemed to rush nearer like a wind, to swell into a swaying
-plaintive song smitten through with the wounded cry of flutes. It gave
-a notion of wood-fays dancing, of whirling wings and flitting gossamer
-moonbright in the shadows. Igraine's blood seemed to spin the faster,
-and her hand left the stirrup and touched the man's thigh. He gave
-never a word or sign in the dark. She spoke to him very softly, very
-meekly.
-
-"What place is this, Pelleas?"
-
-She saw him bend slightly in the saddle.
-
-"It is called the Ghost Forest," he said.
-
-"What are the sounds we hear?"
-
-"Who can tell!"
-
-Igraine had hardly heard him, when a streak of phosphor light flickered
-among the trees, coming and going incessantly as the great trunks
-intervened. It neared them in gradual fashion, and then blazed out
-sudden into the open aisle, a man in armour riding on a great white
-horse, his harness white as the moon, his face pale and wide-eyed, his
-hair like a mass of twisted silver wire. A misty glow haloed him round,
-and though he rode close there seemed no sound at all to mark his
-passing. As he had come, so he went, with streaks of flickering light
-that waxed less and less frequent till they died in the dark, and left
-the place empty as before. Igraine thought the air cold when he had
-gone.
-
-She felt the black horse move beside her, and they went on as before
-into the night of the trees. The noise of flute and harp that had
-ceased awhile bubbled up again quite near, so that it was no longer
-the ghost of a sound, but noise more definite, more discrete. It had a
-queer way of dying to a sighing breath, and then gathering gradually
-into an ascending burst of windy melody. Igraine could almost fancy
-that she heard the sweep of wings, the soft thrill of silks trailing
-through the trees, yet the man on the horse said never a word as they
-went on like a pair of mutes to a grave.
-
-The colonnade opened out abruptly on a great circular clearing in the
-wood shut in by crowded trunks, its open vault above cut by a dense
-ring of foliage. A grey light came down from the sky, showing great
-stones piled one upon another, others fallen and sunk deep in rank
-grass and brambles. The man halted his horse in the very centre of the
-clearing, with Igraine beside him, watchful for what should happen, and
-for the moment when Pelleas should unbend.
-
-Hardly had she looked over the great cromlechs, black and sinister in
-that solitary wilderness, than the whole wood about them seemed dusted
-suddenly with points of fire. North, south, east, and west torches and
-cressets came jerking redly out of the night, flitting behind the trees
-in a wide circle, gathering nearer and nearer without a sound. They
-might have been great fireflies playing through the aisles and ways,
-or goblin lamps carried by fairy folk. Igraine drew very close to the
-man's horse for comfort, and looked up to see his face, but found it
-dark and hidden. Her hand crept up past the horse's neck, rested on the
-mane a moment, and ventured yet further to meet the man's hand, where
-it gripped the bridle. For a minute they abode thus without a sound,
-watching the weird torch-dance in the wood.
-
-With a sudden gibber of laughter and a swirl of pipes the throng of
-lights seemed to seethe to the very margin of the clearing. Queer
-phantastic shapes showed amid the trees, and the great circle grew wide
-with light, and the grey cromlechs surprised in sleep by the glare and
-piping. At that very moment Igraine had a thought of some one looking
-deep into her eyes, of a will, a power, streaming in upon her like
-sunlight into a sleepy pool. Her desire went from the man on the black
-horse into the square shadow of the great central cromlech, where an
-indefinite influence seemed to lurk. Looking long under the roofing
-stone, she grew aware of a tall something standing there, of a pair of
-eyes like the eyes of a panther, of a lean white hand moving in the
-shadows.
-
-The eyes under the cromlech seemed to follow Igraine like fire, and to
-burn in upon her a foreign influence. Rebellious and wondering, she
-stiffened herself against a spiritual combat that seemed moving upon
-her out of the dark. She could have smitten the eyes that stared her
-down, and yet the magnetic stupor of them kindled up things in her
-heart that were strange and newly sensuous. She felt her strength sway
-as though her soul were being lifted from her, and she was warmed from
-top to toe like one who has taken wine, and whose being swims into an
-idyllic glorification of the senses. Again her desire seemed turned to
-the man in red harness, yet when she looked the saddle was empty, and
-the horse held by an armed servant, who wore a wolfs head for covering.
-Still mute with fear, desire, and wonder, she saw a tall figure move
-into the full glare of the torches, a figure in red harness with a
-shield of green, and a red dragon thereon, and with head unhelmed. The
-armour was like the armour of Pelleas, but the face was the face of the
-man Gorlois.
-
-And now the eyes under the shadow of the cromlech were full and strong
-upon Igraine. Breathing fast with a hand at her throat she stepped back
-from Gorlois--hesitated--stood still. She was very white, and her eyes
-were big and sightless like the eyes of one walking in a dream. For all
-her strength, her scorn, and the tricking of her heart, she was being
-swept like a cloud into the embraces of the sun. Reason, power, love,
-sank away and became as nothing. A shudder passed over her. Presently
-her hands dropped limp as broken wings, and her body began to sway like
-a tall lily in a breeze. A gradual stupor saw her cataleptic; she stood
-impotent, played upon by the promptings of another soul.
-
-Gorlois went near to her with hands outstretched, stooping to look into
-her face. A sudden light kindled in her eyes, her lips parted, and new
-life flooded red into her cheeks as at the beck of love. She bent to
-Gorlois full of a gracious eagerness, a wistful desire that made her
-face golden as dawn. Her hand sought his, while the shadowy shape under
-the cromlech watched them with never-wavering eyes. Gorlois's arms were
-round her now all wreathed in her hair; her face was turned to his; her
-hands were clasped upon his neck. Another moment and he had touched her
-lips with his.
-
-A sound of flutes, the tinkling of a bell, and a solemn company
-came threading from the trees, guests, acolytes, torch-bearers, in
-glittering cloth of gold, with a great crucifix to lead them. Gorlois
-and Igraine were hand in hand near the stone that hid the frame of
-Merlin. A priest in a gorgeous cape drew near, and began his patter.
-The vows were taken, the pact sealed, with the noise of a chant and
-music. Thus under the benedictions of the great trees, and the spell of
-Merlin, Gorlois and Igraine were made man and wife.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK III
-
-THE WAR IN WALES
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Aurelius Ambrosius the king was dead, taken off in Winchester by
-the hand of a poisoner. He had been found stark and cold in his
-great carved bed, with an empty wine-cup beside him, and a tress of
-black hair and a tress of yellow laid twined together upon his lips.
-The signet-ring had gone from his finger, and by the bed had been
-discovered a woman's embroidered shoe dropped under the folds of the
-purple quilt. The truth, sinister enough in its bare suggestions, was
-glossed over by the court folk out of honour to Aurelius, and of love
-to Uther the king's brother. It was told to the country how an Irish
-monk sent by Pascentius, dead Vortigern's son, had gained audience of
-the king, and treacherously poisoned him as he drank wine at supper.
-The tale went out to the world, and was believed of many with a sincere
-and honest faith. Yet a certain child-eyed woman, wandering on the
-shores of Wales for sight of Irish ships, could have spoken more of the
-truth had she so dared.
-
-Uther Pendragon had been hailed king at York before the bristling
-spears of a victorious host. But a week before he had marched against
-the heathen on the Humber, and overthrown them with such slaughter as
-had not been seen in Britain since the days when Boadicea smote the
-Romans. At the head of his men he had marched south in a snowstorm to
-be thundered into Winchester as king and conqueror. Twelve maidens of
-noble blood, clad in ermine and minever, had run before him with boughs
-of mistletoe and bay. Five hundred knights had walked bareheaded, with
-swords drawn, behind his horse. The city had glistened in a white web
-of frosted samite, sparkled over by the clear visage of a winter sun.
-
-There were many great labours ready to the king's hand. Britain lay
-bruised by the onslaughts of the barbarians; her monks had been slain,
-her churches desecrated. The pirate ships swept the seas, and poured
-torch and sword along the sunny shores of the south. Andredswold,
-dark, saturnine, mysterious, alone waved them back with the sepulchral
-threatening of its trees. Yet, for all the burden of the kingdom upon
-his broad shoulders, Uther gave his first care to the honouring of
-the dead. Aurelius Ambrosius was buried with great pomp of churchmen
-and nobles at Stonehenge, and a royal mound raised above the tomb. At
-Christmastide, with snow upon the ground, a great gathering was made at
-Sarum of all the petty kings, princes, and nobles of the land. Hither
-came Meliograunt, king of Cornwall, and Urience of the land of Gore.
-Fealty was sworn with solemn ordinance to Uther Pendragon the king, and
-common league bonded against the heathen and the whelps of the north.
-
-There were other perils brewing for Britain over the sea. Pascentius,
-dead Vortigern's son, had been an outcast and a wanderer since the
-days when the sons of Constantine had sailed from Armorica to save
-the land from the blind lust and treason of his father. He had been a
-drifting fire beyond the seas, an intriguer, a sower of sedition, a
-man dangerous alike to friend and foe. Beaten like a vulture from the
-coasts of Britain, he had turned with treasonable hope to Ireland and
-its king, Gilomannius the Black, a strenuous potentate, boasting little
-love for Ambrosius the king. Here, in Ireland, a kennel of sedition
-had arisen. Pascentius, keen, hungry plotter, had toiled at the task
-of piling enmity against those who had destroyed his father amid the
-flames of Genorium. A great league arose, a banding of the barbarians
-with the Irish princes, a union of the Saxons who ravaged Kent with the
-wild tribesmen over the northern border. Month by month a great host
-gathered on the Irish coast. Many ships came from the east and from the
-south. Mid-winter was past before Gilomannius embarked, and, setting
-sail with a fair wind, turned the beaks of his galleys for the shores
-of Wales.
-
-Noise of the gathering storm had been brought to Uther as he journed
-through the southern coasts, rebuilding the churches, recovering abbey
-and hermitage from their desolate ashes. His zeal was great for God,
-and his love of Britain well-nigh as noble. Warned thus in due season,
-he marched for the west, calling the land to arms, assigning for the
-gathering of the host Caerleon upon Usk, that fair city bosomed in the
-fulness of its woods and pastures. Many a knight had answered to his
-call; many a city had sent out her companies; the high-roads rang with
-the cry of steel in the crisp winter weather.
-
-Duke Gorlois had come from Cornwall from his castle of Tintagel,
-bringing many knights and men-at-arms by sea, and the Lady Igraine
-his wife, in a great galley whose bulwarks glistened with shields. In
-Caerleon Gorlois had a house built of white stone, set upon a little
-hill in the centre of the city. To Caerleon he brought this golden
-falcon of a woman, this untamable thing that he had kept prisoned in
-the high towers of Tintagel. He mewed her up like a nun in his house
-of white stone, so that no man should see the fairness of her face.
-She was wild as an eyas from the woods, fierce and unapproachable,
-and sharp of claw. Robbed of her liberty, had she not sought to take
-her own life with a sword, and to throw herself from the battlements
-of Tintagel? Gorlois had won little love by Merlin's subtlety, and he
-feared the woman's beauty and the spell of her large eyes.
-
-It was the month of February and clear crisp weather. The white bellies
-of the Irish sails had shown up against the grey blue stretch of the
-sea, a white multitude of canvas that had sent the herdsmen hurrying
-their flocks to the mountains. Horsemen had galloped for Caerleon, and
-the cry of war went up over wood and water. Flames licked the night
-sky. From Caerleon to St. Davids, from St. Davids to Eryri, the red
-blaze of beacon-fires told of the ships at sea.
-
-The cry of the storm arose in Caerleon, and the tramp of armed men
-sounded all day in her streets. The great host lodged about the city
-broke camp and streamed westwards along the high-road into Wales.
-Bugles blew, banners flapped, masses of sullen steel rolled away into
-purple of the winter woods. Bristling spears and lines of skin-clad
-shields vanished into the west like the waves of a solemn sea. On the
-walls of Caerleon stood many women and children watching the host march
-for the west, watching Uther the king ride out with his great company
-of knights and nobles.
-
-At the casement of an upper room in Gorlois's house stood a woman
-looking out over Caerleon towards the sea. She was clad in a mantle of
-furs, and in a tunic of purple linked up with cord of gold. A tippet
-of white fur clasped with a brooch of amethysts circled her throat.
-Her hair was bound up in a net of fine silk, and there was a girdle of
-blue silk about her loins, and an enamelled cross upon her bosom. She
-stood with her elbows resting on the stone sill, and her peevish face
-clasped between her hands. Her eyes looked very large and lustrous as
-she stared out wistfully over the city.
-
-In the great court below horses champed the bit and struck fire from
-the ringing flags. Men in armour clanged to and fro; rough voices
-cried questions and counter-questions; bridles jingled; spear-shafts
-clattered on the stones. Now a clarion blared as a troop of horse
-thundered by up the street, their armour gleaming dully past the
-courtyard gate. The growl of war hung heavy over Caerleon, a grim
-sullen sound that seemed in keeping with the restless chiding of the
-wind.
-
-Igraine's face was hard as stone as she watched the men moving in the
-courtyard below. She looked older than of yore, whiter, thinner in
-cheek and neck, her great eyes staunch though sad under her netted
-hair. Her face showed melancholy mingled with a constant scorn that
-had rarely found expression with her in the old days, save within the
-walls of Avangel. She looked like one who had endured much, suffered
-much, yet lost no whit of pride in the trial. Though she may have been
-blemished like a Greek vase smitten by some barbaric sword, she was
-her self still, brave, headstrong, resolute as ever. The shame of the
-things she had suffered had perhaps wiped out the gentler outlines of
-her character and left her more stern, more wary, less honest, more
-deep in her endeavours. There was no passive humility or patience about
-her soul, and she was the falcon still, though caged and guarded beyond
-her liberty.
-
-As she stood at the casement with the prophetic murmur of war in her
-ears, it seemed to her as though life surged to her feet and mocked her
-bondage like laughing water. The desire of liberty abode ever with her
-even to the welcoming of stagnant death. She thirsted for her freedom,
-plotted for it, dreamt of it with a zeal that was almost ferocious. Her
-life seemed a speculation, a perpetual aspiration after a state that
-still eluded her. In the Avangel days she had been wild and petulant.
-Then Pelleas had come through the green gloom of early summer to
-soften her soul and inspire all the best breath of the woman in her.
-Again, thanks to Gorlois, she had fallen with the usual reaction of
-circumstance upon evil times; the change had discovered the peevish
-discontent of the girl hardened into the strong wilfulness of the woman.
-
-She hated Gorlois with a fanatical immensity of soul. When the man was
-near her she felt full of the creeping nausea of a great loathing, and
-she waxed faint with hate at the veriest touch of his hands. His breath
-seemed to her more unsavoury than the miasma of a gutter, and it needed
-but the sound of his voice to bring all her baser passions braying and
-yelping against him. He had driven the religious instinct out of her
-heart, and she was in revolt against heaven and the marriage pact
-forged by the authority of the Church. She had often vowed in her heart
-that she could do no sin against Gorlois, her husband. He had no claim
-upon her conscience. The bondage had been of his making; let God judge
-her if she scorned his honour.
-
-Standing by the window watching the knights saddling for their lord's
-sally, she heard heavy footsteps mounting up the stairs, and the ring
-of steel-tipped shoes along the gallery. The footsteps were deliberate,
-and none too fast, as though the man walked under a burden of thought.
-A shadow seemed to pass over Igraine's face. She slipped from the
-window, ran across the room, shot the bolt of the door, and stood
-listening. A hand tried the latch. She knew well enough whose fist it
-was that rattled on the oaken panels. Her face hardened to a kind of
-cold malevolence, and she laughed noiselessly in her sleeve.
-
-A terse summons came to her from the gallery.
-
-"Wife, we ride at once."
-
-The man could not have made a worse beginning. There was a suggestion
-of tyranny in a particular word that was hardly temperate. Igraine
-leant against the door; she was still smiling to herself, and her hands
-fingered the embroidered tassel of the latch.
-
-"We are late on the road; I can make no tarrying."
-
-The door quivered a moment as though shaken by a gusty wind. Everything
-was quiet again, and Igraine could hear the man breathing. Putting her
-mouth to the crack between post and hinge-board she laughed stridently
-as though in scorn.
-
-"Igraine!"
-
-The voice was half-imperative, half-appealing.
-
-"My very dear lord!"
-
-"Are you abed?"
-
-"No, dear lord."
-
-"Open to me; I would kiss your lips before I sally."
-
-"You have never kissed me these many days."
-
-"True, wife; is it fault of mine?"
-
-"Nor shall again, dear lord, if I have strength."
-
-She heard the man muttering to himself a moment, but this time there
-was no smiting of the door, no fume and tempest. His mood seemed more
-temperate, less masterful, as though he were half heavy at heart.
-
-"Igraine--"
-
-"Why do you whimper like a dog?" she said; "go, get you to war. What
-are you to me?"
-
-"When will you learn reason?"
-
-"When you are dead, sire."
-
-"Perhaps I deserve all this."
-
-"Are you so much a penitent?"
-
-Her mockery seemed to lift Gorlois to a higher range of passion, and
-there was great bitterness in his voice as he tossed back words to her
-with a quick kindling of desire.
-
-"Woman, I have been hard in the winning of you, but, God knows, you are
-something to me."
-
-"God knows, Gorlois, I hate you."
-
-His hand shook the door.
-
-"Let me in, Igraine."
-
-"Break down the door; you shall come at me no other way."
-
-"Woman, woman, I am a fool; my heart smarts at leaving you."
-
-"You sound almost saintly."
-
-"I have left Brastias in charge of you."
-
-"Thanks, lord, for a jailer."
-
-Igraine drew back from the door and stood at her full height with
-her hands crossed upon her bosom. She quivered as she stood with the
-intense effort of her hate. Gorlois still waited without the door,
-though she could not hear him moving. The silence seemed like the deep
-hush that falls between the blustering stanzas of a storm.
-
-"Igraine!"
-
-It was a hoarse cry, quick and querulous. Igraine had both her fists to
-her chin in an attitude of inward effort, as though she racked herself
-to give utterance to the implacable temper of her scorn. Her face
-had a queer parched look. When she spoke, her voice was shrill like a
-piping wind.
-
-"Gorlois."
-
-"Wife."
-
-"Would you have my blessing?"
-
-"Give it me, Igraine."
-
-"Go then, and look not to me for comfort. When you are in battle, and
-the swords cry on your shield, I shall pray on my knees that you may
-get your death."
-
-Gorlois gave never a sound as he stood by the barred door with his
-hand over the mezail of his helmet. It seemed dark and gloomy in the
-gallery, and the staunch oak fronted him like fate. His eyes were full
-of a dull light as he turned and went clanging down the stairway with
-slow, heavy tread. His sounding footsteps died down into the din of
-arms that came from the great court. Igraine ran to the window and
-watched him and his men ride out, smiling a bleak smile as the last
-mailed figure gleamed out by the gate.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-When Gorlois and his knights had gone, Igraine unbarred the door, and
-passed down the narrow stair to the state chamber of the house, where
-a fire was burning. It was a solemn room, shadowed with many arches,
-with vaults inlaid with marble, its walls painted green and gold, its
-glimmering casements lozenged with fine glass. Furs were spread upon
-the mosaic floor; painted urns held flowers that bloomed in the mock
-summer of the room.
-
-Igraine stood and warmed herself before the fire. From an altar-like
-pillar near she took storax and galbanum from brazen bowls, and
-scattered the resinous tears upon the flames. A pungent fragrance rose
-up into her nostrils. The flicker of the fire played upon her face, and
-set a lustre in her eyes. It was winter weather, and the warmth was
-welcome.
-
-The refrain of her talk with Gorlois still ran at fever heat like a
-wild song through her brain. She was stirred to the deeps of her strong
-soul. For Gorlois she had no measure of pity. He was a rotten tree to
-her, a slab of granite, anything but quick flesh and blood capable of
-aspiration and desire. She hated him more for his pleading than for his
-tyranny, fearing to be pleased by one she dreaded. He was strenuous and
-obstinate. She knew that it would be great joy to her if she saw his
-face no more, and if his body crumbled in the rain on some bleak coast
-in Wales.
-
-As she stood by the fire and looked into it with pondering eyes she
-heard a curtain drawn and the sound of a footstep on the threshold.
-Turning briskly, like one accustomed to suspicions, she saw the man
-Brastias in the doorway looking at her half-furtively, as though none
-too proud of the office thrust upon him. He had great grey eyes and a
-calm face. Bending stiffly to Igraine with his hand over his heart,
-he turned aside to a cabinet by the wall, took therefrom an illumined
-scroll of legendary tales, and sat down on a bench to read, as though
-he had no other business in the room.
-
-Igraine's long lip curled. She knew the meaning of the man's presence
-there shrewdly enough. Going to a window she opened the casement frame
-and looked out on the winter scene. Usk winding silver to the sea, the
-purple roll of the bleak bare woods, the far sea itself dying a sullen
-streak into a sullen sky. It was dreary enough, and yet it suited her;
-she could have welcomed thunder and the rend of forked fire above the
-woods. Thought was fierce in her with the wind crying about the house
-like a wistful voice, the voice of days long dead.
-
-To be free of Gorlois!
-
-To cast off her present self like a rotten cloak!
-
-To adventure liberty, though the peril were shrill as the wind through
-the swaying pines on the hillside!
-
-To deal with Brastias!
-
-Now Brastias was a grave-faced knight, neither young nor old, but
-a very boy in the matter of the mock wisdom of the world. He was
-possessed of one of those generous natures that looks kindly on
-humanity with a simple optimism born of a contented conscience. He
-was a devout man, a soldier, and a gentleman. Moreover, he owned a
-holy reverence for women, a reverence that led him into a somewhat
-extravagant belief in the sincerity of their truth and virtue. He was
-blessed too in being nothing of a cynic in his conceptions of honour.
-
-Gorlois knew the man to the heart, and trusted him, a fact well proven
-by the faith imposed upon him in his wardenship of the Lady Igraine.
-Brastias hated the task as much as he hated the telling of a lie. There
-are some men whose whole instinct is towards truth. They are golden
-souls, often too easily deceived with a gross dross that makes an
-outward show of kindred colour.
-
-Brastias was no stranger to Igraine, for he had served her as one of
-the knights of the guard in the great castle of Tintagel. He was a man
-who could look into a woman's eyes and make her feel instinctively
-the clear honour of his soul. There was nothing of the flesh about
-Brastias. And it was in this chivalrous faith of his that Igraine
-discovered a credulity that might make him prone to believe a certain
-profession of faith that was taking sudden and subtle form within her
-mind. Months ago, she would have hesitated before the man's grey eyes.
-But feeling herself sinned against, and stirred by the shame of the
-past, she found ample justification for herself in the lie Gorlois had
-practised for her undoing.
-
-She left the window, and went and stood by the fire, with her back to
-the man.
-
-"Brastias," she said, quite softly.
-
-The man looked up from the scroll, and seemed ill at ease.
-
-"I trust your duty is pleasant to you?"
-
-Brastias's eyelids flickered nervously, and he cleared his throat.
-
-"May the Virgin witness," he said, "I have no love of the task."
-
-"My Lord Gorlois trusts you?"
-
-"He has said so, madame."
-
-"And am I not his wife?"
-
-Brastias put the scroll aside with a constrained deliberation. He felt
-himself wholly in the wrong, as he always did before a woman, and his
-wit ran clumsily on such occasions. It had needed but the observation
-of a child to mark the gulf between Gorlois and his wife. Gorlois had
-spoken few words on the matter, had given commands and nothing more.
-Brastias was not the man to tamper officiously with the confidences of
-others. He thought much, said little, and bided quiet for Igraine to
-speak.
-
-She stood half-turned towards the fire, with her face in profile, and
-her hands hanging limply at her side. Looking for all the world like a
-penitent, she spoke with a certain unconscious pathos, as though she
-touched on a matter that was heavy upon her heart.
-
-"Brastias, I may call you a friend?"
-
-"I trust so, madame."
-
-"Then there is no reason for me to be backward in speaking of the
-truth?"
-
-The man bowed and said nothing.
-
-"Come then, Brastias, tell me honestly, have I seemed to you like a
-woman who loved her husband?"
-
-The girl's blue eyes were staring hard into the man's grey ones. There
-was little chance of prevarication before so blunt a question, and
-Brastias's courtesy, like Balaam's ass, refused to deny the scrutiny
-of truth. Igraine could read the man's face like a piece of blazened
-parchment.
-
-"Never fear to be frank," she said; "your belief hangs on your face
-like an alphabet, and that shows me how much you know of a woman's
-heart."
-
-"Pardon me, madame."
-
-"Never blush, man, you would have said that I had as little love for
-Gorlois as for the dirtiest beggar in Caerleon?"
-
-Brastias frowned mildly and agreed with her, remembering as he did a
-certain wild scene on the battlements of Tintagel.
-
-"And doubtless you would say that it pained me not a whit to see
-Gorlois my lord ride out from Caerleon into the wilds of Wales?"
-
-There was such reproach in her voice that Brastias fell into confusion
-before her eyes, reddened, and began to excuse himself.
-
-"Your ladyship's behaviour," he said, with an ingenuous look and an
-intense striving after propitiation,--"your ladyship's behaviour would
-hardly warrant me in believing that my Lord Gorlois was vastly dear
-to you. And, pardon me, a woman does not seek to run away from her
-husband."
-
-"You insinuate--"
-
-Brastias felt himself in the mire, and groaned in spirit.
-
-"Madame, I would say--"
-
-"Yes, yes, I understand you."
-
-"Give me leave--"
-
-"Not another word."
-
-Igraine smiled softly to herself, turned her back on Brastias and
-stared long into the fire. The man stood by, watching her with a
-humbled look, his fingers twisting restlessly at the broidery of his
-black tunic. Igraine traced out the mosaic patterns on the floor with
-the point of her shoe.
-
-"I think you men are all fools," she said.
-
-Brastias's silence might have suggested contradiction.
-
-"Have you ever loved a woman?"
-
-The man shifted, and went red under his straight fair hair. His eyes
-took a dreamy look.
-
-"Yes," he said, as though half-ashamed.
-
-Igraine hung her head and sighed.
-
-"Perhaps," she said, growing suddenly shy and out of countenance,
-"perhaps you may have learnt the lesson of the froward heart, the
-heart that comes by love when it is in peril of great loss."
-
-Brastias drew a quick, deep breath.
-
-"By the Virgin, that's true," he said.
-
-Igraine turned to the fire and hid her face from the man. There was a
-pathetic droop about her shoulders, a listless curving of her neck,
-that made Brastias picture her as burdened with some immoderate sorrow.
-He was an impressionable man, not in any amorous sense, but in the
-matter of sympathy towards his fellows. He thought he heard a catch in
-the girl's breathing that boded tears. Her hair looked very soft and
-lustrous as it curved over her ears and neck.
-
-"Madame Igraine."
-
-No answer. Brastias went a step nearer.
-
-"Listen to me."
-
-A slight turning of the head in response.
-
-"What ails you, madame?"
-
-"Never trouble."
-
-"I beseech you, tell me."
-
-The man was quite afire; his face looked bright and eager, and his eyes
-shone.
-
-"Gorlois has gone to the war."
-
-The words were jerked out one by one.
-
-"Madame!"
-
-"War--and death."
-
-"Courage, madame, courage. On my soul, you are not going to say--"
-
-"Brastias, you understand."
-
-"Then?"
-
-"Man, man, don't drag it out of me; don't you see? are you blind?"
-
-Brastias invoked a certain saint by the name of Christopher, and
-straightway emphasised his words by falling down on his knees beside
-Igraine. She had contrived to conjure up tears as she bent over the
-fire. Brastias found one of her hands and held it.
-
-"This will be my lord's salvation."
-
-"Think you so?"
-
-"On my soul, my dear lady, I thank our Lord Jesu from my heart. For I
-know my Lord Gorlois, and the bitterness that weighed him down, though
-he spoke little to me on this matter, being staunch to you, and to his
-courtesy. And by our Lord's Passion, madame, I love peace in a house,
-and quiet looks, and words like laughing water, for there is never a
-home where temper rules."
-
-"Brastias, you shame me."
-
-"God forbid, dear lady, there's no gospel vanity in my heart. I speak
-but out."
-
-The man's quaint outburst of gladness touched Igraine's honesty to the
-core, but she had no thought of recantation, for all the pricking of
-her conscience. She passed back to the open window and leant against
-the mullion, while Brastias rose from his knees and followed her.
-
-"I am faint," she said, "and the fresh wind comforts me."
-
-"Courage, madame; Duke Gorlois fights for Britain and the Cross; what
-better blessing on his shield?"
-
-Igraine was looking out toward the sea and the grey curtain of the
-sky cut in places by dark woods and the sweep of dull green hills.
-There was a wistful droop about her figure that made Brastias molten
-with intent to comfort, and dumb with words of sympathy that died
-inarticulate in his throat. He stood there, a man muzzled by his own
-sincerity, bankrupt of a syllable, though he commanded his wit to be
-nimble with stentorian cry of conscience. He felt hot in his skin and
-vastly stupid. By the time he had lumbered up some passable fancy,
-Igraine had turned from the window with a quick intelligence kindling
-in her eyes.
-
-"Brastias."
-
-"Madame."
-
-"Listen to me, I have come by a plan."
-
-A sudden flood of sunlight streamed through a rent in the grey canopy
-of clouds. The landscape took a warmer tinge, the purple of the woods
-deepened. Brastias saw the sudden gleam of light strike on Igraine's
-hair. Her head was thrown back upon her splendid neck, and her eyes
-seemed large with love.
-
-"I will show Gorlois how I love him," she said.
-
-Brastias's face was still hazed in conjecture.
-
-"I will wipe out the past."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"We will follow Gorlois to the war, you and I, Brastias, together. What
-say you to that?"
-
-The man looked at her with clear grey eyes, and with a transient
-immobility of feature that changed swiftly to a glow of understanding.
-The words had gone home to him like a trumpet-cry; their courage warmed
-him, and he was carried with the wind.
-
-"A great hazard--and a noble," he said, with a flush of colour; "the
-peril is on my neck, and yet--I'll bear it."
-
-Igraine's face blazed.
-
-"Brastias, you will go with me?"
-
-"By my sword, to the death."
-
-"Come hither, man; I must kiss your forehead."
-
-Brastias knelt to her again with crossed hands. She looked into his
-grey eyes and touched his forehead with her lips.
-
-"Thus I salute honour," she said.
-
-"My lord's lady!"
-
-"You have trusted me."
-
-"Else had I been ashamed."
-
-The man went away to arm, warm at heart as any boy. Igraine stood a
-moment looking into the fire with an enigmatic calm upon her face. For
-Brastias she felt a throttled pity, an impossible admiration that only
-troubled her. Her lust for liberty bore her like a storm-wind, and her
-hate of Gorlois made her iron at heart. She could dare anything to
-fling off the moral bondage that cramped and bound her like a net.
-
-While Brastias was away arming and ordering horses, she went to a
-little armoury on the stairs and filched away a short hauberk and a
-sheathed poniard. She wore these under a gown of black velvet bound
-with a silver girdle, and a cloak of sables hooded and lined with
-sky-blue cloth. She had a strange joy of the knife at her girdle as she
-passed down the stairway to the court.
-
-A few silent servants gaped at her as she passed from the house.
-Brastias came out to her in armour. In the court she heard the cry of
-steel bridles, the sparking of hoofs on the stones. They were soon
-mounted and away under the great gate and free of Caerleon in the
-decline of the day. The west had no colour, and a wind pined in the
-trees as they swept into the twining shadows of the woods, and saw the
-boughs clutch each other against the sullen sky. Soon night came in
-a black cowl, and with a winter wind that roamed the woods like the
-moan of a prophecy. Igraine, riding with her bridle linked in that of
-Brastias, pressed on for the west with a mood that echoed the roar of
-the trees.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-A man in black armour, a lady in a cloak of sables, a pine forest under
-a winter sky.
-
-Myriad trunks interminably pillared, grey-black below, changing to
-red beneath the canopy of boughs; patches of grey-blue sky between;
-a floor overgrown with whortleberry and heather, and streaked seldom
-by the sun. Through the tree-tops the veriest sighing of a wind, a
-sound that crept up the curling galleries like the softly-taken breath
-of a sleeping world. Away on every hand oblivious vistas black under
-multitudinous green spires.
-
-The woman's face seemed white under the sweep of her sable hood. Its
-expression was very purposeful, its mouth firm and resolute, its air
-indicative of a deliberate will. Her eyes stared into the wood over
-her horse's head with a constant care, dropping now and again a quick
-side-glance at the man in black armour riding on her flank. She spoke
-seldom to him, and then with a certain assumption of authority that
-seemed to trouble his equanimity but little. Often she would lean
-forward in the saddle as though to listen, her eyes fixed, her mouth
-decisive, her hand hollowed at her ear to concavitate some sound other
-than the wind-song of the trees. It was evident that she was under the
-spell of some strong emotion, for she would smile and frown by turns as
-though vexed by perpetual alternatives of feeling.
-
-The man at her side watched with his grey eyes the path curling uphill
-between the trees. Having his own inward exposition of the woman's
-mood, he contented himself wisely with silence, keeping his reflections
-to himself. He was not a man who blurted commonplaces when lacking
-the means of inspiration. And he was satisfied with the fancy that he
-understood completely the things that were passing through the woman's
-mind. He believed her troubled by those extreme anxieties of the heart
-that come with war and the handiwork of the sword. Perhaps he was
-fortunate in being ignorant of the truth.
-
-The interminable trees seemed to vex the woman's spirit as their trunks
-crowded the winding track and shut the pair in as with a never-ending
-barrier. But for an occasional patch of heathland or scrub, no lengthy
-vista opened up before them. Tree-boles stood everywhere to baulk their
-vision, silent and stiff like sullen sentinels. The horses plodded on.
-Igraine's impatience could be read upon her face, and discovered in
-her slighter gestures. It was the impatience of a mind at war within
-itself, a mind prone through the chafe of trouble to be vexed with
-trifles; sore, sensitive, and hasty. Brastias watched her, pretending
-to be intent the while on the path that wandered away into the mazes of
-the wood. He was a considerate creature, and he suffered her petulance
-with a placid good-humour, and a certain benevolence that was the
-outcome of pity.
-
-Igraine jerked her bridle, and eyed the trees as though they were the
-members of a mob thrusting themselves between her and her purpose. She
-was inclined to be unreasonable, as only a woman can be on occasions.
-Brastias, calm-faced and debonair, contented himself with sympathy, and
-refrained from reason as from the handling of a whip.
-
-"That peasant fellow was a liar," he said, by way of being
-companionable.
-
-"Yes, the whelp."
-
-"I'll swear we've ridden two leagues, not one."
-
-"The fellow should have a stripe for every furlong."
-
-"Rough justice, madame."
-
-Igraine laughed.
-
-"If justice were done to liars," she said, "the world would be
-hideless, scourged raw."
-
-Brastias edged his horse past an intruding tree and chuckled amiably.
-
-"It would be a pity to spoil so much beauty."
-
-"Eh!"
-
-"The women would come off worst."
-
-Igraine flashed a look at him.
-
-"Balaam's ass spoke the truth," she said.
-
-They had not gone another furlong when Brastias reined in suddenly and
-stood listening. He held up a hand to Igraine, looking at her with
-prophetic face, his black armour lustreless under the trees.
-
-"Hark!"
-
-Igraine stared into his eyes. Neither moved a muscle for fully a minute.
-
-"A trumpet-cry!"
-
-Brastias lowered his hand.
-
-"From the host. And the 'advance,' by the sound on't."
-
-"Then we shall be out of the woods soon."
-
-"Go warily, madame; it would be poor wisdom to stumble on an Irish
-legion."
-
-"Brastias, I would not miss the day for a year in heaven."
-
-As they pushed uphill through the solemn shadows of the forest, a sound
-like the raging of a wind through a wood came down to them faintly from
-afar. It was a sullen sound, deep and mysterious as the hoarse babel
-of the sea, smitten through with the shrill scream of trumpets like
-the cry of gulls above a storm. In the alleys of the pine forest it was
-still as death, and calm beneath the beniscus of the tall trees.
-
-Igraine and Brastias looked meaningly at each other as they rode. The
-sound needed no words to christen it. The two under the trees knew that
-they heard the roar of host breaking upon host, the cataractine thunder
-of a distant battle.
-
-Pushing on as fast as the forest suffered, the din became more
-definite, more human, more sinister in detail. It stirred the blood,
-challenged the courage, racked conjecture with the infinite chaos it
-portended. Victory and despair were trammelled up together in its
-sullen roar; life and death seemed to swell it with the wind-sound of
-their wings; it was stupendous, sonorous, chaotic, a tempest-cry of
-steel and many voices merged into the grand underchant of war.
-
-Igraine's face kindled to the sound like the face of a girl who hears
-her lover's lute at night under her window. Blood fled to her brain
-with the wild strength of the strain humming like a wind through the
-trees. She was in the mood for war; the tragedy of it solemnised her
-spirit, and made her look for the innumerable flash of arms, the
-rolling march of a multitude. For the moment it was life, and the
-glorious strength of it; death and the dust were hid from sight.
-
-Yet another furlong and the red trunks dwindled, and the sombre boughs
-fringed great tracts of blue, and to the north mountains rose up dim
-and purple under an umbrage of clouds. To the west the sea appeared
-solemn and foamless, set with pine-spired aisles, and a great company
-of ships at anchor. Nigh the shore the grey pile of a walled town stood
-out upon green meadows. Igraine and the man pushed past the outlying
-thickets, and drew rein upon a slope that ran gradually down from them
-like the great swell of a sea.
-
-Tented by the dome of the sky lay a natural amphitheatre, shelving
-towards the sea, but rising in the east by rolling slopes to a ridge
-that joined the mountains with the forest. The valley was a medley of
-waste land, scrub, gorse, and thicket, traversed by the white streak
-of a road, and closed on the west by the grey walls of the town rising
-up above the green. It was a wild spot enough. However still and
-solitary it may have seemed in its native desertedness, however much
-the haunt of the wolf and the boar, it seethed now like a cauldron with
-the boiling stir of battle. Men swarmed through scrub and thicket;
-masses of steel moved hither and thither, met, mingled, broke, and
-rallied. Wave rushed on wave. Bodies of horsemen smoked over the open
-with flashing of many colours and the glittering pomp of mail, to roll
-with clanging trumpets into some vortex of death. The whole scene was
-one shifting mass of steel and strife, dust and disorder, galloping
-squadrons, rolling spears, rank on rank of shields a-flicker in the
-sun. And from this whirlpool of humanity rose the dull grinding roar of
-war, fierce, stupendous, clamorous, grand.
-
-To the trained eye of the soldier the chaos took orderly and
-intelligent meaning, and Brastias stood in his stirrups and pointed out
-to Igraine the main ordering of the hosts. Uther Pendragon held the
-eastern ridge with his knights and levies; Gilomannius and Pascentius
-thrust up at him from the sea; while the valley between held the wreck
-of the countercharges of either host, and formed debatable ground where
-troop ran against troop, and man against man.
-
-The masses of Uther's army swept away along the ridge, their arms
-glittering over the green slopes, their banners and surcoats colouring
-the height into a terraced garden of war, the whole, a solemn streak
-of gold against the blue bosoms of the hills. To the north stood
-Meliograunt with his levies from Wales, and next him Duke Eldol and
-King Nentres headed the men of Flavia Cæsariensis. South of all the
-great banner of Tintagel showed where Gorlois and the southern levies
-reared up their spears like a larch-wood in winter. Brastias pointed
-them all out to the girl in turn, keeping keen watch the while on the
-shifting mob of mail in the valley.
-
-Igraine, stirred by the scene, urged on from the forest, and the
-knight following her, they crossed some open scrubland, wound through
-a thicket of pines, and stood at gaze under the boughs. Igraine's
-eyes were all the while turned on the banner of Tintagel, and from
-the common mob of mailed figures she could isolate a knight in gilded
-harness on a white horse, Gorlois, her husband. The mere sight of him
-set her hate blazing in her heart, and seemed to pageant out all the
-ills she had suffered at his hands. Her feud against the man was a
-veritable insanity, a species of melancholia that wrapped all existence
-in the morbid twilight of self-centred bitterness. As she looked down
-upon the host there was a kind of overmastering madness of malice on
-her face, an emotion whose very intensity paled her to the lips, and
-made her eyes hard and scintillant as crystal. She was discreet for all
-her violence of soul. Turning to Brastias, who was scanning the valley
-under his hand, she pointed to the banner with a restless eagerness of
-manner that might have hinted at her solicitude for Gorlois, her lord.
-
-"See yonder," she said, "is not that the Lord Gorlois on the white
-horse by yonder standard?"
-
-Brastias turned his glance thither, considered for a moment, and then
-agreed decisively.
-
-"Love is quick of eye," he said with a smile.
-
-"Let us ride down nearer."
-
-"I care not for the hazard, madame."
-
-"Who fears at such a season?"
-
-"By my sword, madame, not your servant; I am but careful of your
-safety."
-
-"Fear for me, Brastias, when I fear for myself."
-
-"Methinks, madame, that would be never."
-
-"Brastias, I believe you."
-
-Igraine's courage had risen to too high an imperiousness for the
-moment to brook baffling or to endure restraint. She had been lifted
-out of herself, as it were, by the storm-cry of battle, and by the
-splendour of the scene spread out before her eyes. A furlong or more
-down the hillside a little hillock stood up amid a few wind-twisted
-thorns, proffering rare vantage for outlook over wood and dale. She was
-away like a flash, and several lengths ahead before Brastias had roused
-up, put spur to horse, and cantered after her. The man saw the glint of
-her horse's hinder hoofs spurning the sod, and though the wind whistled
-about his ears, he was left well in the rear for all his spurring.
-Igraine, with her hair agleam under her tossed-back hood, and her
-cheeks ruddied by the wind, headed for the rising ground at a gallop,
-gained it, and drew rein on the very verge of a small cliff that
-dropped sheer to the flat below. The hillock was like a natural pulpit,
-its front face a perpendicular some twenty feet high, while its hinder
-slope tailed off to merge into the hillside. Gorlois's mailed masses
-stood but a hundred paces away, and Igraine could see him clearly in
-his gilded harness under the banner of Tintagel.
-
-Brastias galloped up to her with a mild bluster of expostulation.
-
-"You court danger, madame."
-
-"What if I do, Brastias, to be near my lord."
-
-"Your sanctity lies upon my conscience."
-
-"I take all such care from you."
-
-"Madame, that is impossible; duty is duty both night and day, in battle
-and in peace; duty bids me fear for my lord's wife."
-
-Igraine found certain logic invincible in the argument, and made good
-use of it; she meant to rule Brastias for her own ends.
-
-"Fear," she said; "I forget fear when I am nigh Gorlois, my husband;
-and who can gainsay me the right of watching over him? I forget fear
-when I think of Britain, the king, and my lord, and had I a hundred
-lives I could cast them down to help to break the heathen, and serve
-my country."
-
-"Amen," said Brastias, signing the cross upon his breast.
-
-Sterner interests quashed any further polite bickerings that might have
-risen from Igraine's pride of purpose, for Brastias, with the instinct
-of a soldier, marked some large development in the struggle that had
-been passing in the valley below them. The scattered lines of horse
-and foot that had been thrown forward by Uther to try the strength and
-spirit of the Irish host, were falling back sullenly uphill before the
-masses of attack poured up from the flats by Gilomannius the king. The
-whole battle had shifted to the east. Bodies of horse were spurring
-uphill, driving in Uther's men, cutting down stragglers, harrowing
-the slopes for the solid march of the black columns of foot that were
-creeping up between the thickets, winding like giant dragons amid furze
-and scrub. It was a grand sight enough, the advance of a great host,
-a rocking sea of spears pouring up in the lull that had fallen over
-the valley as though the battle took breath and waited. Uther's men
-kept their ground upon the ridge, watching in silence the advance of
-Gilomannius's chivalry. Only a brief wild cry of trumpets betokened the
-gathering of the waves of war.
-
-Even at this juncture Brastias racked his wit and courtesy to persuade
-Gorlois's lady to fall back and watch from the shelter of the woods.
-He pointed out her peril to Igraine, besought, argued, cajoled,
-threatened. All he gained was a blunt but half-smiling declaration
-from the woman that she would hold to her post on the hillock till the
-battle was over, or some mischance drove her from the place. Brastias
-caught her bridle, spurred round, and tried to drag her back by main
-force, but she was out of the saddle instanter, and obstinate as ever.
-In the end the man capitulated, and gave his concern to the fortunes of
-war.
-
-The sudden uproar that sounded out along the hillside made mere
-individual need dull and impossible for the moment. The shock of the
-joining of the hosts had come like the fall of snow from a mountain--a
-sound sweeping down the valley, echoing among the silent fastnesses of
-the hills. Men had come pike to pike, shield to shield, upon the ridge.
-Mass rushed upon mass, billow upon billow. From the mountains to the
-forest the sweat and thunder of strife rolled up from the long line
-of leaping steel, from the living barrier, steady as a cliff. It was
-one of the many Marathons of the world where barbarism clawed at the
-antique fabric of the past.
-
-Igraine's glance was stayed on Gorlois and the southern levies about
-the banner of Tintagel. Her hate surged up the green slope with the
-onrush of the Irish horde, and brandished on the charge in spirit
-towards the tall figure in the harness of gold. She saw Gorlois in the
-press smiting right and left with the long sweep of his sword. In her
-thirst for his destruction she grudged him strength, harness, sword,
-the very shield he bore. She was glad of his courage, for such would
-militate against him. Moment by moment her desire honoured him with
-death as she thought him doomed to fall beneath the surge of steel.
-
-A sudden shout from Brastias brought her stare from this chaos of
-swords. The man was standing in his stirrups, and pointing to the west
-with his face dead white and his mouth agape.
-
-"By God, look!"
-
-Truth to tell, there was little need of the warning. A dull rumble of
-hoofs came up like thunder above the shriller din around. Igraine,
-looking to the west, saw a black mass of horsemen at the gallop,
-swaying, surging, rocking uphill full for Gorlois's flank. The sight
-numbed her reason for the moment. She was still as stone as the column
-swept past the very foot of the hillock--a flood of steel--and plunged
-headlong upon Gorlois's lines, hewing and trampling to the very banner
-of Tintagel. An oath from Brastias made her turn and look at him. He
-had his hand on his sword, and his face was twisted into a snarl of
-wrath and shame as he stood in his stirrups and watched the fight.
-
-"My God!" he cried, "my God! they run."
-
-It was palpable enough that the southern line was breaking and
-crumbling ominously before the rush of Gilomannius's knights. Little
-bunches of men were breaking away from the main mass like smoke, and
-falling back over the ridge. Igraine guessed at Brastias's pride and
-fury, saw her chance of liberty, and took it. She set up a shrill cry
-that stirred his courage like a trumpet-cry.
-
-"My Lord, my Lord Gorlois, Brastias, what of him?"
-
-The man's sword had flashed out.
-
-"Send me to death, lady, only to strike a blow for Britain."
-
-Igraine spread her hands to him like a Madonna, and made the sign of
-the cross in the air. Brastias lifted up his drawn sword, kissed it,
-and saluted her with the look of a hero. Then he wheeled his horse,
-plunged down from the hillock, and rode full gallop into the battle.
-Igraine soon lost sight of his black harness in the mêlée, and since he
-met his death there, she saw Brastias alive no more.
-
-Despite the grim uproar of the overthrow, despite the taunts of a
-patriot pride, there was an under-current of gladness through her
-thought as she watched Gorlois's men giving ground upon the ridge.
-Her lord's shame was her gratification. To such a pitch of passion
-was she tuned that she could find laughter for the occasion, and a
-shrill cry of joy that startled even her own ears when the banner
-of Tintagel quivered and went down into the dust. Men were falling
-like leaves in autumn, and the southern wing of Uther's host seemed
-but a rabble--trampled, overridden, herded, and smitten over the
-ridge. Everywhere the swords and spears of Gilomannius's knights and
-gallowglasses spread rout and panic, while the wavering mass gave
-ground, rallied, gave again, and streamed away in flight over the
-hillside. She could see no sign of Gorlois, and with a whimper of
-hate the strong doubt of his escaping the slaughter took hold on her
-heart, and found ready welcome there. She was rid of Brastias--good
-fellow that he was--and though she honoured him, she loved liberty
-better. Liberty enough! Gorlois her lord had been slain. Such were her
-reflections for the moment.
-
-Pendragon's host seemed threatened with overthrow. The southern wing
-had been driven off the field by a charge of horse; Gilomannius held
-the southern portion of the ridge, and pressed hard on Meliograunt,
-both flank and face. The imminent need of Britain was plain enough even
-to Igraine, yet a sense of calm and liberty had come upon her like the
-song of birds or the gush of green in springtide. Even her patriotism
-seemed dim and unreal for the moment before the treasonable gratitude
-that watched the overthrow of Gorlois's arms. She was alone at last,
-solitary among thousands, able after the bitterness of past months to
-pluck peace from the very carnage of battle. Trouble had so wrought
-upon her mind that it seemed a negation of all probable and natural
-sentiment, a contradiction of the ethical principles of sense.
-
-The day was fast passing, and the grand fires of a winter sunset were
-rolling all the caverns of the west into a blaze of gold and scarlet.
-The pine forest, black and inscrutable as night, stood with its spines
-like ebony to the fringe of the west, while the slanting light lit
-the glimmering masses of steel on hill and valley with a web of gold.
-To the north the mountains towered in a mystery of purple, a gleam of
-amber transient on their peaks.
-
-Sudden and shrill came a cry of trumpets from the hills, a sinister
-sound that seemed to issue in the climax of the last phase of a
-tragedy. Igraine's eyes were turned northwards to the green slopes
-of the higher ground where the great banner of the Golden Dragon had
-flapped over Uther the King. Here a great company of knights, the
-flower of the host, had stood inactive throughout the day. With a
-cry of trumpets this splendid company had moved down to charge the
-masses of Gilomannius's men, who now filled the shallow valley east
-of the ridge, and threatened King Meliograunt and the whole host with
-overthrow. Uther had ridden out to lead the charge with his own sword.
-It was one of those perilous hours when some great deed was needed to
-grapple victory from defeat.
-
-The rest of the scene seemed blotted out as Igraine watched from her
-hillock the glittering mass rolling downhill with the evening sun
-striking flame from its thousand points of steel. On over the green
-slopes, past the pavilions of the camp, it gathered like a wave lifting
-its crest against a rock, on towards the swarm of men squandered in
-pursuit of Gorlois's broken line, on to where Gilomannius formed his
-knights for the charge. The green space dwindled and dwindled with
-the rush and roar of the nearing gallop. Igraine saw the rabble of
-Saxons, light-armed kerns and Irish gallowglasses, split and crack
-like a crumbling wall. For a short breath the black mass held, with
-Uther's storm of mail cleaving cracks and wedges in it--streaks of
-tawny colour like lava through the vineyards and gardens of a village.
-Then as by magic the whole mass seemed to deliquesce, to melt, to
-become as mist. All visible was a thunderstorm of horsemen tearing like
-wind through a film of rain with scattering fringes of cloud scudding
-swiftly to the west. The knights had passed the valley and were riding
-up the slope, hewing, trampling, crushing, as they came. Gilomannius's
-columns that had pushed Gorlois's men into rout had become a rabble in
-turn--wrecked, scattered to the wind, trodden down in blood and dust.
-They were streaming away in flight over the ridge, scampering for
-scrub and thicket, no lust in them save the lust of life. Igraine saw
-them racing past on every quarter, a blood-specked, dust-covered herd,
-their hairy faces panting for the west and the ships on the beach. Not
-a hundred paces away came the line of trampling hoofs and swinging
-swords, a demoniac whirlwind of iron wrath that hunted, slew, and gave
-no quarter.
-
-Beyond the summit of the ridge, and all about the hillock where Igraine
-stood, the glittering horde of knights came to a halt with a great
-shout of triumph. Right beneath Igraine and the straight face of the
-hillock a man in red armour on a black horse, with a golden dragon
-on his helmet, stood out some paces before the ranks of the splendid
-company. A great cry rolled up, a forest of swords shook in the sun.
-The knight on the black horse stood in his stirrups, and with sword and
-helmet upstretched in either hand lifted his face to the red triumph
-fire of the west. Igraine knew him--Pelleas, Uther, the King.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-The sun had rolled back between the pylons of the west. Night was
-in the sky, night in her winter austerity--keen, clear, aglitter
-with stars as though her robe were spangled with cosmic frost. The
-mountains' rugged heads were dark to the heavens, and the sea lay a
-faintly glimmering plain open to the beck of the moon.
-
-The Irish host had broken and fled at sunset before Uther's charge and
-the streaming spears of Eldol and King Nentres. The green meadows, the
-wild scrubland, had been chequered over with the black swarm of the
-flying soldiery; the whole valley had surged with swords and the sound
-of the slaughter. By the grey walls of the town it had beleaguered,
-the driven host had turned and rallied in despair to stave off to
-the last the implacable doom that poured down from the hills. It was
-the vain effort of a desperate cause. Broken and scattered like dust
-along a highway, there had been no hope left them but their ships.
-The battle had ended in the very foam of the breaking waves. Crag and
-cliff, rock-citadel and yellow sand, had had their meed of blood and
-the shrill sound of the sword. The great ships had saved but a remnant,
-and had put out to sea in the dusk, their white sails like huge ghosts
-treading the swell of the twilight waters. Yet with night there had
-come no ceasing of the carnage. Despair had turned to front victory;
-Irish gallowglass and heathen churl, forsaken by their ships and hemmed
-in by sea and sword, had fought on to the end, finding and knowing no
-mercy. Gilomannius the King and Pascentius were dead, and the blood of
-invasion poured out like water.
-
-Now it was night, and in the clear passionless light of the moon a
-figure in a cloak of sables moved towards the mound where Gorlois of
-Cornwall had flown his banner early in the day's battle. Everywhere
-the dead lay piled like sheaves in a cornfield, their harness glinting
-with a ghastly lustre to the moon--piled in all attitudes and postures,
-staring blankly with white faces to the sky, or prone with their lips
-in blood, contorted, twisted, clutching at throat and weapon, mouths
-agape or clenched into a grin, man piled on man, barbarian upon Briton.
-Dark quags chequered the grass with the sickly odour of shed blood, and
-sword and spear, shield and helmet, flickered impotently among the dead.
-
-Igraine went among the bodies like a black monk seeking some still
-quick enough to be shriven before their souls took flight from the
-riven clay. Her cloak was gathered jealously about her as she threaded
-her way among the huddled figures, peering under helmets, scanning
-harness narrowly in her death-inspired quest. Casting hither and
-thither in the moonlight, she came to a tangled bank of furze, and
-beyond it a low hillock that seemed piled and paved with the bodies
-of the slain. Here had stood the banner of Tintagel, and here the
-prowess of Gorlois's household knights had fallen before the charge
-of Gilomannius's chivalry. Igraine saw the medley of mail, the dead
-horses, jumbled figures, wreck of shield and spear rising out above
-her in the moonlight, cloaked with a silence grim and irrefutable,
-as though Death himself sat sentinel on the pyramid of carnage. Half
-shuddering at the sight like an aspen, for all the intent that was in
-her heart, she drew near, determined and resolved to search the mound.
-Compelled to climb over the dead and to set her foot on the breasts
-and shoulders of the slain, her tread lighted more than once on a body
-that squirmed like a dying snake. Strong to do the uttermost after that
-day of revelation she struggled on, loathing the task, her shoes clammy
-with the blood-sweat of death. On the summit of the mound she came upon
-Gorlois's white horse lying dead by the wreathing folds of the fallen
-banner of his house.
-
-A whimper of joy came up into Igraine's heart. Sinister as the sign
-seemed, she was soon searching the mound with an alert desire in her
-eyes that prophesied no vestige of pity for the thing for which she
-sought. Hunt as she would, and she was marvellously patient over the
-gruesome business, no glint of Gorlois's golden harness flattered her
-hate as she searched the mound. Many a good knight lay there, some that
-she had known at Tintagel, and hated because they served her husband,
-but of Gorlois she found no trace. As a last hope, she dragged aside
-the great standard and found a dead man there sheeted in its folds, a
-man in black armour with his face to the sky--Brastias, who had ridden
-with her from Caerleon.
-
-She stood a moment looking down at him with a sudden feeling of awe
-such as had not come upon her through all that day. A white face lay
-turned to the sky,--a face that had looked kindly into hers with a
-level trust,--and smiled with a wealth of manly sympathy. It was a
-simple thing enough, nothing but one death among many thousands, but it
-touched Igraine to the core, and made her ashamed of the lies she had
-given him. She found herself wondering like a child whether Brastias
-was in heaven, and whether he watched her and her thoughts with his
-calm grey eyes. The notion disquieted her. She bent down, took his
-naked sword from his hand, and shrouded him again in the gorgeous
-blazonry of the flag for which he had died, and so left him with a sigh.
-
-As she climbed back again from the mound, a gashed and clotted face
-heaved up and stared at her from a heap of slain. It was the face of
-a man who had struggled up on his hands to look at her with mouth
-agape, dazed after a sudden waking from the stupor of a swoon. For a
-moment in the moonlight she thought it was Gorlois by certain likeness
-of feature, but discovered her error when the man spoke to her in
-gibberish she did not understand. He began to crawl towards her with a
-certain air of menace that made her start back and rear up the sword
-she had taken from dead Brastias. The threat of steel proved needless
-enough, for the man dropped again with a wet groan, and seemed dead
-when she went and bent over him with thoughts of succour.
-
-Passing back again to her hillock, she stood there brooding and looking
-out towards the west. A great bell in the town by the sea was pulsing
-heavily as though for the dead, and there were many cressets flaring
-on the walls, and torches going to and fro in the meadows. The sound
-of a triumph hymn chanted by hundreds of deep voices floated up like a
-prayer from the western meadows.
-
-At the sound Igraine's eyes were strangely full of tears. By some
-strange echoing of the mind the idyls of past days woke like the song
-of birds after a storm of rain. Clear in the dusk she seemed to see
-the red figure on the black horse, his face lit like a god's by the
-slanting light from the west as he stretched his sword to heaven. Again
-the scene changed, and she saw him riding through the flowering meads
-of Andredswold, looking down on her with a grave and luminous pity. She
-was glad of him, glad of his great glory, glad that he had kissed her
-lips, and bewrayed the love to her that was in his heart. The scene and
-the occasion were strange enough for such broodings, yet her eyes were
-very dim as she stood in a half-dream and let the picture drift across
-her mind.
-
-The revelation had come upon her with such suddenness that she had been
-for the moment like one dazed. She had watched Uther sweep on with his
-horde of knights, and had stood mute and impotent as one smitten dumb
-while the red harness and the golden dragon of Britain vanished again
-into the moil of war. Now her whole soul yearned out with a wistfulness
-born of infinite regret. If he had only come to her alone; if he had
-only come to her as Pelleas in some gloom of green, she could have
-fallen down before his horse's feet, kissed the scabbard of his sword,
-wept over his helmet, and burnished it with her hair. Sight of that
-dark sad face had made a beacon of her on the instant.
-
-And Gorlois! If she had hated him yesterday, she hated him with
-a tenfold vigour since she had looked again upon Pelleas's face.
-Certainly her malice had grown with an Antæan strength with each
-humbling of her heart to the dust, and the very thought of Gorlois
-seemed blasphemy against her soul at such an hour.
-
-With the memory of Gorlois a cloud dulled the clear mirror of her mind,
-and her mood of dreams melted into mist. The strong sense of bondage,
-of ineffectual treason, came back with a fuller force as though to
-menace her with the fateful realism of her lot. A hand seemed to sweep
-down and wave her back with a meaning so sinister that even her hate
-stood still a moment as in sudden fear; she had some such feeling as
-of standing on the brink of a mysterious sea whose waves sang to her a
-song of peril, of misery and desire cooped up together in the dim green
-twilight of some coral dungeon. The lure of the unknown beat upon her
-eyes, while love and hate, like attendant spirits, beckoned her over
-the yawn of an open grave.
-
-For the moment the importunity of her immediate need drew her from
-meditations alike bitter and divine. A battlefield after dark, with all
-its lust and pillage, was no pleasant place for a woman. The lights of
-the town still showed up brightly in the west, but Igraine had little
-desire of the teeming streets where victory would be matching blood
-with wine, and where the revels of the soldiery would celebrate the day
-in primal fashion. She was content to be alone under the stars, and
-even the dead seemed more sympathetic than the living at such an hour.
-
-A wind had risen, and she heard the hoarse "salvé" of the forest in
-the night. The thousand voices of the trees seemed to call to her
-with a weird perpetual clamour. She saw their spectral hands jerking
-and clutching against the sky, and heard the creak and gibber of the
-criss-cross boughs swaying in the wind. Leaving the hillock, and still
-bearing Brastias's sword, she held across the open, seeing as she went
-the dark streaks that dotted the hillside--the bodies of men fallen in
-the flight. She gained the trees, and was soon deep among the crowded
-trunks, pondering on her lodging for the night.
-
-Wandering hither and thither, looking for some more sheltered spot,
-her glance lighted on a dim swelling of the ground that proved to be
-an ancient mound or barrow. It had been opened in times past, probably
-in the search for buried treasure or for weapons. Brambles, weeds, and
-heather had roofed the shallow cutting into a little recess or cave
-that gave fair shelter from the wind, and Igraine, braving the notion
-of barrow ghost or spirit, claimed the place as a God-send, and took
-cover therein.
-
-The last crumbs in her wallet finished, she sat with her face between
-her palms, brooding, big-eyed, in the night, like any Druidess
-wreathing spells in her forest solitude. The wind was crying through
-the trees, swaying them restlessly against the starry sky, making
-plaintive moan through all the myriad aisles. Igraine listened like
-one huddled among her thoughts to keep out the cold. Miserable as was
-her lodging, her mind seemed packed with the day's battle; the whirl
-and thunder of it were still moving in her brain, a wild scene towered
-over by a man bare-headed on a black horse, holding his helmet to the
-setting sun. Often and often she heard the roar of hoofs and saw the
-rush of the charge that had trampled the banner of Tintagel and hurled
-Gorlois and his men in rout from the ridge. Had it been death or life
-with the man? Was he with the King hearing holy mass and lifting up the
-wine cup to heaven under a flare of lights, or lying stiff and pinched
-under the mild eyes of night? It was this thought, holding hope and
-doubt in common yoke, that abode with her all the night in her refuge
-under the trees.
-
-It was bleak enough, with a silvering of frost over the land, when
-darkness had rolled back over the western sea, uncovering the wreck of
-death that lay huddled on ridge and slope. Igraine was stirring early
-from the barrow. With the cold and her own thoughts she had slept but
-an hour, and at the first filtering of light through the branches she
-was glad and ready for the day. She wandered through the forest towards
-the open land that showed glimmering through the tree-boles, with no
-certain purpose moving in her mind. The future as yet was a blank to
-her, lacking possibilities, jealous of its secrets, saturnine as death
-itself. There shone one light above her that seemed to burn through the
-unknown; it had long led her from distant hills, yet even her red lamp
-of love beckoned her over a sepulchre.
-
-Coming to the forest margin, she came full upon the incontestable
-handiwork of war. Under the sweep of a great pine lay the body of a
-knight in black harness, all blazoned with gold, while his grey horse
-was still standing with infinite patience by his side, nosing him
-gently from time to time. The man's helmet, a visored casque, somewhat
-gladiatorial in type, had fallen off, and a young beardless face was
-turned placidly up to the blue, a white oval pillowed upon a tuft of
-heather. There was no blood or sign of violence visible save a blue
-bruise on his left temple; it seemed more than probable that he had
-been pitched from the saddle and found death in the fall.
-
-Igraine stood and looked at him in some pity while the horse snuffed at
-her, staring with great wistful eyes as though for help or sympathy.
-The man was young, with a certain nobility of early manhood on his
-face, and it seemed to her very pitiful that he should be cut off thus
-in life's spring. As she looked at him she noted that he was slim of
-figure, and not much above middle height. A sudden fancy took her on
-the instant. She tethered the horse, and kneeling down by the man
-her fingers were soon busy at the buckles and joints of his armour.
-Ungirding his sword, she drew it from the scabbard and set it upright
-at his head, sheathing Brastias's in its place. Having stripped off
-his armour and long surcoat she covered him reverently with her cloak,
-slung the horse's bridle round her wrist, and gathering up his arms and
-helmet went back to the barrow where she had passed the night.
-
-The wood had received a woman in the dress of a woman; it gave in
-exchange a knight on a grey horse--a knight in black armour blazoned
-with gold under a surcoat of violet cloth. The brazen helmet, visored
-and hooded with mail over nape of neck and throat, gleamed and flashed
-under the green boughs. There were three lilies, snow-white, and a
-cloven heart upon the shield, and the horse trappings were bossed and
-enamelled gold and blue.
-
-Igraine rode out from the trees with the pomp of a Launcelot. The grey
-horse's mane tossed in the wind, the furze rippled on the hillside, the
-cloud-ships sailed the blue with white sails spread. The girl was aglow
-with new life under her guise of steel. The essence of manhood seemed
-to have created itself within her as from the soul of the dead knight,
-and she suffered the glory of arms with a pride that was almost boyish.
-
-Holding out from the trees at a solemn pace, she headed westward down
-the valley along the grass slopes that slid between scrub and thicket
-to the sea. On the road below her a company of spears trailed eastward
-uphill in a snakelike column that glittered through the green. Pushing
-on boldly across ground where the battle had raged hotly the night
-before, she reached the road as the head of the column swung up at a
-dull tramp on their march home for Caerleon. Gruffing her voice in
-her throat she hailed the knight who headed the troop for news of the
-battle of yesterday, posing as one late on the scene, and sore at
-having struck no blow for Britain.
-
-The knight drew aside, and letting his men tramp by, he gave tersely
-the tale of the fight as he had seen it from King Nentres's lines.
-
-"St. Jude be blessed," said Igraine at the end thereof. "I am glad,
-friend, of these tidings. As for the field, it looks to have been as
-bloody a one as ever I set eyes on."
-
-"Bloody enough," quoth the man, giving his moustache a twirl; "too
-bloody for Gilomannius and dead Vortigern's whelp."
-
-"What of Uther?"
-
-"Scarce a scratch."
-
-"King Meliograunt?"
-
-"Wounded, but drunk as the devil."
-
-"And Gorlois of Cornwall?"
-
-The man laughed as at a jest.
-
-"Bedded in an abbey," said he, "with a split face; mere flesh, mere
-flesh, nothing deeper."
-
-Igraine thanked him with her helm adroop, and turning her horse, rode
-back towards the forest heavy of heart.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-The King's house at Caerleon stood out above the Usk on a little hill
-whose slopes were set with shrubberies and gardens, the white pillars
-and broad façade glimmering above the filmy cloud of green that covered
-the place as with a garment. A great stairway ran to the river from
-the southern terrace that blazed in summer with flower-filled urns and
-stacks of roses that overspread the balustrade with crimson flame. It
-was a place of dawns and sunsets; of lights rising amber in the east
-over purple hills and amethystine waters; of quiet glows at evening
-in the west, with cypresses and yews carven in ebony against primrose
-skies; while in the burgeoning of the year birds made the thickets deep
-with melody; and all beyond, Caerleon's solemn towers, roofs, casements
-bowered in green, rested within the battlemented walls that touched
-the domes and leaf-spires of the woods.
-
-It was noontide in Caerleon, and down the great stairway, with its
-rows of cypresses, its banks of yew and myrtle, a fair company was
-passing to the river, where many barges clustered round the water-gate
-like gilded beetles sunning their flanks in the shallows. Knights and
-churchmen in groups moved down from the palace talking together as they
-went. There had been a council of state in the King's hall, a great
-assembling of the noble folk and prelatry, to consider the need of
-Britain, the cry of the martyred and the homeless from Kentlands and
-the east. Anderida, that great city of the southern shores, had fallen
-in a tempest of fire and sword; no single soul had escaped from its
-smoking walls; the barbarian had entered in and made great silence over
-the whole city. Now it was told that more galleys had come bearing the
-fair-haired churls from the sand-dunes and pinewoods, the rude hamlets
-of that Angle land over the sea. Vectis had been overrun, Porchester
-burnt to the ground, even the noble city of Winchester threatened
-despite its walls. Beast and robber had sole rule in Andredswold;
-much of nether-Britain was a wilderness, a wistful land given over to
-solitude and the wild creatures of the forest. Churches were crumbling;
-gillyflowers grew on the high altars, and ivy wrapped the tombs;
-sanctuary bells were silent, homes empty and still as death. Desolation
-threatened the south, while the valleys of Armorica oversea gave refuge
-to many who fled before the Saxon sword.
-
-In the great hall of the palace Uther still sat in his chair of ivory
-under a gilded roof that mingled huge beams with banners, spears, and
-rust-rotted harness. The walls were frescoed with Homeric scenes--Helen
-meeting Paris in the house of Menelaus, Achilles slaying Hector,
-Ulysses and Calypso. Twelve painted pillars held the crossbeams of the
-hall, and from the fire on the great hearth a fragrant scent of burning
-cedar wood drifted upon the air. A long table covered with parchment,
-tablets, quills and inkhorns, and an array of empty benches testified
-to the number of noble folk who had assembled at the royal conclave.
-A single councillor remained before the King--Dubricius, Bishop of
-Caerleon, a tall spare man, whose white hair and sensitive ascetic face
-bore testimony to an inward delicacy of soul.
-
-Uther was clad in a tunic of scarlet, with a dragon in gold thread
-blazoned upon his breast. No crown, coronet, or fillet was on his brow;
-on his finger he wore the signet of Ambrosius, and his sword was girded
-to him with a girdle of embroidered leather. His look was much the same
-as when he rode as Pelleas in Andredswold and was nursed of his wound
-by Igraine in the island manor. Possibly there were more lines upon his
-face, a deeper dignity of sadness in his eyes. Circumstance had put
-upon him the cherishing of an imperilled kingdom, and with the charge
-his natural stateliness of soul had risen into a heroism of benignant
-chivalry. No more kingly man could have taken a land under the strong
-sweep of his sword. With the grand simplicity of a great heart he had
-grappled the task as a thing given of God, bending ever in prayer like
-a child before the inscrutable wisdom of heaven.
-
-There had been grave business on his mind that day, and his face was
-dark with a cloud of care as he talked with Dubricius on certain
-matters that lay near his heart. Uther, like the men of old time, was
-superstitious and ever prone to regard all phenomena as possessing
-certain testamentary authority from the Deity. In mediæval fashion he
-referred all human riddles to religious instinct for their solving, and
-searched in holy writ for guidance with a faith that was typical of his
-character. Wholly a Christian in a superstitious sense, he gained from
-the very fervour of his belief a strength that seemed to justify his
-very bigotry.
-
-It was a certain experience, that to his mystic-loving instinct omened
-history still dark in the womb of the future, and kept him closeted
-with Dubricius that day after knight and churchman had filed out from
-the conclave. In the twilight of the hall, with its painted frescoes
-and glimmering shields, Dubricius listened to the King as he spoke of
-portents and visions of the night. Uther, with his elbow resting on the
-arm of his chair and his chin upon his palm, stared at the cedar wood
-burning pungently upon the hearth and catechised Dubricius on visionary
-belief. The old man looked keenly at the King under his arched white
-brows. He was as much a mystic in his creed as this son of Constantine,
-a believer in miracles and in manifestations in the heavens. Certainly
-unusual powers had been given to the early Church, and it was not for
-the atomic mind of man to deny their presence in any later age.
-
-"My lord dreamed a dream," said Dubricius tentatively when he had heard
-the tale to the end.
-
-Uther quashed the suggestion with the calm confidence of a man sure of
-his reason.
-
-"Never a dream, Dubricius."
-
-The old man's eyes were very bright, and his face seemed full of a
-luminous sanctity.
-
-"A vision, then, my lord?"
-
-"I am no woman, Dubricius; I must believe the thing a vision, or damn
-my senses."
-
-"My lord, it is no mere woman's part to see visions; search holy writ
-where the chosen of God--the great ones--were miraculously blessed with
-portent and with dream."
-
-Uther looked into the old man's face as though for succour.
-
-"I am troubled to know what God would have me know," he said.
-"Dubricius, you are aged in the service of the Church!"
-
-"My lord, I have no privilege from heaven in the rendering of dreams."
-
-"Am I then a Pharaoh disappointed of mine own soothsayers?"
-
-"Sire, what of Merlin?"
-
-"Merlin--"
-
-"The man has the gift of prophecy and can speak with tongues. Send for
-him, my lord; he is a child of the Church, though a mage."
-
-Uther warmed himself before the fire of cedar wood, his face motionless
-in contemplative calm. Presently he turned, and looked deep into
-Dubricius's vigil-hollowed eyes as though to read the thoughts therein.
-
-"Merlin, the black-haired man who told Vortigern of the future!"
-
-"He spoke the truth, my lord."
-
-"Sad truth for Vortigern."
-
-"Yet who should fear the truth?"
-
-"Dubricius, to hear of death!"
-
-"Death, my lord?"
-
-"Remember Vortigern."
-
-"My lord, he was a planet lurid with murder, and so damned to darkness.
-Need the sun fear light?"
-
-Uther smiled sadly in the old man's face.
-
-"You are too faithful a courtier, Dubricius."
-
-"My lord, you are the pillar of a distraught land; God be merciful and
-spare you to us."
-
-"I have done my duty."
-
-"Amen, sire, to that."
-
-Uther went and stood by the great window of the room with his arms
-folded upon his breast. His hollow eyes looked out over the city, and
-there was a gaunt grandeur of thought upon his face. He was not a man
-who galloped down destiny like a huntsman on the trail of a stag;
-deliberation entered into his motives, and he never foundered reason
-with over-use of the spur. Dubricius stood and watched him with the
-smile of a father, for he loved the man.
-
-Presently Uther turned back towards the fire. Dubricius saw by his face
-that he had come by decision, and that his mind was steadfast.
-
-"Merlin is at Sarum, my lord."
-
-"I shall not play Saul at Endor."
-
-"No, sire."
-
-"The man shall come to me with no jugglery in dark corners."
-
-"Wise forethought, my lord king."
-
-"I remember me, Dubricius, that you have little leisure to hear of
-dreams. I have given you the names of the holy houses to be rebuilt and
-consecrated in the name of God. We will save Britain by the help of the
-cross. God speed you."
-
-Alone in the half light of the hall Uther stood and stared into the
-fire, his eyes luminous in the glow, while the pungent scent of the
-burning wood swept up like a savour of eastern spices. There was
-intense feeling on his face, a kind of passionate calm, as he gazed
-into the red bosom of the fire. Presently, as though turning in thought
-from some enchantment of the past, he sighed wearily, put his black
-hair from his forehead with both hands, and looked at his image in a
-mirror of steel that hung from a painted pillar. There was a wistful
-look upon his strong face; he had a soul that remembered, a soul not
-numbed by time into mere painless recollection of the past. As in some
-mysterious temple, love, with solemn sound of flute and dulcimer, kept
-fire unquenched night and day upon the altar of his heart.
-
-Rising up out of his mood of gloom, an earthly Hyperion whose face
-shone anew over Britain, he passed out, and calling to the guards
-lounging on the terrace, descended the stairway that sloped through
-gardens to the river. His state barge was in waiting at the gate, and
-entering in he was borne downstream towards the town whose white walls
-rose up amid the emerald mist of spring. Over all Uther cast his eye
-with a lustre look of love, a love that shone like the smile of a child
-at a mother's face. Caerleon was dear to him beyond all other cities;
-its white walls held his heart with the whispered conjure word of
-"home."
-
-Landing at the great quay, where many ships and galleys lay moored,
-he passed up towards the market square with the files of his guard,
-smiling back on the reverences of the people, throwing here and there
-a coin, happy in the honour that echoed to him from every face. Before
-the walls of a pilastered house his guards halted with a fanfare of
-trumpets, a sound that rolled the gates wide and brought a mob of
-servants to line the outer court. Knights came down from the house with
-heads uncovered. It was the King's first entry into Gorlois's atrium
-since the disbanding of the host after the war in Wales.
-
-A face scarred with red across cheek and chin, with nose askew, one
-lower lid turned down, came out to Uther from the doorway of an inner
-room. There was a drawn look upon the man's face, a sullen saturnine
-air about him as though he were vexed inwardly with the chafe of some
-perpetual pain. The pinched frown, the restless bloodshot eyes, the
-hunched shoulders, were all strange to Uther, who looked for Gorlois,
-the man of arrogant and imperial pride, whose splendour of person,
-carriage of head, and long lithe stride had marked him a stag royal
-from the herd of meaner men.
-
-Uther, grave as a god, gripped the other's thin sinewy fingers, his
-eyes searching Gorlois's face with a large-minded scrutiny inspired
-by the natural sympathies of his heart. Gorlois, for his part, half
-crooked the knee, and drew a carved chair before the ill-tended fire.
-He had an Asmodean pride, and the look in Uther's eyes was more
-troublesome to him than a glare of hate. His face never lightened from
-the murk of reserve that covered it like a mask, and it was the King
-who spoke the first word over the flickering fire.
-
-"What of your wounds?" he said.
-
-Gorlois's black beard was down on his breast, and he looked only at the
-fire. He seemed like a man furtive beneath the consciousness of some
-inward shame, mocking his honour.
-
-"My wounds are well, sire."
-
-"You look like a man newly risen from a sick bed."
-
-"If I look sick, sire, blame my physician; he has tinctured me to the
-level of perdition. Bodily I never felt in better fettle. I could hew
-down a horse, and thrust my spear through a pine trunk. A man's face is
-a fallacy."
-
-Uther saw the scars, the harsh smile, and caught the twinge in the
-seemingly careless voice. He could comprehend some humiliation in the
-marring of personal comeliness, but not the humiliation that seemed
-to lurk deep beneath Gorlois's pride. There was more here than the
-scarring of a cheek.
-
-"There is some care upon you, Gorlois," he said.
-
-"Sire, you have much observation."
-
-"Your men have spoken of the change to you."
-
-"They are too discreet, God save their skins."
-
-"Pride, pride."
-
-"Sire, you are right; my pride suffers the inquisitiveness of kings,
-not subjects. Eagle calls to eagle; men are mere magpies. Chatter
-maddens me."
-
-"I grip your hand in spirit."
-
-Both men were silent for a while, the fire crackling sluggishly at
-their feet. Gorlois's eyes were on the window and the scrap of green
-woodland in the distance; Uther's eyes were on Gorlois's face. The
-latter, with the sore sensitiveness of a diseased spirit, felt the look
-and chafed at it. His petulance was plain enough to Uther as he sat and
-watched him, and pondered the man's trouble in his heart.
-
-"Gorlois."
-
-"Sire."
-
-"I am no gabbler."
-
-"True, my lord."
-
-"You are trouble ridden."
-
-Gorlois's eyes flashed up to Uther's, faltered, and fell.
-
-"What of that, sire?" he said curtly.
-
-"You have a deadly pride."
-
-"I own it."
-
-Uther leant forward in his chair, and looked earnestly into the other's
-face.
-
-"I too am a proud man in my trouble," he said, "buckling up
-unutterable things from the baseness of the world, jealous of my inward
-miseries. Yet when I see a strong man and a friend chained with the
-iron of a silent woe, I cannot keep my sympathy in leash, so tell him
-to unburden to a man whose pride feels for the pride of others."
-
-The words seemed to stir Gorlois from his lethargy of reserve and
-silence. Uther's very largeness of soul, his stately faith and
-courtesy, were qualities that won largely upon the mind, lifting it
-above factious things to the serene level of his own soul. Gorlois,
-impulsive spirit, could not rebuff such a man as Uther. There was a
-certain calm disinterestedness in the King's nature that made trust
-imperative and condemned secretiveness as churlish. Gorlois was an
-obstinate man in the extreme rendering of the epithet. He had spoken to
-no one of his trouble, leaving his thoughts to be inferred. Yet staunch
-sympathy like Gige's ring has power over most hidden things of the
-heart, and Gorlois was very human.
-
-"It is a woman, sire."
-
-"Mine was a woman, too."
-
-Gorlois scattered the half-dead embers with his foot.
-
-"I married a wife," he said.
-
-"I had never heard it."
-
-"Few have."
-
-"The woman's name?"
-
-"Never ask it, sire; it will soon lie with her in the dust."
-
-"These are grim words."
-
-"Grim enough for the man of my own house,--my own familiar friend."
-
-"Mother of Christ,--your friend!"
-
-"My brother in arms, sire."
-
-"The shedding of such blood seems like justice. Had I suffered thus--"
-
-"Sire, you warm to my temper."
-
-"It should be the sword."
-
-"Mine yet waits white for blood."
-
-Gorlois, implacable, grim as a werewolf, threw open the door of a
-closet and led Uther within the narrow compass of its walls. It was a
-little oratory, dim and fantastic, with lamps hanging from the roof,
-and black curtains over the narrow casement. Two waxen candles burnt
-with steady, windless flames upon the altar, and beneath their light
-glimmered a great sword, naked, and a cup half filled with purple wine.
-Gorlois took up the sword and touched it with his lips.
-
-"For the man," he said.
-
-Then he set the sword down beneath its candle and touched the goblet
-with his fingers; his black eyes glittered.
-
-"For the woman, sire."
-
-"And the candles?"
-
-"I burn them till I have crushed the life out of two souls; then I can
-pinch the wicks between my fingers, and snuff them out in smoke."
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-It was spring at Caerleon, and a web of green had swept upon the
-empty purple of the woods and shut the naked casements to the sun.
-The meadowlands were plains of emerald that glimmered gold; the gorge
-blazed with its myriad lamps lighting the dark gateways of the pine
-forests, and covering all the hillsides as with a garment of yellow. In
-the woods the birds sang, and hyacinths and dog violets spread pools
-of blue beneath the infinite greenness of the boughs. In Caerleon's
-orchards the fruit trees stood like mounts of snow flecked with
-ethereal pink and a prophecy of green. Yew, cypress, cedar, reared
-their dark bosoms betwixt the gentler foliage, and many a bronze-leafed
-oak made mimic autumn with a mist of leaves.
-
-In a forest glade that opened upon the high-road some three leagues
-eastward of Caerleon, an old man sat beside a shallow spring, whose
-waters lay a pool of tarnished silver within the low stone wall that
-compassed them. The old man by the pool was clad in a ragged cloak of
-coarse brown cloth lined with rabbit skin; he had sandals on his feet,
-a staff and wallet by his side, and under the shadow of his hood of
-fur a peaky white beard hung down like an icicle under the eaves of a
-house. His hands were thin and white, and he seemed decrepit as he sat
-hunched by the well with a crust of brown bread in his lap and a little
-bronze pannikin that served him as a cup.
-
-It was late in the day, and the great oaks that reached out their arms
-over the well stood solemn and still in the evening calm, while the
-cloud masses bastioned overhead were radiant with the lustre of the
-hour. The road curled away right and left into the twilight of the
-woods; no folk passed to and from Caerleon to throw alms to the beggar
-who squatted there like any old goblin man out of a tomb. From time to
-time he would turn and look long into the pool as into a mirror, as
-though he watched the future glimmering dimly in a magic well. He had
-finished his crust of bread, and his head nodded over his lap as though
-sleep tempted him after a day's journey. Rabbits were scampering and
-feeding along the edge of the forest; a snake slid by in the grass like
-a streak of silver; far down the glade a herd of fallow deer browsed as
-though caring nothing for the huddled scrap of humanity by the well.
-The beggar man might have been dead, for all the heed he gave to the
-forest life that teemed so near.
-
-Yet it was soon evidenced that his faculties were keenly alive to all
-that passed about him by a marvellous perception of sound, a perception
-that made itself plain before the sun had drifted much further down the
-west. The old man had heard something that had not stirred the fallow
-deer browsing in the glade. A thin metallic sound shimmered on the air,
-the clattering cadence of hoofs far away upon the high-road. The beggar
-by the pool had lifted his head, and was listening with his hooded face
-turned towards the west, his thin fingers picking unconsciously at his
-beard.
-
-Presently the deer browsing in the glade reared up their heads to
-listen, snuffed the air, and swept back at a trot into the forest.
-Jays chattered away over the trees; rabbits stopped feeding and sat up
-with their long ears red in the sunlight. The indifferent suggestion
-of a sound had grown into a ringing tramp that came through the trees
-like a blunt challenge to the solitary spirit of the place. Through
-the indefinite and mazy screens of green a glitter of harness and a
-streaking of colour glimmered from the wizard amber glow of the west.
-Three horsemen were coming under the trees,--one in lurid arms before,
-and two abreast behind in black. The beggar by the pool pulled his cowl
-down over his face, and stood by the roadside with his bronze pannikin
-held in a shaky right hand to pray for alms.
-
-The knights drew rein by the pool, and he in the red harness flung down
-money from his belt, and required tidings in return:
-
-"The Lord Jesus have mercy on your soul in death," came the whine of
-gratitude; "what would your lordship learn from an old man?"
-
-Uther considered him from the shadow of his casque. He had his
-suspicions, and was half wise in his conjectures. He could see nothing
-of the old man's face, and so elected to be innocent for the moment.
-
-"Grandfather, have you heard in your days of Merlin the prophet?"
-
-"Have I heard of the devil, lording!"
-
-"Were he to ride here, should you know his face?"
-
-"Sir, I have seen no man these three hours. Yet, in truth, I did but
-now smell a savour as of hell; and there was a raven here, a black
-villain of a bird that croaked 'Abracadabra to the letter.'"
-
-Uther smiled.
-
-"Are you from Caerleon?" he said.
-
-"No, sire, it is Uther the King who comes from the City of Legions."
-
-"Uther, say you? Put back that hood."
-
-"My lord, lo! I bow myself; I have kept the tryst."
-
-The cowl fell back, the cloak was unwrapped, the beard twitched
-from the smooth, strong chin. The bent figure, feeble and meagre,
-straightened and dilated to a stature and bulk beyond mere common
-mould. A man with hair black as a raven's wing, and great glistening
-eyes, stood with his moon-face turned up to Uther Pendragon. A smile
-played upon his lips. He was clad in a cloak of sombre purple, wreathed
-about with strange devices, and a leopard's skin covered his shoulders;
-his black hair was bound with a fillet of gold, and there were gold
-bracelets upon his wrists. It was Merlin who stood before Uther under
-the arch of the great trees.
-
-"The benisons of all natural powers be upon you; the God of the stars
-and the spirit fires of the heavens keep you. Great is your heart, O
-King, and great your charity. Bid me but serve you, and the beggar's
-pence shall win you a blessing."
-
-The man bowed himself even to the ground. Uther left his horse tethered
-to a tree, and faced Merlin over the pool. Both men were solemn as
-night in their looks.
-
-"Merlin," said the King.
-
-"Sire."
-
-"I have a riddle from the stars."
-
-"Speak it, O King."
-
-"To your ear alone."
-
-"Sire, pass with me into the forest."
-
-"Blessed be thy head if thou canst read the testament of the heavens."
-
-It was towards sunset, and the place was solemn and still as some vast
-church. In the white roadway the black knights stood motionless, with
-spear on thigh, their sable plumes sweeping like cloudlets under the
-dark vault of the foliage. Merlin, with the look of an eternity in his
-eyes, bowed down once more before Uther, and pointed with his hand into
-the dim cloister of the trees. Red and purple passed together from the
-pool, and melted slowly into an oblivion of leaves.
-
-In a little glade under a great oak, whose roots gripped the ground
-like talons, Uther told to Merlin the vision that had come to him in
-the watches of the night. He had stood late at his window, looking
-over Caerleon shimmering white under the moon, and had seen a star of
-transcendent glory smite sudden through the blue vault of the heavens.
-A great ray had fallen from the star, and from the ray had risen a
-vapour, a golden mist that had shaped itself into a dragon of gold, and
-from the dragon's mouth had proceeded two smaller rays that had seemed
-to compass Britain between two streams of fire. Then, like smoke, both
-star and dragon had melted out of the heavens, and only the moon had
-looked down on Usk and the sleeping woods about Caerleon.
-
-When Uther had spoken his whole soul in this mystery of the night,
-Merlin withdrew himself a little and looked long into the sky, his
-tall figure and strong face clear as chiselled stone in a slant gleam
-of the sun. For fully the third part of an hour he stood thus like a
-pillar of basalt, neither moving nor uttering a sound, while the sky
-fainted over the tree tops and flashed red fire from the armour of the
-King. Suddenly, as though he had caught inspiration from the heavens,
-prophecy came upon him like a wind at sunset. He stretched his hands to
-the sky. His body quivered; his eyes were as rubies in a mask of marble.
-
-"I have seen, O King! I have looked into the palpitating web of the
-stars, into the glittering aisles of the infinite."
-
-Uther strode out from the tree trunk where he had leant watching the
-man's cataleptic pose grow into the quick furor of prophecy.
-
-"Say on," he said.
-
-Merlin swept a hand towards him with a magnificence of gesture.
-
-"Thou art the star, the dragon is thy son. He shall compass Britain
-with a band of steel, beat back the wolves of heathendom, and cast
-stupendous glory over Britain's realm. His name shall shine in history,
-sun-bright, magnificent, and pure; his name shall be Arthur. Thus, O
-King! Uther of the Dragon, read I this vision of the night."
-
-Uther, a gradual lustre in his eyes, looked long at the sun behind
-the swart pillars of the forest. He seemed to gather vigour from the
-glow. Prophecy was in his thought, a prophecy that tempted the inmost
-dreamings of the heart, and linked up the past with promise of the
-future. To love, to be loved, to win the woman among women! To beget
-a son, a warrior, a king; to harden his body like to an oak, temper
-his heart like steel; to set the cross in his hands and send him forth
-against the beast and the barbarian like a god! Such, indeed, were the
-idyls of a King!
-
-"Merlin, I have no wife, and you speak to me of a son," was his sole
-answer.
-
-The retort echoed from the man.
-
-"The King must wed."
-
-"This is no mere choosing of a horse."
-
-"Sire, you can learn to love. It is not so difficult a thing, no more
-than falling down upon a bed of roses."
-
-The retort was in no wise suited to Uther's humour.
-
-"I am no boy to be married on the moment to cap the reading of a
-vision."
-
-"Sire!"
-
-"Bring me the woman I may love, if you are magical enough,--then bid me
-wed."
-
-"My lord, you mock me with a dream."
-
-"Not so."
-
-"She is dead then?"
-
-"On my soul I know not."
-
-"Then, sire--"
-
-"All women are dead to me save one. Conjure her into my being, and I
-will give you the wiser half of myself, even my heart."
-
-For an instant Merlin smiled--a smile like an afterglow in a winter
-sky,--clear, cold, and steely. He drew nearer Uther, his purple robe
-with its fantastic scroll-work dim in the twilight, his black hair
-falling down about his face. His words were like silken things purring
-from his lips.
-
-"My lord, tell me more."
-
-"You are a prophet. Read my past."
-
-"Sire, my vision fails at such a depth."
-
-"But not thy flattery."
-
-"Her name, sire?"
-
-"I will read you a fable."
-
-Uther, his eyes lit as with a lustre of recollection, turned from
-Merlin and the ken of his impenetrable face. He leant against a tree
-trunk, and looked far away into the dwindling vistas of the woods. His
-voice won emphasis from the absolute silence of the place, and he spoke
-with the level deliberation of one reading aloud from some antique book.
-
-"A woman befriended a knight who was smitten of a dread wound. It was
-summer, and a sweet season full of the scent of flowers,--odours of
-grass knee deep in dreamy meadows. The woman had red-gold hair, and
-eyes like a summer night; her mouth was more wistful than an opening
-rose; her voice was like a flute over moonlit waters. And the knight
-lost his soul to the woman. But the woman was a nun, and so, to save
-his vows, he battled down his love and left her."
-
-Merlin's eyes took a sudden glitter.
-
-"A nun, sire?"
-
-"A nun."
-
-"With hair of red gold and eyes of amethyst. Her convent, sire?"
-
-"Avangel. Burnt by the heathen on the southern shores."
-
-"And the nun's name?"
-
-"Igraine, Igraine."
-
-Merlin gave a shrill, short cry; badges of colour had stolen into his
-cheeks, and he looked like a Bacchanal for the moment.
-
-"Sire, sire, the woman is no nun."
-
-Uther still leant against the tree, and looked into the distance
-with his hand shadowing his eyes. It might have seemed that he had
-not heard the words spoken by Merlin, or at least had not understood
-their meaning, so unmoved was his look, so motionless his figure.
-Unutterable thoughts were moving in his mind. There was a grandeur of
-self-suppression on his face as he turned and fronted Merlin with the
-quiet of a great strength.
-
-"Man, what words are these?"
-
-Merlin had recoiled suddenly within himself. He was silent again,
-subtle as steel, and very debonair.
-
-"My lord, I swear she is no nun."
-
-"Give me fact, not assertion."
-
-"The woman is but a novice. I had the whole tale from one who knew her
-well at Radamanth's in Winchester, where she found a home. She had
-grieved, sire, for Pelleas."
-
-"Pelleas--Igraine! My heart is great in me, Merlin; where saw you her
-last?"
-
-"Wandering in a wood by Winchester."
-
-"Alone?"
-
-"Alone in heart."
-
-"Where now?"
-
-"My lord--I know not."
-
-"O God!--to see her face again."
-
-Merlin cast his leopard skin across his visage and stood like a statue,
-even his immense grandeur of reserve threatened for the moment with
-summary overthrow. In the taking of twenty breaths he had calmed
-himself again to stand with bare head and frank face before the King--a
-promise on his lips.
-
-"My lord, give me a moon's season to stare into this mystery. On the
-cross I swear it--I will bring you good news at Caerleon."
-
-"On the cross!"
-
-"On the cross of your sword."
-
-"Merlin, if this thing should come to be, if life returns to one whose
-hopes were dead, you of all men in Britain shall be next my heart.
-Behold--on the cross--I swear it."
-
-A certain season of youth seemed to have come down upon Uther, and
-lighted up the solemn tenor of his mood. His face grew mellow with
-the calm of a great content; he was reasonable as to the future, not
-moved to any extravagant outburst of unrest; the constant overshadowing
-of the cross seemed to give his faith a tranquil greenness--a
-rain-refreshed calm that pervaded his being like moist quiet after a
-wind.
-
-"Merlin, what of the night?"
-
-"Sire, I am well provided; I have a pavilion near a brook where a
-damsel serves me."
-
-"I go to Caerleon. You have conjured me back into the spring of life;
-my heart is beholden to you. Take my hand--and remember."
-
-"Sire, I am your servant."
-
-When Uther had passed, a streak of scarlet, into the blue twilight of
-the darkening wood; when the dull clatter of hoofs had dwindled into
-an ecstasy of silence, Merlin, white as the faint moon above, found
-again the pool under the trees by the high-road to Caerleon. Going
-on his knees by the brink he looked into its waters, black, sheeny,
-mysterious, webbed with a flickering west-light, sky mosaics dim and
-ethereal between swart-imaged trees. Still as a mirror was the pool,
-yet touched occasionally with light as from a rippling star-beam, or
-a dropped string from the moon's silver sandals. Merlin bent over it,
-his fateful face making a baleful image in the water. Long he looked,
-as though seeking some prophetic picture in the pool. When night had
-come he rose up with a transient smile, folded his cloak about him, and
-passed like a wraith into the forest.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-While Gorlois was lowering over an imagined shame, and Uther given
-to brooding on a vision, the Knight of the Cloven Heart wandered
-through wild Wales and endured sundry adventures that were hardly in
-concatenation with the distaff or the cradle.
-
-In rough ages might was right, and every man's inclination law unto
-himself. To strike hard was to win crude justice; to ride a horse,
-to wear mail, to carry a sword, were characteristics that ensured
-considerable reverence from men less fortunate, by maintaining at least
-an outward arrogance of strength. Not only on these grounds alone
-did the Knight of the Cloven Heart hold at a disadvantage those folk
-of the wilderness who went--to speak metaphorically--naked. She made
-brave show enough, had a strong arm and a strong body, and could match
-any man in the mere matter of courage. The moral effect of her great
-horse, her shield and harness, and the sword at her side, carried her
-unchallenged through wood and valley where meaner wayfarers might have
-come to grief, or suffered a tumbling. The forest folk assumed her a
-knight under her helmet and her harness; a certain bold magnificence of
-bearing in no wise contradicted the assumption.
-
-It would be wearisome to record the passage of two months or more,
-to construct an itinerary of her progress, to chronicle the events
-of a period that was solitary as the wilds through which she passed.
-She never slept a night under populous roof the whole time of these
-wanderings. Luckily it was fair weather, and a mild season; forest
-shade, such as it was, and the caves of the wilderness, a ruined villa,
-the forsaken hut of a charcoal burner, an empty hermitage,--such in
-turn gave her shelter from the placid light of the moon, or the black
-stare of a starless sky. She never ventured even among peasant folk
-unhelmeted. Her food was won from cottager or herdsman by such store of
-money as she had about her, though many she came across were eager to
-appease so formidable a person with milk, and pottage, and the little
-delicacies of the rude home. Often her fine carriage and youthful voice
-won wonders from the bosom of some peasant housewife. She had her
-liberty, and was free to roam; the life contented her instincts for a
-season, and at least she was saved the sight of Gorlois. Since war had
-failed to loose her from the man, she would essay her best to keep him
-at a distance.
-
-If hate repelled, love drew with dreams. Yet had Igraine been asked
-of peace at heart, she would have smiled and sighed together. There
-are degrees of misery, and solitary suffering is preferable to that
-publicity which is very torture in itself, a galling whip to the tender
-flanks of pride. In being free of Gorlois she was happy; in thinking
-of Uther and in contemplation of the shadows of the unknown she was of
-all women most miserable. A mood of self-concentration was settling
-slowly upon her like an inevitable season upon the face of the earth.
-Day by day a dream prophetic of the future was pictured in the imagery
-of thought till it grew familiar as an often looked on landscape that
-awakes no wonder and no strange unrest. The ordinances of man had
-thrust on her a damnable tyranny, and she was more than weary of the
-restrictions of the world. The inevitable scorn of custom had long
-taken hold upon her being, and she had been driven to that state when
-the soul founds a republic within itself, and creates its ethics from
-the promptings of the heart.
-
-Uther was at Caerleon; she had heard the truth from many a peasant
-tongue. Caerleon therefrom drew her with magic influence, as a lamp
-draws a golden moth from the gloom, or the light in the night sky wings
-on the wild-fowl with the prophecy of water. Caerleon became the bourn
-of all her holier thoughts; strange city of magic, it held love and
-hate for her, desire and obloquy; though its walls were as a luring net
-scintillant with spirit gossamer, her very reason lulled her fears to
-sleep, and turned her southwards towards Uskland and the sea.
-
-It came to pass, on the very day that Uther spoke with Merlin in the
-forest, that Igraine rode over a stretch of hills by a sheep-track, and
-came down into a valley not many leagues from Caerleon. The place stood
-thick with woodland, ranged tier on tier with the peaked bosses of huge
-trees. That impenetrable mystery of solitude that abides where forests
-grow was deeply hallowed in this silent dale. The infinite majesty of
-nature had cast a spell there, and the vast oaks, like pyramids of
-gloom, caverned a silence that was utter and divine.
-
-Glimmering beneath the huge, stupendous boughs, through darkling aisles
-and the colossal piers that held the innumerable roofing of the leaves,
-Igraine passed down through umbrage and still ecstasies of green, by
-colonnade and gallery,--interminable tunnels, where stray light struck
-slantwise on her armour, that it seemed a moving lustre in the solemn
-shade.
-
-Deep in the woodland lay a valley, a pastureland girt round with trees,
-and where the meadows, painted thick with flowers, seemed all enamelled
-white and azure, green, purple, pink, and gold. A peace as from the
-sun shone over it like saffron mist. A pool gleamed there, tranquil
-and deep with shadows; all the trees that Britain knew seemed girdled
-round it--oak, beech and holly, yew, thorn and cedar, the elfin pine,
-the larch, whose delicate kirtle shames even broidery of silk. No sound
-save the cuckoo's cry, and the uncertain twittering of birds, disturbed
-the sanctuary of that forest solitude.
-
-Igraine, halting on the brink of the meadowland, looked down over wood
-and water. The quiet of the place, the clear glint of the pool, the
-scent of the meadows, brought back the valley in Andredswold, and the
-manor in the mere. She loved the place on the instant. Even a blue
-plume of smoke rising straight to the sky, and the grey-brown backs of
-a few sheep in the meadows, evidencing as they did the proximity of
-man, failed to disenchant the solitary grandeur of the scene.
-
-There is no stable perpetuation of peace in the world; care treads
-upon the heels of Mammon, and lust lies down by the side of love. Even
-in the quiet of the wilderness the hawk chases the lark's song out of
-the heavens, and wind scatters the bloom from the budding tree. Thus
-it was that Igraine, watching from under the woods, saw the sheep
-scampering suddenly in the meadows as though disturbed by something as
-yet invisible to her where she stood. Their bleating came up with a
-tinge of pathos, to be followed by a sound more sinister, the cry of
-one in whom pain and terror leapt into an ecstasy of anguish--a shrill,
-bird-like scream that seemed to cleave the silence like the white blade
-of a sword. Igraine's horse pricked its ears with a snort of wrath,
-as though recognising the wounded cry of some innocent thing. The
-girl's pulses stirred as she scanned the valley for explanation of this
-discord, sudden as the sweep of a falcon from the blue. Nor was she
-long at gaze. A flickering speck of colour appeared in the meadowlands,
-the figure of a woman running through the grass like a hunted rabbit,
-darting and doubling with a whimpering outcry. Near as a shadow a tall
-streak of brown followed at full stride, terrible even in miniature.
-Hunter and hunted passed before the eye like the figures of a dream,
-yet with a fierce realism that whelmed self in an objective pity.
-
-Never did Britomart herself, with splendid soul, find fitter cause in
-faerie-land than did the Knight of the Cloven Heart in that woodland
-dale. Igraine rode down from the trees, a burning figure of chivalry
-that galloped through the green, and bore fast for the scudding forms,
-that skirted round the pool. Like a stag pressed to despair, the hunted
-one had taken to the water, and was already waist deep in ripples that
-seemed to catch the panic of the moment. Plunging on past tree and
-thicket, Igraine held on, while sheep scattered from her, to turn and
-stare with the stupidest of white faces at the horse thundering over
-the meadows. The pursuer had passed the water-weeds, and was to his
-knees in the pool when the Knight of the Cloven Heart came down to the
-bank and halted, like a mailed statue of succouring vengeance.
-
-The white heat of the drama seemed cooled for the moment. Over the
-flickering scales of the little mere the girl's white face, tumbled
-hair, and blue smock showed, as she half-floated and half-paddled with
-her hands. Nearer still, the leather-jerkined, fur-breeched figure of
-the man bent like a baffled satyr baulked of evil. On the green slope
-of the bank the mailed splendour of chivalry waited like Justice to
-uphold the right.
-
-The man in the mere wore the short Roman sword, or parazonium; any more
-effective weapon that he had possessed had been thrown aside in the
-heat of the chase and in the imagined security of his rough person. He
-had the face of a wolf. In girth and stature he seemed a young Goliath,
-a savage thing bred in savage times and savage places, and blessed with
-the instincts of mere barbarism. Igraine's disrelish equalled her heat
-as she looked at him, and slanted her great sword over her shoulder.
-
-In another instant the scene revived, and ceased to be a mere picture.
-The girl in the pool had found a footing, and her half-bare shoulders
-showed above the water. The man, with his short sword held behind him,
-was splashing through the shallows with a grin on his hairy face that
-meant mischief. Igraine, every whit as hot as he, held her horse well
-in hand, and put her shield before her. Matters went briskly for a
-minute. The man made a rush; Igraine spurred up and sent him reeling
-with the charging shoulder of her horse; the short sword pecked at
-nothing, the long one struck home and drew blood. A second panther
-leap, a blow turned by the shield, a counter cut that made good carving
-of the fellow's skull. The shallows foamed and crackled crimson; hoofs
-stirred up the mire; a plunge; a noise of crossed steel; a last sweep
-of a sword, and then victory. Igraine's horse, neighing out the spirit
-of the moment, trampled the fallen body as it had been the carcase of a
-slaughtered dragon.
-
-The girl in the pool waded back at the sight, her blue smock clinging
-about her, and showing an opulent grace of shoulder, arm, and bosom--a
-full figure swept by the damp tangle of her dark brown hair. She had
-full red lips, eyes of bright blue, a round and ruddy face, that told
-of a mind more for tangible pleasures than for spiritual aspiration.
-She came up out of the shallows like a water-nymph, her frightened face
-already all aglow with a smile of gratitude, mild shame, and infinite
-reverence. Going down on her knees amid the water-weeds and flags, she
-held up her playful hands as to a deliverer direct from heaven. "Grace,
-Lord, for thy servant."
-
-With the peril past, Igraine could not forego the sly scrap of mischief
-that the occasion offered; her white teeth gleamed in a smile under her
-helmet, as she wiped her sword on the horse's mane, before sheathing it.
-
-"Give Heaven thy thanks," she said, with a quaint sententiousness of
-gesture. "Be sure in thy heart that it was a mere providence of God
-that I heard thy screaming. As for yon clod of clay, we will bury it
-later, lest it should pollute so goodly a pool. For the rest, child, I
-am an old man, and hungry, and would taste bread."
-
-The girl jumped up instantly, with a shallow and half-puzzled smile.
-The voice from the helmet was young, very young, and full of the
-free tone of youth; yet both manner and matter were sage, practical,
-leavened with a hoary-headedness of intention that seemed to baulk the
-inferences suggested by such panoply of arms. With a bob of a curtsey,
-she took the knight's bridle, and led the horse some fifty paces round
-the pool, where, under the imminent shoulder of a cedar tree, a little
-cabin nestled under a hood of ivy. It was built of rough timber from
-the forest, and thatched with reeds; honeysuckle clustered over its
-rude façade, and thrust fragrant tendrils into its reed-latticed
-windows, where an early rose or so shone like a red star against the
-russet-wood. A garden full of flowers lay before the rustic porch that
-arched the threshold; and an outjutting of the pool brought a little
-fiord of dusky silver up to the very green of the path, a streak of
-silver blazoned with violet flags, golden marigolds of the marsh, and
-a lace-like fringe of snowy water-weed in bloom. All around, the great
-trees, those solemn senators, stood with their green shoulders bowed in
-a strong dream of deep eternal thought.
-
-Igraine left the saddle and suffered the girl to tether her horse to a
-cedar bough. Her surcoat of violet and gold swept nearly to her ankles,
-and saved from any marring the infinite art of the anomaly that veiled
-her sex. Her man's garb seemed every whit as worthy of a woman, nor
-did it hinder that loving grace that made her beauty of body the more
-admirable and rare.
-
-The girl came back with more bendings of the knee, and led Igraine amid
-the flowers to the porch of the forest dwelling. Once within, she drew
-a settle close to the doorway, spread a rug of skins thereon, and again
-bowed herself in homage.
-
-"Let my lord be seated, and I will serve him."
-
-"I am hungry, child; but first put off that wet smock of thine."
-
-The girl crept behind the door of a great cupboard, with a blush of
-colour in her cheeks. Cloth rustled for a moment; a circle of blue and
-a slim pair of legs showed beneath the cupboard door; soon she was back
-again in a gown of apple green, fastening it with her fingers over the
-full swell of her bosom.
-
-"What will my lord eat?"
-
-"What you have, child."
-
-"Bread and dried fruit, the flesh of a kid, new milk and cheese, a
-little cider."
-
-"Give me milk, child, a mere flake of meat, some cheese and bread, and
-I ask nothing more. I will pay you for all I take."
-
-"Lord, how should you pay me, when I owe more than life to your sword?"
-
-The little shepherdess went about her business with a barefooted tread,
-soft as any cat's. The cottage proved a wonder of a place. The great
-cupboard disgorged a silver-rimmed horn, wooden platter, a napkin white
-as apple blossom, red fruit piled up in a brazen bowl. The girl set the
-things in order on the table, with an occasional curious look stolen
-at the figure in mail on the settle--splendid visitant in so humble a
-place. And what a rich voice the knight had,--how mellow, with its many
-modulations of tone. His hands too were wonderfully shapen, fingers
-long and tapering, with nails pink as sea-shells. There surely must be
-a face worth gazing at, for its very nobility, under that great brazen
-helmet that glinted in the half light of the room.
-
-The meal was spread, but the guest still unprepared. The forest child
-dropped a curtsey, and a mild suggestion that the knight should make a
-beginning.
-
-"Will not my lord unhelm?"
-
-A rich, mischief-loving laugh startled her for answer.
-
-"Child, take the thing off if you will."
-
-The little shepherdess obeyed, and nearly dropped the helmet in the
-doing of it. A mass of gold fell rippling down over the violet surcoat;
-a pair of deep eyes looked up with a sparkling laugh; a satin upper lip
-and chin gave the lie to the nether part of the picture.
-
-"Christ Jesu!" quoth the girl with the helmet, and again "Christ Jesu,"
-as though she could get no further.
-
-Igraine caught her smock and drew her nearer.
-
-"Come, little sister, kiss me for--'thank you.'"
-
-With a contradictory impulse the girl fell down on her knees and began
-to cry, with her brown hair tumbled in Igraine's lap.
-
-When persuasion and comforting had quieted her somewhat, she sat on the
-floor at Igraine's feet, her round eyes big with an unstinted wonder.
-Even Igraine's hunger and the devoir done upon the new milk could
-hardly persuade the girl that this being in armour was no saint, but a
-very real and warm-blooded woman. She even touched Igraine's fingers
-with her lips, to satisfy herself as to the warmth and solidity of the
-slim strong hand. She had never heard of such a marvel, a woman, and
-a very beautiful woman, riding out as a man, and doing man's bravest
-work with courage and cleverness. The girl made sure in her heart
-that Igraine was some princess at least, who had been blessed with
-miraculous power by reason of her maidenhood and the magic innocence of
-her mind.
-
-Igraine talked to the girl and soon began to win her to less devotional
-attitude with that graciousness of manner that became her so well at
-such a season. She forgot herself for the time, in listening to this
-child of solitude. The girl's father--an old man--had died two winters
-ago, and she had buried him with her own hands, under a tree in the
-dale. Since his death, she had lived on in the cabin, alone, a forest
-child nurtured in forest law. Every Sabbath, Renan, a shepherd lad in
-a lord's service, would come over the hills and pass the day with her.
-They were betrothed, and the lord of those parts had promised Renan
-freedom next Christmastide; then Renan and Garlotte were to be married,
-and the cabin in the dale was to serve them as a home.
-
-Garlotte was soon chattering like any child. She talked to Igraine
-of her sheep and goats, her little corn-field on a sunny slope, her
-garden, her wild strawberry beds and vine, her fruit trees, and her
-marigolds. The lad Renan, bronze-haired and brown-eyed, sprang in here
-and there with irresistible romance. He could run like a hound, swim
-like an otter, fish, shoot with the bow, and throw the javelin a great
-many paces. He had such eyes, too, and such gentle hands. Igraine's
-sympathies were quick and vivid on matters of the kind. The girl's head
-was resting against her knees before an hour had gone.
-
-The evening was still and sultry and the sky overcast. When Igraine
-went to the porch after supper, rain had begun to fall, and there was
-the moist murmur of a heavy, windless shower through all the valley.
-The sheep had huddled under the trees. Infinite freshness, unutterable
-peace, brooded over the green meadows and the breathless leaf-clouds
-of the woods. For all the sweet, dewy silence a bitter discontent lay
-heavy upon Igraine's heart, and woe made quiet moan in her inmost soul.
-Green summer swooned in the branches and breathed in the odours of
-honeysuckle, musk, and rose, yet for her there seemed no burgeoning, no
-bursting of the heart into song.
-
-The girl Garlotte stood by and looked with a quaint awe into the proud,
-wistful face.
-
-"What are you thinking of, lady?" she said.
-
-Igraine's lips quivered.
-
-"Of many things, child."
-
-"Tell me of them."
-
-"What should you know, child, of plagues and sorrow, of misery in high
-places, of despair coroneted with gold, of hearts that ache, and eyes
-that burn for the love of the world that never comes?"
-
-"I am very ignorant, dear lady, but yet I think you are not happy."
-
-"Is any woman happy on earth?"
-
-"Yet you are so good and beautiful."
-
-"Child, child, beauty brings more misery than joy; it is a bright fire
-that burns upon itself."
-
-"Renan has told me I am beautiful."
-
-"So you are, and to Renan."
-
-"I never think of it, lady, save when Renan looks into my eyes and
-touches my mouth with his lips; then say in my heart, 'I am beautiful,
-and Renan loves me, God be thanked!'"
-
-The words echoed into Igraine's soul. There was such pain in her great
-eyes that the girl was startled from the simple contemplation of her
-own affairs of heart.
-
-"You are sad, lady."
-
-"Child, I am tired to death."
-
-"Bide with me and rest. See, I will feed your horse and give him water;
-he will do famously under the tree. There is my bed yonder in the
-corner; I spread a clean sheet on it this very morning. Shall I help
-you to unarm?"
-
-"Thanks, child. How the rain hisses into the pool."
-
-"I love the sound, and the soft rattle on the green leaves. All will be
-fresh and aglister to-morrow, and the flowers will smile, and the trees
-shake their heads and laugh. How clumsy my fingers are; I am so slow
-over the buckles; ah! there is the last. I will put the sword and the
-shield by the bed. Shall we say our prayers?"
-
-"You pray, child; I have forgotten how to these many months."
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-There is a charm in simplicity of soul, and in sympathies green in
-the first rich burgeoning of the mind, unshrivelled and untainted by
-the miserable misanthropies of the world. The girl Garlotte was as
-ignorant as you will, but she loved God, had the heart of a thrush
-in spring-time, and was possessed naturally of a warm and delicate
-appreciation of the feelings of others that would have put to utter
-shame the majority of court ladies.
-
-Women of a certain gilded class are prone to judge by superficialities.
-Living often in an artificial air of courtesy, the very life about them
-is a cultured, perfumed atmosphere unstirred by the deeper wind-throbs
-of true passion, or the solemn sweep of the more grand emotions.
-Hypocrisy, veneered with mannerisms, propped with etiquette, pegged up
-with gold, passes for culture and the badge-royal of fine breeding.
-Of such things the girl Garlotte was indeed flagrantly ignorant; she
-had lived in solitudes, and had learnt to comprehend dumb things--the
-cry of a sheep in pain, the mute look from the eyes of a sick lamb.
-Her life had made her quick to see, quick to discover. She had all
-the latent energy of a child, and her senses were the undebauched
-handmaids of an honest heart. She knew nothing of the trivial prides,
-the starched and petty arrogances, the small self-satisfactions, that
-build up the customs of the so-called cultured folk. She thought her
-thoughts, and they were generous ones, mark you, and spoke out on the
-instant without fear, as one whose words were in very truth the audible
-counterpart of the vibrations of her mind.
-
-To Igraine at first there was some embarrassment in the ingenuous
-methods of this child of the forest. It was in measure disturbing to be
-confronted with a pair of blue eyes that looked at one like two pools
-of truth, and a pair of lips that naively remarked: "You seem pale,
-lady, and in pain; you slept little, and talked even when you slept. I
-am rosy and cheerful, and I sleep from dusk till dawn. What is there
-in your heart that is not in mine?" Still, with the abruptness once
-essayed, there was a refreshing sincerity in Garlotte's openness of
-heart. It was as the first plunge into a clear, cool pool--a gasp at
-the first moment, then infinite warmth, intense kindling of all the
-senses, with the clean ripples bubbling at the lips and the swinging
-water buoying up the bosom. Garlotte recalled Lilith--Radamanth's
-daughter--to Igraine, only that she had more penetration, more liberty
-of thought and character. The one was as a warm wind that lulled, the
-other a breeze blowing over open water--clean, invigorating, kind.
-
-Igraine's mood of unrest found refuge in the valley, and in Garlotte's
-cottage. She won some measure of inward calmness in the simple life,
-the simple tasks, that kept the more sinister energies of the mind at
-bay. It contented her for a season with its companionship, its air of
-home, its green quiet and tranquil beauty. Garlotte's cheerfulness of
-soul, like some penetrating essence, suffused itself upon Igraine,
-despite the militant savour of things more turbulent. She fell into
-temporary contentment almost against her will, even as sleep enforces
-itself upon a brain extravagantly possessed by the delirium of fever.
-
-For all the quiet of the place, circumstances were gathering and
-moving down upon her with that ghostly and inevitable fatefulness that
-constitutes true tragedy. No one could have seemed more hidden from the
-eye of fate than she in the deep umbrage of the trees, yet often when
-the heart imagines itself most secure from the factious meddling of the
-world, the far, faint cry of destiny smites on the ear like some sudden
-stirring of a wind at night.
-
-It was late evening, on the fifth day of Igraine's sojourn in the
-valley. The day had been dull, grey, and colourless, wrapped in a blue
-haze of rain that had fallen heavily, drenching the woods and making
-monotonous music on the water. Towards evening the sky had melted to a
-serene azure; the air was a web of shimmering amber, the west streamed
-through a mist of gold, and every leaf glittered with dew. A luminous
-vapour hovered over the little mere, and there were rain pools in the
-meadows that burnt with a hundred sunsets like clear brass.
-
-Garlotte and Igraine had been bathing in the mere. They had come up
-from the water to dry themselves upon a napkin of white cloth, the
-bronze-gold and brown hair of each meeting like twin clouds, while
-their linen lay like snow on the trailing branches of a tree near
-the pool. Their limbs and shoulders gleamed against the silver-black
-mirror spread by the mere; their voices made a mellow sound through the
-valley as they talked. Igraine had fastened her violet surcoat about
-her beneath her breasts; Garlotte's blue smock still hung from a branch
-above her head.
-
-As they sat under the tree, drying their hair and looking over the
-pool to the forest realm beyond, Igraine told the girl much of the
-outer world as she had seen it; nor was her instruction unleavened by a
-certain measure of cynicism--a bitterness that surprised Garlotte not
-a little. The girl had great dreams of the glories of old cities, the
-splendour of court life, the zest of a mere material existence.
-
-"You do not love the great world," she said.
-
-"Once, child, I did. Everything outside a convent wall seemed good
-to me; I thought men heroes, and the world a faerie place; who has
-not! Thoughts change with time: that which I once hungered for, now I
-despise."
-
-"I have never been into a great city, not even into Caerleon. My father
-loved the country and said it was God's pasture."
-
-"I would rather have a dog for a friend than most men, child. Man is
-always thinking of his stomach, his strength, or his passion; he is
-vain, dull, and surly often; takes delight in slaying dumb things;
-drinks beer, and sleeps like a log save for his snoring."
-
-"But Renan doesn't."
-
-"There are some _men_, child, among the swine."
-
-"And the women?"
-
-"I have known good women."
-
-"In the convent?"
-
-"I suppose there they were good, just as stones that lie in the grass
-are good in that they do very little harm."
-
-"But they served God!"
-
-"Mere habit, just as you eat your dinner."
-
-"A hard saying."
-
-"Your sayings would be hard, child, if you had learnt what I have
-learnt of the world."
-
-Garlotte pulled her blue smock from the tree and wrapped it round her
-shoulders.
-
-"But you love God?" she said.
-
-"What is God?"
-
-"The Great Father who loves all things."
-
-"Methinks then I am nothing."
-
-"Nothing, Igraine?"
-
-"You say God loves all men and women. Why, then, have I been cursed
-with perversities ever since I was born, tormented with contradictions,
-baffled, and mocked, till the eternal trivialities of life now make my
-soul sick in my body?"
-
-"Sorrow is heaven sent to chasten, just as rain freshens the leaves."
-
-"Old, old proverb. Rain comes from clouds; clouds hide the sun; how can
-sorrow be good, child, when it darkens the light of life, hides God
-from the heart, and makes the soul bitter?"
-
-"That seems the wrong spirit, Igraine."
-
-"So meek folk say; we are not all mild earth to be smitten and make no
-moan. There are sea-spirits that lash and foam, fire-spirits that leap
-and burn. My spirit is of the flame; am I to be cursed, then, because I
-was born with a soul of fire?"
-
-"We cannot answer all this, Igraine."
-
-"I hate to bow down blindly, to cast ashes on the head because a
-superstition bids us so."
-
-"I have faith!"
-
-"I cannot see with my heart."
-
-"I would you could, Igraine."
-
-"Perhaps you are right."
-
-Garlotte put on her shift and frock with a sigh, and straightway went
-and kissed Igraine on the forehead. They sat close together under the
-tree and watched the valley grow dim as death, and the pool black and
-lustrous as a mirror turned to the twilight. Garlotte's warm heart
-was yearning to Igraine; her arm was close about her, and presently
-Igraine's head rested upon her shoulder. She began to tell the girl
-many things in a still, stifled voice; her bitterness gushed out like
-fermented wine, and for a season she was comforted--with no lasting
-balm indeed, for there was but one soul in the world that could give
-her that.
-
-"Believe, Igraine, believe," said Garlotte very softly.
-
-"Believe--child!"
-
-"That there is good for every one in the world if we wait and watch in
-patience."
-
-"I seem to have watched years go by, and life stretches out from me as
-a sea at night."
-
-"Look not there, Igraine, but into your own heart and into the gold of
-faith."
-
-"I have no heart to look to, child."
-
-"Save into a man's. And it was a good heart."
-
-"Good as a god's."
-
-"Then look into it still."
-
-"You speak like a mother."
-
-They had talked on into the dusk of night, forgetful of time, hearing
-only the dripping from the leaves, seeing nothing but the short stretch
-of water and herbage at their feet. Yet an hour ago a figure in a
-palmer's cloak and cowl had come out from the western forest and stood
-leaning upon its staff, to stare out broodingly over the valley. The
-laurel green of the man's cloak harmonised so magically with the green
-of grass and tree that it was difficult to isolate his figure from the
-framing of wood and meadow.
-
-The pilgrim had stood long in the shadows and watched the two white
-forms come up out of the waters of the pool. He had seen them sit
-and dry their hair under the tree as the dusk crept down. While they
-talked he had passed down towards the cottage, accompliced by the
-trees, slipping from trunk to trunk, to enter the cottage itself while
-the girls' faces were turned from it towards the pool. From one of
-the narrow casements his cowled face had looked out; he had marked
-Igraine's red gold shimmering hair; he had seen her face for a moment,
-also the shield hanging in the room with its cloven heart and white
-lilies, the sword and helmet, the harness of workmanship so subtle.
-When he had seen all this he had stolen out again into the gloaming,
-a thin gliding streak of green under the gnarled thorns and the
-night-bosomed cedars. The forest had taken him to its depths again and
-the unutterable silence of its shades. The girls by the pool had heard
-no sound, nor dreamt of the thing that had been so near, watching like
-a veritable ghost through the mist of the mere's twilight.
-
-Caerleon slept under the moon, a dream city in a land of dreams. Its
-walls were like ivory in a dark gloom of green. The tower of the palace
-of the king caught a coronet from the stars, while in the window of an
-upper room a thin flame flickered like a yellow rose blown athwart the
-black foliage of the night. Within blood-red curtains breathed over the
-arched door; a little altar stood against the eastern wall, guarded
-above by angels haloed with gold, standing in a mist of lilies with
-wings of crimson and green. The silence of the hour seemed embalmed in
-silver--so pure, so still, so hallowed was it.
-
-Uther knelt before the little altar in prayer; the light from the
-single lamp slanted down upon him, but left his face in the shadow.
-It was past midnight, yet the man's head was still bowed down in
-his devotion. He was in an ecstasy of spiritual ascent to heaven, a
-mood that made the world a Patmos, and his own soul a revelation to
-itself. At such a time his imagination could mount with a mystery of
-poetic rapture. Angels drumming on golden bells or bearing diamond
-chalices of purple wine seemed to gaze deep-eyed on him from a paradise
-of snow and amethyst. Above all shone the Eternal Face, that clear
-sun of Christendom shining with wounded love through the crimson
-transgressions of mankind.
-
-Deliberate footfalls and the rustle of a drawn curtain intervened
-between solitude and devotion. The curtain fell again; footfalls echoed
-away to die down into a well of silence; a tall man wrapped in a cloak
-stood motionless in the oratory. Uther, still upon his knees, turned to
-the window and the moonlight, with big prayerful eyes that questioned
-the intruding figure.
-
-"Merlin," he said, with a breath of prophecy.
-
-"Even so, sire."
-
-"I was praying but now for such a thing."
-
-"Sire, pray no longer. I have kept my tryst."
-
-Uther rose up straightway from before the altar and stood before the
-square of the casement. The moonlight made a halo of his hair, and lit
-his face with a whiteness that seemed almost supernatural. Strong as he
-was, his hands shook like aspen leaves; his lips were parted, and his
-eyes wide with the shadow of the night. Merlin stood in the dark angle
-of the room; his voice seemed to come as from a tomb; the single lamp
-flame shook and quivered in a fickle draught.
-
-"Sire, the moon is not yet full."
-
-"And Igraine?"
-
-"Sire."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Suffer me, sire, a moment."
-
-"Speak quickly. God knows, I have prayed like a Samson."
-
-Merlin cast his mantle from him, and stood out in the moonlight wrapped
-in the mystic symbolism of his robe. Sapphire and emerald, ruby and
-sardonyx, flashed with a ghostly gleam in the pale light, and caught
-the moonbeams in their folds. Merlin's thin hands quivered like a spray
-of May blossom waving in the night wind, and his eyes were like the
-eyes of a leopard.
-
-"Sire, thou wert Pelleas once."
-
-"I should remember it."
-
-"Thou art Pelleas again."
-
-"Again?"
-
-"In thy red harness with thy painted shield, thy black horse; take them
-all."
-
-"The past rushes back like dawn."
-
-"Near Caerleon lies a valley."
-
-"There are twenty valleys."
-
-"Go north, sire, in thought. Pass the Cross on Beacon Hill, hold on for
-the Abbey of the Blessed Mary, take to the hills, go by a ruined tower,
-ford Usk, where there is a hermitage. Pass through a waste, cross more
-hills, go down into a valley that runs north and south."
-
-"I follow."
-
-"Go alone, sire."
-
-"Alone."
-
-"The valley is piled steep with forestland. Go down and fear not. In
-the valley's lap lie meadowlands, a pool, a cottage. In that cottage
-you shall find a knight; his armour is gilded gold, his horse a grey,
-his shield shows a cloven heart set amid white lilies. Speak with that
-knight."
-
-"Yet more!"
-
-"Speak with that knight, sire."
-
-"In peace?"
-
-"If you love your soul."
-
-"And Igraine--Merlin, what of her?"
-
-"That knight shall lead you to her. Sire, I have said."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-It was early and a clear dewy morning when Uther rode down alone from
-the palace by a narrow track that curled through the shrubberies
-clothing the palace hill. A generous sky piled its blue dome with
-mountainous clouds that billowed up above the horizon. The laurels
-in the shrubbery flickered their leaves like innumerable scales of
-silver in the sun; amber sun rays slanted through the dense branches of
-the yews, and flashed on the red harness that burnt down the winding
-track. The wind sang, the green larches tossed their 'kerchiefs, in the
-distance the sea glimmered to the white frescoes of the sky.
-
-Uther--Pelleas once more--tossed his spear to the tall trees, and burst
-into the brave swing of a _chant d'amour_. With caracole and flapping
-mane his horse took his lord's humour. It was weather to live and love
-in, weather for red lips and the clouding down of perfumed hair. God
-and the Saints--what a grand thing to be strong, to have a clean heart
-to show to a woman's eyes! What were all the baser fevers of life
-balanced against the splendid madness of a great passion!
-
-Down through Caerleon's streets he rode unknown of any on his tall
-black horse. It was pleasant to be unthroned for once, and to put
-a kingdom from off his shoulders. With what a swing the good beast
-carried him, how the towers and turrets danced in the sun, how bright
-were the eyes of the women who passed him by. All the world seemed
-greener, the sky bluer, the city merrier; the laughter of the children
-in the gutter echoed out of heaven; the old hag who sold golden lemons
-under a beech tree seemed almost a madonna--a being from a better
-world. Uther laughed in his heart, and blessed God and Merlin.
-
-It is one of the rare reflections of philosophy dear to the
-contemplative mind, how joy jostles pain in the world, and pleasure in
-gold and scarlet elbows the grey-cloaked form of grief. Even innocent
-merriment may throw a rose in the face of one who mourns, innocent
-indeed of the desire to mock. The throstle sings in the tree while
-the beggar lies under it dying. So Uther the King flashed hate in the
-eyes of one who watched,--knowing him only that morning as Pelleas
-the knight. In an old play the jealous man saw the devil ride by, and
-promptly followed him on the chance of finding his lost wife, deeming,
-indeed, the devil's guidance propitious for such a quest.
-
-It was the shield that caught Gorlois's eye as he stood on a balcony
-of his house and looked out over Caerleon. The device smote him sudden
-as the lash of a whip. The red harness, the black horse, the painted
-shield, mingled a picture that burnt into his brain with a vividness
-that passed comprehension. He knew well enough to whom such arms should
-belong; had he not carried them fraudulently to his own doubtful
-profit? This knight must be that Pelleas whose past had worked such
-mischief with his own machinations, that Pelleas who had won Igraine
-the novice fresh from the shadow of her convent trees. Gorlois watched
-the man go by with a kind of superhuman envy twisting in him like a
-colic. The smart of it made him stiffen, go pale, gnaw his lip.
-
-If this was the knight Pelleas, what then? Gorlois could not reason
-for the moment; his brain seemed a mass of molten metal in a bowl
-of iron. Convictions settled slowly, hardened and took form. Igraine
-had loved the man Pelleas; Igraine was his wife; he had lost her and
-Brastias also; poison and the sword waited to do their work. Supposing
-then this Pelleas was in quest of Igraine; supposing they had come to
-know each other again; supposing Brastias and Pelleas were one and the
-same man. Hell and furies--what a thought was this! It goaded Gorlois
-into action. He would ride after the man, hunt him, track him, in hope
-of some fragment of the truth. Hazard and hate, blood and battle, these
-were more welcome than chafing within walls as in a cage, or frying on
-a bed as on a gridiron.
-
-Gorlois's voice rang through gallery and hall like a battle-cry.
-
-"Ho, there!--my sword and harness."
-
-There was a grimness in the sound that made those who came to arm him
-bustle for dear life. They knew his black, furious humour, the hand
-that struck like a mace, the tyranny that took blood for trifles. The
-stoutest of them were cowards before that marred and moody face. Be as
-brisk as they would, they were too slow for Gorlois's temper, a temper
-vicious as a wounded bear's.
-
-"God and the Saints--was ever man served by such a pack of
-stiff-fingered fools! The devil take your fumbling. Go and gird up
-harlots, or hold cooking-pots. On with that helmet."
-
-A fellow, very white about the mouth, clapped the casque on, and drew
-a quick breath when the angry eyes withered him no longer. Armlets,
-breastplates, greaves, cuishes, all were on. Gorlois seemed to emit
-fire like metal at white heat. He went clanging down stairway and
-through atrium to the courtyard, where a horseboy held a white charger.
-Gorlois cuffed the lad aside, mounted with a spring, took his spear
-from an esquire, and rode straight for the gate, his horse's hoofs
-sparking fire from the courtyard stones. Half an hour or more had gone
-since Pelleas had passed by on his black horse, and Gorlois spurred at
-a gallop through Caerleon, bent on catching sight of the red knight
-before he should have ridden into the covering masses of the woods.
-
-Pelleas meanwhile rode on like a lad whose first quest led him into the
-infinite romance of the unknown. Woods and waters called; bare night
-and the blink of the stars summoned up that strangeness in life that
-is like wine to the heart of the strong and the brave. He was young
-again--young in the first glory of arms; the world shone glamoured as
-of old as he turned from the high-road to a bridle-track that led up
-through woods towards the north.
-
-Holding on at a level pace he passed the woods and saw them rolling
-back like a green cataract towards the sea. Bare hills saluted him;
-the beacon height with its great wooden cross stood out against the
-sky; mile on mile of wooded land billowed out before him, clouded with
-a blue haze where the domes of the trees rose innumerably rank on
-rank. The Abbey of the Holy Mary lay low in meadows on his left, its
-fish pools shimmering in the sun, its orchards densely green about its
-walls. Two leagues or more of wood and wild, a climb over hills, a long
-descent, and Usk again shone out trailing distant in the hollows. A
-crumbling tower stood up above the trees. Pelleas passed close to it,
-giving antiquity due reverence as was his custom, looking up at its
-ivied walls, its crown of gillyflowers, its windows wistful as a blind
-man's eyes. Another mile and Usk ran at his feet. A hermitage stood
-by the ford. Pelleas gave the good man a piece of silver and besought
-his prayers before he rode down and splashed through the river to the
-further bank. Heathland and scrub rolled to the east, merging into the
-blue swell of a low line of hills. It was wild country enough, haunted
-by snipe and crested plover, an open solitude that swept into a purple
-streak against the northern sky.
-
-It was noon before Pelleas had made an end of its shadeless glare
-and taken to the hills that rose gently towards the east. His red
-harness moving over the green was lost to Gorlois, who had missed the
-trail long ago in the woods beyond St. Mary's. It was dusk when the
-Cornishman came guided to the ford, and learnt from the hermit there
-that the chase lay across Usk and eastward over the heath. Gorlois
-gave the man no piece of silver, only a savage curse to gag his
-alms-seeking. Night came and caught him in the open, and rather than
-wander astray in the dark he spent the night under a whin bush, calming
-his incontinent temper as best he might.
-
-An hour past noon Pelleas stood on the last hill slope and looked down
-upon the massed woodland at his feet. Here at last was Merlin's valley
-choked up with trees--a green lake of foliage that rippled from ridge
-to ridge. Pelleas, with the sun at his back, stood and looked down on
-it with a kind of quiet awe. So Godfrey and his knights looked down
-upon the holy city, so Dante saw Beatrice in his vision, and Cortez
-gazed at the Pacific in the west. Pelleas had taken his helmet from
-his head and hung it at his saddle-bow; there was a grand hunger on
-his face, a passionate calm, as he abode on the hill top with his tall
-spear a black streak against the sun.
-
-Mystery waved him on to the great oaks whose tops rose like green
-flames to the blue of the sky. Could Igraine be in this valley? Would
-he set eyes on her that day, and see the bronze gloss of her hair go
-shimmering through some woodland gallery? It was nigh upon a year since
-he had seen her. It had been summer then, and it was summer now; his
-heart was singing as it had sung on that mere island when Igraine had
-looked into his eyes under the cedar tree. He had borne much, endured
-much, since then; time had hallowed memory and shed a crimson lustre
-over the past. Manwise, for the great love that was in him, he almost
-feared to look on her again lest she should have changed in face or in
-heart. Great God, what a thought was that! It had never smitten him
-before. Stiffened by his own strong constancy, he had dowered Igraine
-with equal loyalty of soul, nor had considered the lapse of time and
-the crumbling power of hours. The thought brought a dew of sweat to his
-forehead and made him cold even in the sun. No, honour to God, the girl
-had a heart to be trusted, or he had never loved her as he did!
-
-Shaking the bridle, he rode down into the murk of the trees. He had to
-slant his spear and to bow his head often as the great boughs swooped
-to the ground. The dim glamour of the place had a sinister effect upon
-his mind; it solemnised him, touched the spiritual chords of his heart,
-uncovered the somewhat gloomy groundwork of philosophy that lay deep
-under the fabric of religious habit. Merlin had told a tale and nothing
-more. God's blessings were not man's blessings, God's ways not man's
-ways. Pelleas had learnt to look for what he might have called the
-contradictions of divine charity. We are smitten when we pray for a
-blessing, chided when desirous of comfort. Life would seem at times a
-gigantic tyranny for the creation of patience. Pelleas remembered the
-past, and kept his hopes and desires well in hand.
-
-Betimes he judged himself not far from the bottom of the valley, for
-through gaps in the foliage overhead he could see the woods on the
-further slope towering up magnificently to touch the sky. Still further
-the long galleries of the wood arched out upon grassland gemmed with
-summer flowers. Showers of sunlight told of an open sky. He was soon
-out of the shadows and standing under the wooelshawe, with the dale
-Merlin had pictured stretching north and south before his eyes.
-
-The scene smiled up at him from its bath of sunlight--the green meadows
-flecked white, blue, and gold, the diverse foliage of the trees, the
-little pool smooth as crystal, the solemn barriers of the surrounding
-woods. He looked first of all for the cottage built of timber, and
-could not see it for its overshadowing trees. None the less, by the
-pool a girl in a blue smock stood looking up towards him, her face
-showing oval white from her loosened hair. Pelleas held his breath for
-the moment, then saw well enough that it was not Igraine. Meanwhile the
-figure in blue had disappeared as though in fear of him; he could no
-longer see the girl from where he watched on the edge of the wood.
-
-Riding out, he sallied down through the long grass with its haze of
-flowers, his eyes turned with a steadfast eagerness to the pool in the
-meadows. His impatience grew with every step, but he was outwardly cool
-as any veteran. First the brown thatch of the cottage came into view,
-then the blue smock of the girl who stood by the porch and watched.
-Last of all Pelleas saw a gleam of armour through the gloom of a cedar
-tree, heard the neigh of a horse, the jar of a swinging shield. The
-sight made his heart beat more briskly than ever ghost or goblin could
-have done. Pushing through the trees he came full upon a knight mounted
-on a grey horse, who was advancing towards him bearing on his shield
-the cognisance of a cloven heart.
-
-The knight on the grey horse reined in and abode stone still in the
-meadows, the sunlight flashing on his helmet and such points of his
-harness uncovered by his surcoat. Pelleas as he rode down took stock
-of the stranger with an eagerness that was half jealous maugre his
-perspicuity of soul. What had this splendid gentleman to do with
-Igraine the novice? Truth to tell, Pelleas would rather have had some
-humbler person to serve as guide on such a quest.
-
-The knight on the grey horse never budged a foot. Pelleas saw that he
-carried no spear and that his sword was safe in his scabbard. This
-looked like peace. Drawing up some three paces away, he scanned the
-strange knight over from head to foot, voted him a passable man, and
-admired his armour. And since his whole soul was set on a certain
-subject, he made no delay over courteous generalities, but came at once
-to the point at issue.
-
-"Greeting, sir; I have ridden from Caerleon to speak with you."
-
-The knight in the violet surcoat swayed in the saddle as though shaken
-by a spear thrust on his painted shield. Pelleas noted that both his
-hands were tangled up in the grey horse's mane, though nothing could be
-seen of the face behind the fixed vizor of the helmet. A voice, husky,
-toneless, feeble, answered him after a moment's silence.
-
-"What would you with me, knight of the red shield?"
-
-"There is a lady whose name is Igraine; I seek her. I have been
-forewarned that a knight lodging in this valley has knowledge of her,
-and you, messire, seem to be that knight."
-
-"That is the truth," quoth the cracked, husky voice from the helmet.
-
-Pelleas considered a moment and held his peace. There was something
-strange about this knight, something tragical, something that touched
-the heart. Pelleas's instinct for superb miseries took hold of him with
-a queer, twisting grip that made him shudder. His dark eyes smouldered
-as he watched the strange knight, and gave voice to the grim thought
-that lay heavy on his mind.
-
-"The lady is not dead?"
-
-"No," said the husky voice with blunt brevity.
-
-"And she is well fortuned?"
-
-"Passably."
-
-"Thank God," said Pelleas.
-
-There was a dry sob in the brazen helmet, but Pelleas never heard the
-sound. He was staring into the woods with large, luminous eyes, and a
-half smile on his lips, as though his thoughts pleased him.
-
-"Is the Lady Igraine far from hence?" he asked presently.
-
-"If you will follow me, my lord, I can bring you to her in less than an
-hour."
-
-Pelleas flushed red to the forehead, his dark eyes beamed. He looked a
-god of a man as he sat bareheaded on his black horse, his face aglow
-like the face of a martyr. The Knight of the Cloven Heart looked at
-him, flapped his bridle, and rode on.
-
-Pelleas said never a word as they passed up the valley. There were deep
-thoughts in his heart, yearnings, and ecstasies of prayer that held
-him in a stupor of silence. His was a grandeur of mind that grew the
-grander for the majesty of passion. There was no blurting of questions,
-no gabbling of news, no chatter, no flurry. Like a mountain he was
-towering, sable-browed, impenetrable, while the thunder of suspense
-lasted. The knight on the grey horse watched him narrowly with a white
-look under his helmet that was infinitely plaintive.
-
-At the northern end of the valley, on the very edge of the forest,
-stood a thicket of gnarled thorns still smothered with the snow of
-early summer. The Knight of the Cloven Heart drew rein in the long
-grass and pointed Pelleas to these white pavilions under the near
-umbrage of the oaks.
-
-"Look yonder," said the voice.
-
-Pelleas answered with a stare.
-
-"Would you see your lady?"
-
-"Be careful how you jest, my friend."
-
-"I jest not, Uther Pendragon. Get you down and tether your horse; go in
-amid yon trees and look into the forest. I swear on the cross you shall
-see what you desire."
-
-Pelleas gave the knight a long look, said nothing, dismounted, threw
-the bridle over a bough. Then he thrust his spear into the ground and
-went bareheaded in among the trees. Standing under the shadow of a
-great oak, he peered long into the glooms, saw nothing living but a
-rabbit feeding in the grass.
-
-Suddenly a voice called to him.
-
-"Pelleas, Pelleas."
-
-It was a wondrous cry, clear and plaintive, yet tremulous with feeling.
-It rang through the woods like silver, bringing back the picture of a
-solemn beech wood under moonlight, and a girl tied naked to the trunk
-of a tree. A great lustre of awe swept over Pelleas's face; his eyes
-were big and luminous as the eyes of a blind man; he groped with his
-hands as he passed back under the May trees to the valley.
-
-In the long grass stood a woman in armour, her helmet thrown aside, and
-her red gold hair pouring marvellous in the sunlight over her violet
-surcoat. Her head was thrown back so as to show the full sweep of her
-shapely throat; her face was very pale under her parted hair, while
-her lids drooped over eyes that seemed to swim with unshed tears. Her
-hands, slightly outstretched, quivered as with a shuddering impulse
-from her heart, and her half-parted lips looked as though they were
-moulded to breathe forth a moan.
-
-Pelleas stood and stared at her as a dead man might look at God. He
-drew near step by step, his face white as Igraine's, his eyes as deep
-with desire as hers. Neither of them said a word, but stood and looked
-into each other's faces as into heaven--awed, solemnised, silenced.
-Above them towered the green woods; the meadows rippled from them with
-their broidery of flowers; the scent of the white May swept fragrant on
-the air. Solitude was with them, and the mild smile of Nature glimmered
-with the sunlight over the trees.
-
-Igraine spoke first.
-
-"Pelleas," was all she said.
-
-The man gave a great sob, fell on his knees, and would have kissed her
-surcoat. Igraine bent down to him with eyes that shone like two deep
-wells of love. Both her hands were upon Pelleas's shoulders, his face
-was turned to hers.
-
-"Kneel not to me."
-
-"Igraine."
-
-"Pelleas."
-
-"Let me touch you."
-
-"There, there, you have my hand."
-
-"My God, my God!"
-
-Igraine gave a low cry, half knelt, half fell before him. Pelleas's
-arms caught her, his face hung over hers, her hair fell down and
-trailed a golden pool upon the grass. She put her hands up and touched
-his hair, smiled wonderfully, and looked at him as though she were
-dying.
-
-"Kiss me, Pelleas."
-
-Pelleas drew a deep breath; his body seemed to quake; his whole soul
-was sucked up by the girl's lips.
-
-"Igraine," was all he said.
-
-Her face blazed, her hands clung about his neck.
-
-"Again, again."
-
-"My God, have I not prayed for this!"
-
-His eyes were large and wonderful to look upon. There was such awe and
-love in them that an angel might have looked thus upon the Christ and
-have earned no reproach. Igraine kissed his lips, crept close into his
-bosom, hid her face, and wept.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-When Igraine had ended her tears, and grown calm and quiet, Pelleas
-took her hand and led her to a grass bank painted thick with flowers
-that sloped to the white boughs of a great May tree. He was radiant in
-his manhood, and his eyes burnt for her with such a splendour of pride
-and tenderness that she trembled in thought for the secret she had kept
-from him in her heart. He could know nothing of Gorlois, or he would
-not have come thus to her. The mocking face of fate leered at her like
-a satyr out of the shadows, yet with the joy of the moment she put the
-thoughts aside and lived on the man's lips and the great love that
-brimmed for her in his eyes.
-
-Pelleas sat in the long grass at her feet and looked up at her as at
-a saint. Never had she seen such glory of happiness on human face,
-never such manhood deified by the holier instincts of the heart. The
-sheer strength of his devotion carried her above her cares and made her
-content to live for the present, and to gird time with the girdle of an
-hour.
-
-"You are no nun, Igraine?"
-
-She smiled at him and shook her head.
-
-"No, no, Pelleas."
-
-"Would to God you had told me that a year ago."
-
-"Would to God I had."
-
-"It would have saved much woe."
-
-Igraine hung her head. The man's words were prophetic in their
-honest ignorance, and the whole tale had almost rushed from her that
-moment but for a certain selfishness that held her mute, a fear that
-overpowered her. She knew the fibre of Pelleas's soul. To tell him the
-truth would mean to call his honour to arms against his love, and she
-dreaded that thought as she dreaded death.
-
-"I was a fool, Pelleas," she said, with a queer intensity of tone that
-made the man look quickly into her eyes.
-
-"You did not know."
-
-"Pardon, Pelleas, I knew your soul, how true and strong it was. God
-knows I tried you to the end, and bitter truth it proved to me. If you
-had only waited."
-
-"Ah, Igraine."
-
-"Only a night; you would have had the truth at dawn."
-
-"I struggled for your soul and for mine, as I thought."
-
-"Yes, yes, you chose the nobler part, thinking me a mere woman, a frail
-thing blown about by my own passion. I loved you, Pelleas, for the
-deed, though it nigh brought me to my death."
-
-"God knows I honoured you, Igraine."
-
-"Too well; it had been better for us both if you had been more human."
-
-There was an anguish of regret in her voice, a plaintive accusation
-that made Pelleas wince to the core. He bent down and kissed her hand
-as it lay in her lap, then looked into her face with a mute appeal that
-brought her to the verge of tears.
-
-"Courage, courage, dear heart."
-
-"God bless you, Igraine."
-
-"I am very glad of your love."
-
-"Come now, tell me how the year has passed."
-
-Igraine held his hand in hers and began to twist her hair about his
-wrist into a bracelet of gold. Her eyes faltered from his, and were hot
-and heavy with an inward misery of thought. The man's words wounded her
-at every turn, and in his innocence he shook her happiness as a wind
-shakes a tree.
-
-"There is little I can tell you," she said.
-
-"Every hour is as gold to me."
-
-"Would I had them lying in my lap."
-
-"We are young yet, Igraine."
-
-There was a joyousness in his voice that sounded to the girl like a
-blow struck upon empty brass, or like the laugh of a child through a
-ruined house. His rich optimism mocked her to the echo.
-
-"I took refuge in Winchester," she began, "with Radamanth my uncle, and
-lodged there many months. I watched for you and waited, but got no news
-of a knight named Pelleas. Week by week as my knowledge grew I began to
-think and think, to piece fragments together, to dream in my heart. I
-longed to see this Uther of whom all Britain talked. Ah, you remember
-the cross, Pelleas, which you left at my feet?"
-
-Pelleas smiled. She put her hand into her bosom with a little blush of
-pride and looked into the man's eyes.
-
-"I have it here still," she said, "where it has hung these many months.
-This scrap of gold first taught me to look for Uther."
-
-"Ah, Igraine, am I a king!"
-
-"My king, sire. And oh! how long it was before I could get news of
-you; yet in time tidings came. Then it was that I left Winchester,
-went on foot through the land, and hearing again of you I set out for
-Wales and Caerleon with rumours of war in my ears. Even from Caerleon
-I followed you, even to the western sea, where I saw the great battle
-with Gilomannius, and the noble deeds you did there for Britain."
-
-Pelleas's dark eyes flashed up to hers. A man loves to be noble in deed
-before the face of the woman he serves, a species of divine vanity that
-begets heroes. The girl's staunch faith was a thing that proffered the
-superbest flattery.
-
-"You are very wonderful, Igraine."
-
-"It was all for my own heart; and what greater joy could I have than to
-see you a king before the thundering swords of your knights."
-
-"You saw that, Igraine?"
-
-"Do you remember a hillock by the pine forest on the ridge, where you
-reined in after the charge and uncovered your head to the sun?"
-
-"As it were yesterday."
-
-"I stood on that hillock, Pelleas, and saw your face after many months."
-
-"Ah, Igraine, said I not you were very wonderful?"
-
-"No, no, I am only a woman, only a woman."
-
-"God give me such a wife."
-
-The word was keen as the barb of a lance. Pelleas's head was bowed over
-the girl's hand as he pressed his lips to the gold circlet of hair, and
-he did not see the frown of pain upon her face. Wife! What a mockery,
-what bitterness! The sky seemed black for a moment, the valley bare
-with the blasts of winter and the moan of tortured trees. She half
-choked in her throat, and her heart seemed to fail within her like a
-bowl that is broken. Yet there was a smile on her face when Pelleas
-looked up from the circlet of her hair with the pride of love in his
-large eyes.
-
-"What ails you, Igraine?"
-
-"A mere thought of the past."
-
-"Tell it me."
-
-"No, no, it is a nothing, a mere vapour, and it has passed. How warm
-your lips are to my fingers. Tell me of yourself, Pelleas."
-
-"But this armour, Igraine?"
-
-"I took it from a dead knight, God rest his soul. I have wandered long
-in Wales, yet ever drew to Caerleon where folk spoke your name, yet
-never might I come near you, lest--lest you were too great for me."
-
-"Child, child!"
-
-"Uther Pendragon, King of Britain!"
-
-"Let the world die."
-
-"And let us live; Pelleas, tell me of yourself."
-
-The man looked long over the valley in silence. His face was very
-grave, and his eyes were deep with thought as though the past awed him
-with the recollection of its bitterness.
-
-"May I never pass such another night," he said.
-
-The words were curt and calm enough as though leaving infinite things
-unsaid. Igraine sat silent by him and still plaited her hair about his
-wrist.
-
-"I went away in the dark, for I thought you were a nun, Igraine, and
-I would not break your vows. I was nearly blind for an hour. Twice my
-horse stumbled and fell with me in the woods, and once I was smitten
-out of the saddle by a tree. Dawn came, and how I cursed the sun. I
-seemed to see your face everywhere, and to hear your voice in every
-sound. Days came and went, and I hated the sight of man; as for my
-prayers, I could not say them, and I was dumb in my heart towards God.
-I rode north into the wilds, and into the fenlands of the east. Strange
-things befell me in many places. I fought often, beast and wild men and
-robber ruffians out of the woods. Fighting pleased me; it eased the
-wrath in my heart that seemed to rage up against the world, and against
-all things that drew breath. I wandered in the night of the forests,
-waded through swamps, took my food by the sword, and never blessed man
-or woman. I felt bitter and evil to the core."
-
-Igraine bent down and touched his forehead with her lips.
-
-"Brave heart," she said.
-
-"You shall hear how I came by my own soul again."
-
-"Ah, tell me that."
-
-"It was as though a still voice came to me out of heaven. I was riding
-in the northern wilds not far from rough coastland and the sea, and
-riding, came upon a little house of timber all bowered round with
-trees. It was a peaceful spot, flowers grew around, and the sun was
-shining, and I drew near, moved in my heart to beg food and rest, for
-I was half starved and gaunt as a monk from an African desert. What
-did I see there? A dead man tied to a tree and gored with many wounds;
-a woman kneeling dead before his feet, thrust through with a sword; a
-little child lying near with its head crushed by a stone or a club. The
-sword was a Saxon sword, and I knew who had done the deed; but sight
-of the dead folk by their empty home seemed to smite my pity like the
-thought of the dead Christ. I had pitied but myself and you, Igraine,
-and had wandered through the land like a brute beast mad with the
-smart of my own wound. Here was woe enough, agony enough, to shame my
-heart. Straightway I went down on my knees and prayed, and came through
-penitence and fire to a knowledge of myself. 'Rise up,' said the voice
-in me, 'rise up and play the man. There is much sorrow in Britain, much
-shedding of innocent blood, much violence, and much brute wrath. Rise
-up and strike for woman and for babe, let your sword shine against the
-wolves from over the sea, let your shield hurl them from the ruined
-hearths of Britain, the smoking churches, and the children of the
-cross.' So I rose up strong again and comforted, and rode back into the
-world to do my duty."
-
-When Pelleas had made an end of speaking, Igraine's eyes were full of
-tears. The simplicity of the man's words had awakened to the full all
-the pathos of the past in her, and she was as proud of him as when she
-saw him hurl Gilomannius and his host down the green slopes towards the
-sea. Her lips quivered as she spoke to him--looking into his face with
-her eyes dim and shadowy with tears.
-
-"Forgive me all this."
-
-"It has been good for me, Igraine, nor would I alter the days that are
-gone."
-
-"No, no."
-
-"We have found love again."
-
-"Ah, Pelleas!"
-
-"What more need we ask?"
-
-"What more?"
-
-Her voice was half a wail. Again it was winter, and the wind blew as
-though at midnight; the flowers and the green woods were blurred before
-the girl's eyes. Gorlois's hard face and the grey walls of Tintagel
-came betwixt her and the summer. And, though the mood lasted but for a
-moment, it seemed like the long agony of days crushed into the compass
-of a minute.
-
-Evening stood calm-eyed in the east. A tranquil heat hung over wood
-and valley, a warm silence that seemed to bind the world into a golden
-swoon. Not a ripple stirred in the grass with its tapestries of
-flowers; every leaf was hushed upon the bough; nothing moved save the
-droning bee and the wings of the butterflies hovering colour-bright
-over the meadows. The sky was a mighty sapphire, the woods carved
-emeralds piled giantwise to the sun. There was no discord and no sound
-of man, as though the curse of Adam was not yet.
-
-Igraine had drawn Pelleas's great sword from its sheath. She held it
-slantwise before her, and pressed her lips to the cold steel.
-
-"Old friend," she said, "be ever true to me."
-
-Pelleas laughed and touched her hair with his hand. A kind of
-exaltation came upon them, and the zest of life crept through the
-bodies like green sap in spring. Igraine had filled her brazen helmet
-to the brim with flowers, and she scattered them and sang as they
-roamed into the hoar shadows of the woods:--
-
- "Dear love of mine,
- Where art thou roaming?
- The west is red,
- My heart is calling."
-
-Never had the vaults seemed greener, the half light more mysterious
-under the massive trees. The far world was out of ken; they alone lived
-and had their being; the toil of man was not even like the long sob of
-a moonlit sea, or the sound of rivers running in the night.
-
-The infinite strangeness of beauty shone over them like a wizard light
-out of the west. Igraine's lips were very red, her face white in the
-shadows, her eyes deep with mute desire. Hand held hand, body touched
-body. Often she would lie out upon Pelleas's arm, her head upon his
-shoulder, her hair clouding over his red harness. They were content
-to be together, to forget the world save so much of it as came within
-the ken of their eyes, and the close grip of their twined fingers.
-They said little as they swayed together under the trees. Soul ebbed
-into soul upon their lips, and a deep ecstasy possessed them like the
-throbbing pathos of some song.
-
-As the day deepened Pelleas and Igraine turned back into the valley,
-hand in hand. The west burnt gold above the tree tops, the gnarled
-trunks were pillars of agate bearing Byzant domes of breathless leaves.
-By the white May trees the two horses stood tethered, black and grey
-against the grass. Loosing them, and taking each a bridle, they passed
-down through flowers to the cottage and the pool.
-
-Garlotte met them there with her brown hair pouring over her shoulders,
-and a clean white kerchief over her throat and bosom. She came to
-them through a little thicket of fox-gloves that were budding early,
-white and purple. Her blue eyes quivered for a moment over Pelleas's
-face as she made him a deep curtsey, and bent to kiss Igraine's hand.
-There was a vast measure of sympathy in Garlotte's heart, and yet for
-all her well-wishing she was troubled for the two, fearing for them
-instinctively with even her small knowledge of the world. She had
-learnt enough from Igraine to comprehend in measure that element of
-tragedy that had entered with Gorlois into her life. Her interest in
-the man Pelleas was no mere vulgar curiosity, rather an intense pity
-that permeated her warm innocence of spirit to the core.
-
-She had spread supper on the table, a much meditated feast that had
-kept her eagerly busy since she had guessed the name of the strange
-knight who had ridden down out of the woods. She had the pride of a
-young housewife in her creamy milk, her bread. She had made a tansy
-cake, and there was a rich cream cheese ready in the cupboard, and a
-fat rabbit stewing by the fire. Yet for all her ingenuous pride she
-felt much troubled when it came to the test lest her fare should seem
-rude and meagre to the great knight in the red harness. Certainly he
-had a kind face and splendid eyes, but would he not smile at her humble
-supper, her horn cups, and her plates of hollywood? Her cares were
-empty enough, but they were very real to the sensitive child who feared
-to seem shamed before Igraine.
-
-Half the happiness of life lies in the kindly sensibility of others
-to our desire for sympathy. A surly word, a trivial ungraciousness,
-a small deed passed over in thankless silence, how much these things
-mean to a sensitive heart! Garlotte, standing in her cottage door, half
-shy and timid, found her small fears mere little goblins of her own
-invention. Igraine, radiant as the evening, came and kissed her on the
-lips.
-
-"Little sister, you have been very good to me."
-
-The great knight too was smiling at her in quite a fatherly fashion.
-What a strong face he had, and what a noble look; she felt sure that he
-was a good man, and her heart went out to him like an opening flower.
-When he took her hand, and a lock of her hair and kissed it, she went
-red as one of her own roses, and was dumb with an impulsive gladness.
-
-"Little sister, you have been very good to me."
-
-"Good, my lord, to you!"
-
-"Child, Igraine can tell you how."
-
-"But the Lady Igraine, she saved my life!"
-
-"Ah, I had not heard that. Tell me."
-
-Garlotte found her ease in a moment. The whole tale came bubbling up
-like water out of a spring. Pelleas's strong face beamed; he touched
-Igraine's hair with his fingers and looked into her eyes as only a
-man in love can look. Garlotte saw that she was giving pleasure, and
-felt a glow from head to heart. Surely this great, grave-faced knight
-was a noble soul; how gentle he was, and how he looked into Igraine's
-eyes and bent over her like a tall elm over a slim cypress tree. She
-caught the happiness of the two, and from that moment her heart was
-singing and she had no more fear for herself and her poor cottage. Even
-the horn cups took a golden dignity, and her tansy cake and her cream
-seemed fit for a prince.
-
-The three were soon at supper together round the wooden table, with
-honeysuckle and roses climbing close above their heads. Garlotte would
-have stood and waited on Pelleas and Igraine, but they would have none
-of it; so she was set smiling at the head of her little table, and
-constrained to play the lady under her own roof. It was a dull meal so
-far as mere words were concerned. Pelleas's eyes were on Igraine in
-the twilight, and he had no hunger save hunger of heart; yet that the
-supper was a success there was no doubt whatever. Garlotte watched them
-both with a quiet delight; young as she was she was wise in the simple
-love of love, and so she mothered the pair to her heart's content in
-her own imagination. If only Renan had been there to help her serve,
-and touch her hand under the table, what a perfect guest-hour it would
-have been.
-
-When the meal was over she jumped up with a shy smile, took a rush
-basket from the wall, and went out into the garden. Igraine called her
-back.
-
-"Where are you going, child?"
-
-"Up the valley to the dead oak tree where herbs grow. I must make a
-stew to-morrow."
-
-"It will soon be dark."
-
-Garlotte swung her basket and laughed from her cloud of hair.
-
-"You gathered herbs on Sunday, Igraine."
-
-"You squirrel!"
-
-"Renan was here; you came home after dusk; good-by, good-by."
-
-They heard her go singing through the garden, a soft _chant d'amour_
-that would have gone wondrously to flute and cithern. It died away
-slowly amid the trees like an elf's song coming from woodlands in the
-moonlight. Pelleas drew a deep breath and listened in the shadow of
-the room with his hands clasped before him on the table. He looked as
-though he were praying. Igraine's eyes were glooms of violet mystery as
-she watched him, her hands folded over a breast that rose and fell as
-with the restless motion of a troubled sea. She called the man softly
-by name; her body bent to him like a bow, her hair bathed his face with
-dim ripples of gold as mouth touched mouth.
-
-They went out into the garden together and stood under the cedar tree.
-
-"Pelleas, my love, my own."
-
-"Heart of mine."
-
-"You will never leave me?"
-
-"How should the sea put the earth from his bosom, or the moon pass from
-the arms of the night?"
-
-"I am faint, Pelleas; hold me in your arms."
-
-"They are strong, Igraine."
-
-"There, let me rest so, for ever. Look, the stars are coming out, and
-there is the moon flooding silver over the trees. My lips burn, and I
-am faint."
-
-"Courage, courage, dear heart."
-
-"How close you hold me! I could die so."
-
-"What is death to us, Igraine?"
-
-"Or life?"
-
-"God in heaven, and heaven on earth."
-
-"Your words hurt me."
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-How the birds sang that evening as a saffron afterglow fainted over the
-forest spires, and when all was still with the hush of night how the
-cry of a nightingale thrilled from a tree near the cottage!
-
-The glamour of the day had passed, and now what mockery and bitterness
-came with the cold, calculating face of the moon. Igraine tossed and
-turned in her bed like one taken with a fever; her brain seemed afire,
-her hair like so much flame about her forehead. As she lay staring
-with wide, wakeful eyes, the birds' song mocked her to the echo, the
-scent of honeysuckle and rose floated in like a sad savour of death,
-and the moonlight seemed to watch her without a quaver of pity. Her
-heart panted in the darkness; she was torn by the thousand torments
-of a troubled conscience, wounded to tears, yet her eyes were dry and
-waterless as a desert. Gorlois's face seemed to glare down at her out
-of the idle gloom, and she could have cried out with the fear that lay
-like an icy hand over her bosom.
-
-Pelleas slept under the cedar tree, wrapped in an old cloak, relic of
-Garlotte's father. How Igraine's heart wailed for the man, how she
-longed for the touch of his hand! God of heaven, she could not let him
-go again, and starve her soul with the old cursed life. His lips had
-touched hers, his arms had held her close, she had felt the warmth of
-his body and the beating of his heart. Was all this nothing--a dream,
-a splendid phantasm to be rent away like a crimson cloud? Was she to
-be Gorlois's wife and nothing more, a bitter flower growing under a
-gallows, sour wine frothing in a gilded cup?
-
-God of heaven, no! What had the world done for her that she should obey
-its edicts and suffer for its tyrannies? Gorlois had cheated her of her
-liberty, let him pay the price to the fates; what honour, indeed, had
-she to preserve for him? If he was a brute piece of lust, a tyrant,
-a demagogue, so much the better, it would ease her conscience. She
-owed no fealty, no marriage vow, to Gorlois. Her body was no more his
-than was her soul, and a dozen priests and a dozen masses might as
-well marry granite to fire. How could a fool in a cape and frock by
-gabbling a service bind an irresponsible woman to a man she hated more
-than the foulest mud in the foulest alley? It was a stupendous piece
-of nonsense, to say the least of it. No God calling himself a just God
-could hold such a bargain holy.
-
-And then--the truth! What a stumbling-block truth was on occasions!
-She knew Pelleas's intense love of honour, the fine sensibility of his
-conscience, the strong thirst for the highest good, that made him the
-victim of an ethical tyranny. If he had left her after Andredswold
-because he thought her a nun, what hope now had she of holding him if
-he knew her to be a wife? And yet for all her love she could not bring
-herself to keep him wholly from the truth. For all her passion and the
-fire in her rebellious heart she was not a woman who could fling reason
-to the winds, and stifle up her conscience with a kiss. Besides, she
-loved Pelleas to the very zenith of her soul. To have a lie understood
-upon her lips, to be shamed before the man's eyes, were things that
-scourged her in fancy even more than the thought of losing him. She
-trembled when she thought how he might look at her in later days if a
-passive lie were proven against her with open shame.
-
-But to tell him of Gorlois, and the humiliation of that darkest hour
-of her life! Could such a man as Pelleas serve her longer after such a
-confession? He would become a king again, a stranger, a man set in high
-places far beyond the mere yearning of a woman's white face. And yet,
-it was possible that his love might prove stronger than his reason; it
-was possible that he might front the world and frown down the petty
-judgments of men. Glorious and transcendent sacrifice! She could face
-calumny beside him as a rock faces the froth of waves; she could look
-Gorlois in the eyes, and know neither shame nor pity.
-
-Her mood that night was like the passage of a blown leaf, tossed up to
-heaven, whirled over the tree tops, driven down again into the mire.
-Strong woman that she was, her very strength made the struggle more
-indecisive and more racking. She could not renounce Pelleas for the
-great love she bore him, and yet she could not will to play a false
-part by reason of this same great love. Her soul, like a wanderer in
-the wilds, halted and wavered between two tracks that led forward into
-the unknown.
-
-Garlotte was sleeping in the far corner of the cottage. The girl
-had given up her bed to Igraine, who envied her her quiet, restful
-breathing as she lay and listened. In her doubt she called and woke
-Garlotte from her sleep, hardly knowing indeed what she desired to say
-to her, yet half fearful of lying alone longer in the night with her
-own thoughts for company. Garlotte rose up and came across the room to
-the bigger bed. She knelt down; two warm arms crept under the coverlet,
-and a soft cheek touched Igraine's.
-
-"Why are you awake, Igraine?"
-
-The warmth of the girl's body, her quiet breathing, the sweep of her
-hair, seemed to bring a scent of peace and human sympathy into the
-moonlit room. Igraine put her arms about her, and drew her down to her
-side. Their white faces and clouding hair lay close together on the
-pillow.
-
-"You are in trouble, Igraine?"
-
-"How should I be in trouble?"
-
-"You breathe like one in pain, and your voice is strange."
-
-"Hush, Garlotte."
-
-"Am I not right?"
-
-"Pelleas must not hear us talking."
-
-They were silent awhile, lying in each other's arms with no sound
-save that of their breathing. Igraine's misery burnt in her and cried
-out for sympathy; Garlotte, half wise by instinct, yearned to share a
-trouble which she did not wholly comprehend, to advise where she was
-partly ignorant. The girl felt a great stirring of her heart towards
-Igraine, but could say nothing for the moment. Having no better
-eloquence at command she raised her head and kissed the other's lips, a
-warm, impulsive kiss that seemed as rich in sympathy as a rose in scent.
-
-Igraine's confidence woke at the touch of the girl's lips; she hungered
-even for this child's comfort, her simple guidance in this matter of
-life and love. It was easy enough to die, hard to exist as a mere
-spiritless Galatea devoid of soul.
-
-"Garlotte!"
-
-"Yes, Igraine."
-
-"Imagine that you were married to a man you hated, and you loved Renan."
-
-Garlotte raised herself in bed.
-
-"And Renan loved you and knew nothing?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Would you tell Renan the truth?"
-
-Garlotte remained motionless, propped on her two hands, and looking
-out of the window into the streaming moonlight. Her brown hair touched
-Igraine's face as she lay still and watched her. The room was very
-silent, not a breeze seemed stirring, the roses athwart the window were
-still as though carved in wood.
-
-Garlotte spoke very softly, looking up with her face white and solemn
-in the moonlight.
-
-"I should tell Renan," she said.
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Because I love him."
-
-"Yes--go on."
-
-"I should not love him rightly in God's eyes if I kept him from the
-truth."
-
-The coverlet rose and fell over Igraine's bosom, and there was a queer
-twisting pain at her heart.
-
-"But if you were never to see Renan again?" she said.
-
-"If I told him the truth?"
-
-"Yes, child."
-
-Garlotte dared not look into Igraine's face; her lips were twitching,
-and her eyes were hot with tears.
-
-"I do not know," she faltered.
-
-"Think, child, think!"
-
-"I should not tell him."
-
-In half a breath she had contradicted herself with a little gasp.
-
-"Yes, yes, I should tell him."
-
-"The truth?"
-
-"Because I should not be happy even with him if I were acting a lie."
-
-Igraine gave a dry sob, and drew Garlotte down again to her side. They
-lay very close, almost mouth to mouth, their arms about each other's
-bodies.
-
-"I love Pelleas."
-
-"Yes, yes."
-
-"I will tell him the truth."
-
-"Ah, Igraine, it is best, it is best."
-
-"But it will kill me if I lose him."
-
-"Ah, Igraine, but he will love you all the more."
-
-It was Garlotte who broke into tears, and hid her face in the other's
-bosom. Igraine's eyes were as dry as a blue sky parched with a summer
-sun, and her voice failed her like the slack string of a lute. The
-moonlight slanted down upon them both. Before dawn they had fallen
-asleep in each other's arms.
-
-How many a heart trembles with the return of day; what fears rise with
-the first blush of light in an empty sky! The cloak of night is lifted
-from weary faces; the quiet balm of darkness is withdrawn from the
-moiling care of many a heart. To Igraine the dawn light came like a
-message of misery as she lay beside the sleeping Garlotte, and watched
-the gloom grow less and less in the little room. This dawn seemed
-a veritable symbol of the truth that she feared to look upon--and
-recognise. The night seemed kinder, less implacable, less grave of
-face. Day, like a pale justiciary, stalked up out of the east to call
-her to that assize where truth and the soul meet under the eye of
-heaven.
-
-How different was it with Pelleas under the eaves of the great cedar.
-He had slept little that night for mere wakeful happiness; the moon had
-kept carnival for him above the world; at dawn the stars had crept back
-from the choir stalls into the chambers of the night. He had known no
-weariness, no abatement of his deep calm joy. His heart had answered
-blithely to the dawn-song of the birds as though he had risen fresh
-from a dreamless sleep. The day to him had no look of evil; the sky
-was never grey; the flush in the east recalled no flashing of torches
-over a funeral bier. He rose up in the glory of his clean manhood, the
-strong kindliness of his great love. His prayers went to heaven that
-morning with the lark, and the Spirit of God seemed like a wind moving
-softly in the green boughs above his head.
-
-Very early before it was light he had taken a plunge and a swim in
-the pool, a swinging burst through the still water that had made him
-revel in his great strength. He had come up from the pool like a god
-refreshed, and had put on his red harness while the mists rose from the
-valley, and the birds chanted in the ghostly trees. When the day was
-fully awake he walked the grass-path in the garden like a watchman,
-with the scent of honeysuckle and thyme in his nostrils, and a blaze
-of flowers at his feet. As he paced up and down with his face turned
-to the sky, he sang in a mellow bass a song of Guyon's, the Court
-minstrel--
-
- "When the dawn has come,
- My heart sighs for thee and the gleam of thy hair;
- Eyes deep as the night
- When the summer sky arches the world."
-
-So sang Pelleas as he paced the grass with his eyes wandering ever
-towards the doorway of the cottage.
-
-Presently Igraine came out to him, and stood under the shadow of the
-porch. Her hair hung lustrous about a face that was white and drawn,
-despite a smile. Certainly a haze of red flushed her cheeks when
-Pelleas came up with a glory of love in his eyes, took her hands and
-kissed them, as though there was no such divine flesh in the whole wide
-world. How wonderful it was to be touched so, to have such eyes pouring
-out so strong a soul before her face, to know the presence of a great
-love, and to feel the echoing passion of it in her own heart!
-
-After the barren months of winter, and the long bondage in Tintagel,
-it seemed ah idyllic thing to be so served, so comforted. And was this
-faery time but for an hour, a day, and no longer? Was she but to see
-the man's face, to feel the touch of his hands, the grand calm of his
-love, before losing him, perhaps for life? Her heart fluttered in her
-like a smitten bird. And Pelleas, too, what a thrust lurked for the
-man, a blow to be given in the name of truth. How could she speak to
-him of Gorlois when he came and looked at her with those eyes of his?
-
-Igraine had never felt such misery as this even in the gloomy galleries
-of Tintagel. It tried her courage to the death to face Pelleas's
-wistful gaiety, and the adoration that beamed on her from his eyes.
-
-"Dear heart, it is dawn--it is dawn!"
-
-Pelleas held her hands, and waited for her lips to be turned to his.
-Instead, he saw lowered lids and quivering lashes, lips that were
-plaintive, a face white beneath a wealth of hair.
-
-"Ah, Igraine, you do not look at me."
-
-Her eyes trembled up to his with a sudden infinite lustre.
-
-"Pelleas!"
-
-"Girl, girl!"
-
-"Ah, I have hardly slept."
-
-"Nor I, Igraine."
-
-"I think I am worn out with thinking of you."
-
-"Ha, little woman, you are extravagant; you will die like a flower even
-while I hold you in my bosom."
-
-Garlotte came out from the cottage, and was kissed by Pelleas on the
-lips. The girl's eyes were red and heavy; she had been crying but a
-moment ago in the shadow of the cottage room, and she was timid and
-very solemn. Pelleas looked at her like a big brother.
-
-"Come now, little sister," he said, with a rare smile; "methinks you
-must be in love too by your looks."
-
-"Yes, lord."
-
-"Said I not so? You women take things so to heart."
-
-"Yes, lord."
-
-"What a solemn face, little sister!"
-
-Garlotte mastered herself for a moment, then burst into tears and ran
-back into the cottage. Pelleas coloured, looked troubled, glanced
-at Igraine, thinking he had hurt the girl's heart with his words.
-Igraine's face startled him as if the visage of death had risen up
-suddenly amid the flowers. He stood mute before her watching her
-starved lips, her drawn face, her eyes that stared beyond him with a
-kind of cold frenzy.
-
-"Pelleas, Pelleas!"
-
-It was like the wild cry of a woman over her dead love. The sound
-struck Pelleas with a vague sense of stupendous woe, a dim prophecy
-of evil like the noise of autumn in the woods. Before he could gather
-words, Igraine had turned and run from him as in great fear, skirting
-the pool and holding for the black yawn of the forest aisles. Pelleas
-started to follow her in a daze of wonder. Was the girl mad? Had love
-turned her brain? What was there hid in her heart that made her wing
-from him like a dove from a hawk?
-
-By the trees Igraine slackened and turned breathless on the man as
-he came towards her through the long grass. Her eyes were dim and
-frightened, her lips twitching, and there was a bleak hunted look upon
-her face that made her seem white and old. Pelleas's blood ran cold in
-him like water; a vague dread sapped his manhood; he stared at Igraine
-and was speechless.
-
-The girl put her arm before her eyes and shook as she stood. Pelleas
-fell on his knees with a cry, and reached for her hand.
-
-"Igraine, Igraine!"
-
-She snatched her arm away and would not look at him.
-
-"My God, what is this, Igraine?"
-
-"Don't touch me; I am Gorlois's wife!"
-
-A vast silence seemed to fall sudden on the world. It might have been
-dead of night in winter, with deep snow upon the ground and no wind
-stirring in the forest. To Igraine, swaying in an agony with her arm
-over her face, the silence came like the hush that might fall on heaven
-before the damning of a lost soul to hell. She wondered what was in
-Pelleas's heart, and dared not look at him or meet his eyes. God in
-heaven! would the man never speak; would the silence crawl on into an
-eternity!
-
-At last she did look, and nearly fell at the wrench of it. Pelleas was
-standing near her looking at her with his great solemn eyes as though
-she had given him his death. His face seemed to have gone grey and
-haggard in a moment.
-
-"Gorlois's wife!" was all he said.
-
-Igraine hung her head, shivered, and said nothing. Pelleas never
-stirred; he seemed like so much stone, a mere pillar of granite misery.
-Igraine could have writhed at his feet and caught him by the knees only
-to melt for a moment that white calm on his face that looked like the
-mask of death.
-
-A voice that was almost strange to her startled her out of her stupor
-of despair.
-
-"How long have you been wed, Igraine?"
-
-"Nine months, Pelleas."
-
-The man seemed to be struggling with himself as though he strove after
-the truth, yet could not confront it for all his strength. When he
-spoke his voice was like the voice of a man winded by hard running. He
-appeared to urge himself forward, to goad his courage to a task that
-he dreaded. There was great anguish on his face as he looked into the
-girl's eyes.
-
-"I must speak what I know, Igraine."
-
-The words seemed slow with effort. Igraine watched him in silence, full
-of a vague dread.
-
-"Gorlois has spoken to me of his wife."
-
-"Say on, Pelleas."
-
-Pelleas hesitated.
-
-"The truth--tell me the truth."
-
-She was almost clamorous. Pelleas plunged on.
-
-"Gorlois told me how his wife was faithless to him, how she had fled
-with Brastias, the knight who had ward over her at Caerleon. I never
-knew her name until this hour."
-
-The words might have fallen like the strokes of a lash. Igraine
-stood and stared at the man, her open mouth a black circle, her eyes
-expressionless for the moment, like the eyes of one smitten blind. The
-full meaning of the words numbed her and hindered her understanding. A
-babel of shame sounded in her ears. The sinister intent of the man's
-accusation rose gradual before her reason like the distorted image of a
-dream. She felt cold to the core; a strange terror possessed her.
-
-"Pelleas, what have you said to me?"
-
-Her voice was a mere whisper. Pelleas hung his head and said never a
-word. His silence seemed to fling sudden fire into Igraine's eyes, and
-her face flamed like a sunset. It might have been Gorlois who stood and
-challenged the honour of her soul.
-
-"Man, tell me what is in your heart."
-
-Her voice was shrill--even imperious. Pelleas hung his head.
-
-"Gorlois keeps poison for his wife," were his words.
-
-Igraine's lips curled.
-
-"A sword for Brastias."
-
-"Generous man."
-
-Pelleas was watching her as a prisoner watches a judge. He had a great
-yearning to believe. Fear, anguish, anger, were in Igraine's heart,
-but she showed none of the three as she stood forward and looked into
-the man's eyes with a steadfastness no honour could gainsay.
-
-"Pelleas!" she said.
-
-"Girl!"
-
-"Look into my eyes."
-
-He did so without flinching. Igraine took his sword and gave it naked
-into his hand.
-
-"Listen! Gorlois told you a lie."
-
-"Igraine!"
-
-"Do you believe me, Pelleas? If not, strike with the sword, for I will
-live no longer."
-
-The man gave a sudden cry, like one who leaps over a precipice, threw
-the sword far away into the grass, and falling on his knees, buried his
-face in his hands.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-Igraine stood and watched Pelleas as he knelt in the grass at her feet
-with his face hidden from her by his hands. She saw the curve of his
-strong neck, the sweep of his great shoulders. She even counted the
-steel plates in his shoulder pieces, and marked the tinge of grey in
-his coronal of hair.
-
-Calm had come upon her with the trust won by the confessional of
-the sword. She felt sure of the man in her heart, and eased of a
-double burden since she had told him the truth and brought him to a
-declaration of his faith. She knew well from instinct that her honour
-stood sure in Pelleas's heart.
-
-Going to him, she bent and touched his head with her hand.
-
-"Pelleas," she said very softly.
-
-The man groaned and would not look at her.
-
-"Mea culpa, mea culpa!" was his cry.
-
-Igraine smiled like a young mother as she put his hands from his face
-with a gradual insistence. It was right that he should kneel to her,
-but it was also right that she should forgive and forget like a woman.
-Yet as she stood and held his hands in hers, Pelleas hung his head and
-would not so much as look into her face. He was convicted in his own
-heart, and contrite according to the deep measure of his manhood.
-
-Igraine touched his hair softly with her fingers, and there was a great
-light in her eyes as she bent over him.
-
-"Come, Pelleas, and sit by me under the trees, and I will tell you the
-whole tale."
-
-Never had she seemed so stately or so superb in Pelleas's eyes as she
-stood before him that morning, strong and sorrowful with the burden
-of her past. He knelt and looked up at her, knowing himself pardoned,
-humbled to see love in the ascendent so soon upon her face as she
-looked down at him from her golden aureole of hair.
-
-"I am forgiven?" he said.
-
-"Ah, Pelleas!"
-
-"You have shamed me; I am a broken man."
-
-He rose up half wearily and stood looking at her as though some
-mysterious influence had parted them suddenly asunder. So expressive
-were his eyes, that Igraine read a distant anguish in them on the
-instant, and fathomed his thoughts, to the troubling of her own heart.
-
-"Look not so," she said, "as though a gulf lay deep between us here."
-
-"How else should I look at you, Igraine, when you are wife to Gorlois?"
-
-"Never in my soul."
-
-"How can that help us?"
-
-Igraine winced at the words and took refuge in silence. She went and
-seated herself at the foot of a gnarled oak. Pelleas followed her and
-lay down more than a sword's length away, leaving a stretch of green
-turf between, a thing insignificant in itself, yet full of meaning to
-the girl's instinctive watchfulness. The man's face too was turned
-from her towards the valley, and she could only see the curve of his
-cheek and chin as she began to speak to him of that which was in her
-heart.
-
-"You know the man Gorlois?" she said.
-
-Pelleas nodded.
-
-"In Winchester Gorlois saw my face and straightway pestered me as
-he had been turned into my shadow. By chance he had rendered me
-service, and from the favour casually conferred plucked the right of
-thrusting his perpetual homage upon me. I trusted Gorlois little from
-the beginning, and trusted him less as the weeks went by. His eyes
-frightened me, and his mouth made my soul shiver; the more importunate
-he grew the more I began to fear him."
-
-Pelleas shifted his sword and said nothing.
-
-"A day came when the man Gorlois grew tired of courtesies, and would be
-gainsaid no longer. It was in Radamanth's garden; we quarrelled, and
-the man laid hands upon me and crushed me against the wall to thieve
-a kiss. In my anger I broke from him and ran into my uncle's house.
-The same night I fled to an abbey, the abbey of St. Helena, and left
-Winchester in my dress at dawn."
-
-Igraine could see the muscles of Pelleas's jaw standing out contracted
-as though his teeth were clenched in an access of anger. He was
-breathing deeply through his nostrils, and his hands plucked at the
-grass with a terse snapping sound. These things pleased Igraine, and
-she went on forthwith.
-
-"I left Winchester on foot at dawn and travelled towards Sarum, for I
-heard that Uther the King was there, and it was greatly in my mind,
-sire, to see his face. An old merchant friend of Radamanth's overtook
-me on the road; at a ford the horse he had lent me fell and twisted
-my ankle. I was carried to Eudol's house, and lay abed there many
-days, learning little to my comfort that Gorlois had ridden out and
-was hunting me through the countryside. Recovered of my strain, and
-fearful of Gorlois's trackers, I held on for Sarum through the woods,
-and lodged the same night in a hermitage in a little valley. Here the
-first piece of craft overtook me, for early in the morning outside the
-hermitage I saw a knight ride by on a black horse, bearing red harness,
-and armed at all points like to you."
-
-Pelleas turned his head for the first time and looked at her as though
-with some sudden suspicion of what was to follow. Igraine saw something
-in his dark eyes that made her heart hurry. His face was like the face
-of a man who fronts a storm of wind and rain with brows furrowed and
-eyes half-closed. There was much that was threatening in his look, a
-subdued ominous wrath like a storm nursed in the bosom of a cloud.
-
-Igraine told the whole quaint tale, how she followed Gorlois in faith,
-how she was led into the forest, bewitched there, and made a wife,
-mesmerised into a false affection for the man by Merlin's craft. It
-was a grim tale, with a clear contour of truth, and credible by reason
-of its very strangeness. It was sufficient to manifest to Pelleas how
-Igraine's strong love for him had lost her her liberty and made her the
-victim of a man's lust.
-
-When she had ended the tale Pelleas left the grass at her feet and
-began to pace under the trees like a sentinel on a wall. His scabbard
-clanged occasionally against his greaves. Masses of young bracken
-covered the ground between the trees with a rich carpet of green, and
-his armour shone like red wrath under the wreathing arcs of foliage.
-His face was dark and moody with the turmoil of thought, but there
-was no visible agitation upon him; nothing of the aspen, more of the
-unbending oak. Igraine leant against her tree and watched him with a
-curious care, wondering what would be the outcome of all this silence.
-Down in the valley the pool glistened, and she could see Garlotte
-walking in the cottage garden. How different was this child's lot to
-hers. With what warm philosophy could she have changed Pelleas into a
-shepherd, and taken the part of Garlotte to herself.
-
-Presently Pelleas stayed in his stride through the bracken, and came
-and stood before her, looking not into her face but beyond her into the
-deeps of the wood.
-
-"Tell me more, Igraine."
-
-"What more would you hear from me?"
-
-"That which is bitterest of all."
-
-"God, must I tell you that!"
-
-"Let us both drink it to the dregs."
-
-Igraine's face and neck coloured rich as one of Garlotte's red roses,
-and she seemed to shrink from the man's eyes behind the quivering
-sunlight of her hair. She put her hands to her breast and stood in a
-strain of thought, of struggle against the infinite unfitness of the
-past.
-
-Pelleas saw her trouble, and his strong face softened on the instant.
-He had forgotten milder things in his grappling of the truth. Igraine's
-red and troubled look revived the finer instincts of his manhood.
-
-"Never trouble, child," he said; "I know enough of Gorlois to read the
-rest."
-
-But Igraine, as by inspiration, had come by other reasons for telling
-out the whole to the last pang. She was at pains to justify herself
-to Pelleas, nor was she undesirous of inflaming him against Gorlois,
-her lord. She had wit enough to grasp the fact that Pelleas's wrath
-might be roused into insurrection against custom and the edicts of the
-Church. A volcanic outburst might throw down the barriers of man and
-leave her at liberty to choose her lot. Moreover, her hate of Gorlois,
-an iconoclastic passion, had crushed the reverence of things existing
-out of her heart. A contemplation of her evil fortune had brought her
-to the conviction that she was exiled from the sympathies of men, a
-spiritual bandit driven to compass the instincts of a rebellious soul.
-In her hot impulse for liberty and the justification of her faith, she
-did not halt from making Pelleas feel the full malignity of truth. She
-neither embellished nor emphasised, but portrayed incidents simply in
-their glaring nakedness in a fashion that promised to inflame the man
-to the very top of her desire.
-
-Igraine's cheeks kindled, and she could not look at the man for the
-words upon her lips. Pelleas's face was like the face of man in
-torture. The woman's words entered into him like iron; his wrath
-whistled like a wind, and the very air seemed tainted in his mouth.
-What a purgatory of passion was let loose into the calm precincts of
-the place! This burning vault of blue, was it the same as roofed the
-world of yesterday? The feathery mounts of green dappled with amber,
-and these flowers, had they not changed with the noon lust of the sun?
-There was a rank savour of fleshliness over the whole earth, and all
-life seemed impious, passionate, and unclean.
-
-"My God, my God!"
-
-The man's cry shook Igraine from her rage for truth. In her
-confessional she had been carried like a bird with the wind. Looking
-into Pelleas's face she saw that he was in torment, and that her words
-had smitten him in a fashion other than she had foreseen. It was not
-wrath that burnt in his eyes, only a deep grieving, a frenzy of shame
-and anguish that seemed to cry out against her soul. A sudden stupor
-made her mute. With a great void in her heart she fell down amid the
-bracken with a sense of ignominy and abasement overwhelming her like a
-deluge.
-
-Pelleas stood and shut his eyes to the sun. A red glare smote into his
-brain; love seemed numb in him and his blood stagnant. Prayer eluded
-him like a vapour. Looking out again over wood and valley, the golden
-haze, the torpor of the trees mocked him with a lethargy that smiled at
-the impotence of man.
-
-And Igraine! He saw her prone beneath the green mist of the fern
-fronds, lying with her face pillowed on her arms, her hair spread like
-a golden net over the brown wreckage of the bygone year. To what a pass
-had their love come! Better, he thought, to have lived a king solitary
-on a throne than to have wandered into youth again to give and win
-such dolor.
-
-His face was dark as he stood and looked at the woman's violet surcoat
-gleaming low under the bracken. How symbolical this attitude seemed of
-all that had fallen upon his heart--love cast down upon dead leaves!
-Igraine had feared his honour. Pelleas feared for it in another sense
-as he looked at the woman, and felt his pity clamouring for life.
-He could have given his soul to comfort her if no shame could have
-come upon her name thereby. As it was, some spiritual hand seemed at
-his throat stifling aught of love that found impulse on his lips. A
-superhuman sincerity chilled him into silence, and held him in bondage
-to the truth.
-
-A face stared up from the bracken, wan, tearless, and tragic. The
-wistfulness of the face made him quail within his harness. He knew too
-well what was in Igraine's heart, and the look that questioned him like
-the look of a wounded hare. Her eyes searched his face as though to
-read her doom thereon. There was no whimpering, no noise, no passionate
-rhetoric. A great quiet seemed to take its temper from the silence of
-the woods.
-
-"Pelleas."
-
-"Yes, Igraine."
-
-"Tell me what is in your heart."
-
-Pelleas hung his head; he could not look at her for all his courage.
-She was kneeling in the bracken with her hands crossed over her breast
-and her face turned to his with the white wistfulness of a full moon.
-Pelleas felt death in his heart, and he could not speak nor look into
-her eyes.
-
-"Pelleas."
-
-"Child."
-
-"You do not look at me."
-
-"Great God, would I were blind!"
-
-The truth came crying to her like the wild cry of a bird taken by a
-weasel in the woods. A great sobbing shook her; she fell down and
-caught Pelleas by the knees.
-
-"Pelleas, Pelleas!"
-
-"My God, Igraine, I stifle!"
-
-"Don't leave me, don't send me away."
-
-"What can I say to you?"
-
-"Only look into my eyes again."
-
-Pelleas put his fists before his face; the girl felt him quiver, and he
-seemed to twist in an agony like a man dangling on a rope. Igraine's
-hands crept to his shoulders; she drew herself by his body as by a
-pillar till her face met his and she lay heavy upon his breast.
-
-"Pelleas!"
-
-Her breath was on his lips, and her hair flooded over his hands like
-golden wine.
-
-"Pelleas, Pelleas!"
-
-The words came with a windless whisper.
-
-"Have pity, Igraine."
-
-"I will never leave you."
-
-"Gorlois's wife!"
-
-"Never, never!"
-
-"My God!"
-
-"I am not his. Pelleas, take me body and soul; take me and let me be
-your wife."
-
-"How can I sin against your soul, Igraine?"
-
-"Is it sin, then, to love me?"
-
-"You are Gorlois's wife before God."
-
-"There is no God."
-
-"Igraine!"
-
-"I will have no God but you, Pelleas."
-
-The man took his hands from his face and looked into Igraine's eyes. A
-strong shudder passed over him, and he seemed like a great ship smitten
-by a wave, till every fibre groaned and quivered in his massive frame.
-
-A green calm covered the valley, and the whole world seemed to faint
-in the golden bosom of the day. Not the twitter of a bird broke the
-vast hush of the forest. The sunlit aisles climbed into a shadowland
-of mysterious silence, and an azure quiet hung above the trees. As for
-Pelleas and Igraine, their two lives seemed knotted up with a cord of
-gold. They had mingled breath, and taken the savour of each other's
-souls. Yet for all the glory of the moment it was but autumn with
-them--a pomp of passion, a red splendour dying while it blazed into the
-grey ruin of a winter day.
-
-Igraine read her doom in the man's face. It was the face of a martyr,
-pale, resolute, yet inspired. A dry sob died in her throat, and her
-hands dropped from the man's shoulders. Pelleas stood back and looked
-at her with a warm light in his dark eyes, the green woods rising
-behind him like a bank of clouds.
-
-"Igraine."
-
-She nodded, felt miserable, and said nothing.
-
-"I cannot love you easily."
-
-Igraine's eyes stared at him with a mute bitterness. She was a woman,
-and thought like a woman; mere saintly philosophy was beyond her.
-
-"You are too good a man, Pelleas," she said.
-
-"I would hold my love in my heart like a great pearl in a casket of
-gold."
-
-"What comfort is there in mere splendid misery, and in such words?"
-
-"How should I love you best?"
-
-"Ah, Pelleas, ask your own heart."
-
-The man was an impossible being for mere mortal argument. He seemed to
-bear spiritual pinions that tantalised the intelligence of the heart.
-Igraine felt herself adrift and beaten, and she was hopeless of him to
-the core.
-
-"Think you I shall be a saint, Pelleas," she said, "when you have given
-me back to myself?"
-
-"I shall pray for you."
-
-"And for a devil!"
-
-She gave a shrill laugh, and twined her hair about her wrist.
-
-"Ah, Pelleas! you know not what you do."
-
-"Too well, Igraine."
-
-"You are too strong for me, and yet--and yet--I should not have loved
-you so well if you had not been strong."
-
-"That is how I think of you, Igraine."
-
-"You love me more by leaving me."
-
-"I love you more by keeping you pure before my soul."
-
-A great calm had come upon Igraine. She was very pale and firm about
-the lips, and her eyes were staunch as steel. Her voice was as clear
-and level as though she spoke of trivial things.
-
-"I shall not go back to Gorlois," she said.
-
-"Beware of the man."
-
-"Doubtless you would speak to me of a convent."
-
-Pelleas fell into thought, with his dark eyes fixed upon her face.
-
-"As a novice."
-
-Igraine almost smiled at him.
-
-"And not a nun?"
-
-For answer he spoke three simple words.
-
-"Gorlois might die."
-
-The stillness of the woods seemed like the hush of a listening
-multitude. A blue haze of heat hung over the rolling domes of
-the western trees, and never a wind-wave stirred the long grass.
-Mountainous clouds sailed radiant over ridge and spur, and it might
-have been Elysium where souls wandered through meads of asphodel.
-
-Igraine looked long over the valley with its stately trees, its
-flowering grass and quiet pool in the meadows. She was vastly calm,
-though her eyes were full of a woe that seemed to well up like water
-out of her soul. She still twisted and untwisted a strand of her hair
-about her wrist, but for all else she was as quiet as one of the trees
-that stood near and overshadowed her.
-
-"Pelleas," she said.
-
-The man came two steps nearer.
-
-"Go quickly."
-
-"Igraine!"
-
-"Man, man, how long will you torture me? I am only a little strong."
-
-The calm of tragedy seemed to dissolve away on the instant. Pelleas
-thrust his hands into the air like a swimmer sinking to his death. His
-heart answered Igraine's exceeding bitter cry.
-
-"Would we had never come to this!"
-
-"I cannot say that, though my heart breaks."
-
-Pelleas fell down and clasped her with his arms about the knees. His
-face was hidden in the folds of her surcoat. Presently he loosed his
-hold, looked up, took a ring from his hand and thrust it into her palm.
-
-"The signet of a king," he said; "keep it for need, Igraine. Have you
-money?"
-
-"I have money, Pelleas."
-
-"God guard you!"
-
-Igraine was white to the lips, but she never wavered.
-
-"Heaven keep you!" she said.
-
-Her voice was hoarse in her throat, and she began to shiver as though
-chilled by a sleety wind.
-
-"Go quickly, Pelleas; for God's sake hide your face from me!"
-
-"It is death; it is death!"
-
-He sprang up and left her without a look. Igraine saw him go through
-the long grass with his hand over his eyes, staggering like one
-sword-smitten to the brain. He never stared back at her, but held
-straight for the cottage and the cedar tree where his black horse was
-tethered under the shade. She watched him mount and gallop for the
-forest, nor did she move till his red harness had died into the gloom
-of the trees.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-
-Down through the woods that morning rode Gorlois on his great white
-horse, with helmet clanging at saddle-bow, shield hung at his left
-shoulder, spear trailing under the trees. He was hot, thirsty, and in
-a most evil temper. His bronzed face glistened with sweat, and the
-chequered webs of light flickering through the leaves flashed fitfully
-upon his golden harness. Since dawn he had ridden the hills in the
-glare of the sun till his armour blazed like an oven; it was June
-weather, and hot at that; his tongue felt like wood rubbing against
-leather; it was a damnable month for bearing harness.
-
-Casting about over the hills he had come upon Garlotte's valley, and
-seeing it green and shadowy, had plunged down to profit by the shade.
-Since the Red Knight was lost to him, it was immaterial whether he rode
-by wood or hill. On this account, too, Gorlois's temper was as hot as
-his skin. He hated a baulking above all things; he was moved to be
-furious with trifles, and like the savage who gnashes at the stone that
-bruises his foot, he cursed creation and felt thoroughly at war with
-the world. A grim unreason had possession of him, such a mood as makes
-murder a mere impulse of the hand, and malice the prime instinct of the
-heart.
-
-As he rode with loose rein the trees thinned suddenly, and the forest
-gloom rolled back over his head. Gorlois halted mechanically under the
-wooelshawe, and scanned the valley spread before him under the brown
-hollow of his hand. He had expected no such open land in this waste
-of wood--open land with water, a cottage, sheep feeding, and horses
-tethered under the trees. One of the horses tethered there was a black.
-The coincidence livened Gorlois's torpid, sunburnt face with a cool
-gleam of intelligence. He sat motionless in the saddle and took the
-length and breadth of the valley under the keen ken of his black eyes.
-
-The man swore a little oath into his peaked black beard. His face grew
-suddenly rapacious as he stared out under the hollow of his hand. He
-had seen a streak of red strike through the green wall far up the
-eastern slope that fronted him, a scrap of colour metallic with the
-hint of armour. It went to and fro under the distant trees like a
-torch past the windows of a church. Gorlois's hand tightened on the
-bridle. He watched the thing as a hawk watches a young rabbit in the
-grass.
-
-Betimes he gave a queer little chuckle, and turned his horse into the
-deeper shade of the trees. He began to make a circuit round the valley,
-holding northwards to compass the meadows. He cast long, wary glances
-into the wood as he went; tried his sword to see that it was loose in
-the scabbard; took his helmet from the saddle-bow, and let down the
-cheek-pieces from the crown. Before long he kicked his stirrups away,
-rolled out of the saddle, and tied his horse to an oak sapling in a
-little dell. Going silently on foot over the mossy grass, stopping
-often to stare into the sunny vistas of the forest, moving more or
-less from tree to tree, he worked his way southwards along the eastern
-slope. Streaks of meadowland and the glint of water showed below him,
-and he heard the bleat of sheep far away, and the tinkling of a bell.
-
-Presently the murmur of voices came to him through the woods. He
-ventured on another fifty paces, then stopped behind a tree to listen.
-There were two voices, he was sure of that: one was a woman's, and the
-other had the sonorous vibration of a man's bass. Gorlois's eyes took a
-queer, far-away look, and his strong teeth showed between his lips.
-
-He worked his way on through the trees with the cautious and deliberate
-instinct of a hunter. The two voices gained in timbre, character, and
-expression. Their talk was no jays' chatter; Gorlois could tell that
-from the emphasis of sound, and a certain dramatic melody that ran
-through the whole. Soon the voices were very near. Going on his belly,
-with his sword held in his left hand, he crawled like a gilt dragon
-through a forest of springing fern. He crawled on till he was quite
-near the two who stood and talked under the trees. Lying flat, never
-venturing to lift his head, he crouched, breathing hard through his
-nostrils and holding his scabbarded sword crosswise beneath his chin.
-
-Gorlois's face, scarred and drawn as it was, seemed as he listened a
-clear mirror for the portrayal of human passion. His black moustachios
-twitched above his angular jaw; his eyes took a rapacious and glazed
-look, and a shadow seemed to cover his face. He turned and twisted as
-he lay, and dug the points of his iron-shod shoes into the soft ground
-as though in the crisis of some pain. It was the woman's voice that did
-all this for him. Every word seemed like the wrench of a hook in his
-flesh, as he cursed and twisted under the bracken.
-
-Presently he lay still again, as though to listen the better. He could
-hear something of what was said to the man in the red harness, but the
-main drift of their talk was beyond him. Pelleas! Pelleas! He squirmed
-like a crushed snake at each sounding of the name. The bracken hardly
-swayed as he crawled on some twenty paces and again lay still, with his
-cheek resting upon the scabbard of his sword.
-
-"Gorlois might die."
-
-Gorlois heard the words as plainly as though they had been spoken into
-his ear. A vast silence hung like thunder over the forest. Gorlois lay
-as though stunned with a stone, his dry mouth pressed to the cold steel
-of the sword. His eyes took a stubborn stare under the sweep of his
-casque. With gradual labour he raised himself upon his elbows, drew his
-knees up under his body, and lifted his head slowly above the sweep of
-green.
-
-The ground fell away slightly from where Gorlois knelt in the bracken,
-and he could look down on the two who stood under the trees, while the
-fern fronds hid his harness. He saw a woman in violet and gold, her
-hair falling straight on either side of her face, and her arms folded
-crosswise over her breast. He saw also the knight in red harness, with
-his locked hands twisting above his head as in an agony, while his face
-was hidden by his arm. A passionate whisper of words passed between the
-two. Even when Gorlois watched, the man in the red harness jerked
-round and fell on his knees at the woman's feet. Gorlois suddenly saw
-his face; it was the face of Uther the King.
-
-[Illustration: "LIFTED HIS HEAD SLOWLY ABOVE THE SWEEP OF GREEN"]
-
-Gorlois dropped back under the bracken as though smitten through with a
-sword. He lay there a long while with his head upon his arms. A sudden
-breeze came up the valley, sounding through the trees, swaying the
-green fronds above the man's harness, calling a gradual clamour from
-the woods. The overmastering image of the King seemed to frown down
-Gorlois for the moment, and he crouched like a dog--with the courage
-crushed out of his soul.
-
-Betimes Gorlois's reason revived from the stroke that had stunned it
-for a season. Like Jonah's gourd a quick purpose sprang up and shadowed
-him from the too hasty heat of his own passions. He was a virile
-man, capable of great wrath and great resentment. Yet he was no mere
-firebrand. His malice, strangely enough, was one-handed and reached out
-only against the woman. For Uther he conceived a superhuman envy, a
-passion that rose above mere bloody expiation by the sword. Gorlois had
-the wit to remember the finer cruelties of a spiritual vengeance, the
-gain of wounding the soul rather than the flesh. His malice was a thing
-fanatical in itself, yet taken from the forge to be cooled and tempered
-like steel.
-
-When he lifted his head again above the bracken, Uther had gone, and
-Igraine stood alone under the trees. She stood straight and motionless
-as some tall flower, her hair falling like quiet sunlight, unshaken by
-a wind. Her great beauty leapt out into Gorlois's blood and maddened
-him. As she looked out over the valley, Gorlois, straining his neck
-above the bracken, could see that she watched Uther as he went down
-from her towards the pool. Even to Gorlois there was something tragic
-about the solitary figure under the trees, a stiff, grievous look as
-though woe had transformed her into a pillar of stone. To him the
-affair seemed a mere assignation, a hazardous passage of romance.
-Measuring the souls of others by his own morality, he guessed nothing
-of the deeper throes that surged through the tale like the long moan of
-a night wind.
-
-Gorlois saw Uther and his black horse disappear into the opposing bank
-of woodland. Viciously satisfied, he lay in the bracken and watched
-Igraine, coming by a queer pleasure in considering her beauty, and
-in the knowledge that her very life was poised on the point of his
-sword. How little she thought of the man-dragon lying in his gilded
-scales under the green of the feathery fronds. Gorlois felt a kind of
-arrogance of ownership boasting itself in his heart. Certainly he held
-a means more sinister than the sword wherewith to perfect his vengeance
-and to preserve his honour. A very purgatory, bolgia upon bolgia,
-stretched out in prospect for the souls of the two who had done him
-this great evil. Gorlois made much of it, with a joy that was hard and
-durable as iron.
-
-Igraine stirred at last from her stupor of immobility. Walking
-unsteadily, as though faint in the heat, she passed out from the
-trees with their mingling of sun and shadow, and went down through
-the long grass towards the pool and the cottage. Gorlois knelt in the
-bracken, and watched her with a smile. There was little chance of her
-escaping, and he could be as deliberate as he pleased over the matter.
-He inferred with reason that the cottage served her as a lodging in
-this woodland solitude, where she lay hid from all the world save
-from Uther, whose courtezan she was. Gorlois laughed--a keen, biting
-laugh--at the thought of it all. At least he would go back for his
-horse and spear, and make a fitting entry before the woman who was his
-wife.
-
-Igraine, walking as though in her sleep, came into the cottage, and
-almost fell into Garlotte's arms. The girl looked frightened, and very
-white about the lips. She could find nothing in her heart to say to
-Igraine; she helped her to the bed, and ran to the cupboard to get wine.
-
-"Drink it," she said, the cup rocking to and fro in her hand.
-
-Igraine did her best, but spilt much of the stuff upon her bosom,
-where it made a stain like blood. She sat on the edge of the bed, and
-looked into the distance with expressionless eyes. Her hands were very
-cold. Garlotte chafed them between her own, murmured a word or two, but
-could not bring herself to look into Igraine's face. From the valley
-the bleating of sheep came up with a sudden wind, and the red roses
-flung their faces across the latticed casement.
-
-Igraine was looking through the window into the deep green of the
-woods. She could see the place where Pelleas had left her, even the
-tree under which she had stood when she had pleaded with him without
-avail. How utterly quiet everything seemed. Surely June was an evil
-month for her; had it not brought double misery--and well-nigh broken
-her heart? And the end of it all was that she was to go back to a
-convent, to grey walls, vigils, and the sounding of a bell. Even that
-was better than being Gorlois's wife.
-
-Suddenly, as she sat and stared out of the casement, her body grew
-tense and eager as a bent bow. Her eyes hardened, lost their dreamy
-look; the hands that had rested in Garlotte's gripped the girl's wrists
-with a force that made her wince.
-
-"Saddle the horse."
-
-The words came in a hard whisper. Garlotte stared at her, and did not
-stir.
-
-"Child, never question me; be quick, on your life."
-
-Igraine, a different woman in a moment, had started up and taken her
-shield and helmet from the wall. Her sword was girded to her. Quick
-as thought, she gathered up her trailing hair, thrust on the casque,
-strapped it to the neck-plate under her surcoat. Garlotte, vastly
-puzzled, but inspired by Igraine's earnestness, had hurried out with
-saddle and bridle over her shoulder. As she ran through the garden, she
-looked up to the woods and saw the reason of Igraine's flurry. A knight
-had come out from the forest on a white horse, his armour flashing and
-blazing in the noonday sun. He had halted motionless at the edge of
-the woodland, as though to mark what was passing beneath him in the
-valley.
-
-Garlotte found Igraine armed beside her, as she stood by the grey
-horse under the cedar, and tugged with trembling fingers at the saddle
-straps. Bit and bridle were quickly in place. Igraine, moved by a
-hurried tenderness, gripped Garlotte to her with both arms.
-
-"God guard you, little sister."
-
-"Where are you going, Igraine?"
-
-"God knows!"
-
-"Who is yonder knight?"
-
-"Gorlois, my husband."
-
-Igraine climbed into the saddle from the girl's knee. She dashed in
-the spurs and went at a gallop over the meadows towards the south.
-Gorlois's white horse was coming at full stride through the feathery
-grass. The man was riding crosswise over the valley, bent on cutting
-off Igraine from the southern stretch of meadows, and driving her back
-upon the woods. It was Igraine's hope to overtake Pelleas, and to put
-herself behind the barrier of his shield. Gorlois, guessing her desire,
-drove home the spurs, and hunted her in earnest.
-
-Igraine headed the man and won a lead in the first half mile. Her grey
-horse plunged like a galley in a rough sea, and she held to the pommel
-of her saddle to keep her seat. Gorlois thundered at full gallop in her
-wake, the long grass flying before his horse's hoofs like foam. He had
-thrown away his spear, and his eyes were set in a long stare on the
-galloping horse ahead. The zest of the chase had hold of him, and he
-used the spurs with heavy heel.
-
-The green woods rolled down on them as the valley narrowed to its
-southern end. Igraine had never wandered so far from Garlotte's
-cottage, and the ground was strange to her, nor did she know how the
-country promised. Riding at full gallop, she saw with a shudder of
-fear a barrier of rock running serrate across her path and closing the
-narrow valley like a wall. Gorlois saw it too, and sent up a shout
-that made Igraine's hate flame up into a kind of rapture. To have
-turned right or left up the steep grass slope towards the woods, would
-have given back to Gorlois the little start she had of him. With a numb
-chill at her heart she abandoned all hope of Pelleas, and turned to
-face the inevitable, and Gorlois her lord.
-
-The man came up like a wind through the grass, and drew rein roughly
-some ten paces away. He laughed as he stared at Igraine, an uncouth,
-angering laugh like the yapping of a dog. He looked big and burly in
-the saddle, and the muscles stood out in his neck as he tilted his
-square jaw and stared down at his wife. Igraine had not looked upon his
-face since he had been smitten in battle. Its ugliness seemed to match
-his soul.
-
-Gorlois lifted up his voice and mocked her.
-
-"Ha, my brave, you are trapped, are you? Mother of God, but you make
-a good figure of a man. These many months I have missed you, wife in
-arms. And you have served in the pay of my lord the King. Good service
-and good pay, I warrant, and plenty of plunder. I will have that
-harness of yours hung over my bed."
-
-Igraine suffered him not so much as a word. She was furious, and in no
-mood to be scoffed down and cowed by mere insolent strength. She looked
-into Gorlois's libidinous face from behind the vizor of her helmet,
-and thought her thoughts. Gorlois ran on in his mocking fashion. His
-bronzed face gleamed with sweat, and a rough lascivious smile showed up
-his strong white teeth to her.
-
-"Ha, now, madame! deliver, and let us have sight of you. The King loves
-your lips, eh! They are red, and your arms are soft. I warrant he found
-your bosom a good pillow. Uther was ever such a solemn soul, such a
-monk, such a father. It is good for the heart to hear of him knotted up
-in a woman's hair."
-
-Igraine shook with the immensity of her hate.
-
-"You were ever a foul-tongued hound," she said.
-
-"Am I your echo?"
-
-"I wish you were dead."
-
-"So said the King."
-
-"So you spied on us?"
-
-Gorlois set up a scoffing laugh, showing his red throat like a hungry
-bird.
-
-"And saw my wife the King's courtezan; ha, what a jest! Come, madame,
-let us be going; your honest home waits for you. I will chatter to you
-of moralities by the way."
-
-He had hardly delivered himself of the saying, when Igraine's hand
-clutched at the handle of her sword. She jerked the spurs in with her
-heels. Her grey horse started forward like a bolt; blundered into
-Gorlois; caught him cross-counter, and rolled his white stallion down
-into the grass. Igraine had lashed out at the shock. Her sword caught
-Gorlois's arm, and cut through sleeve and arm-guard to the bone. As he
-rolled with his horse in the grass, she wheeled round, and clapping in
-the spurs, rode hard uphill for the forest.
-
-Gorlois, hot as a furnace, scrambled to his feet, and dragged his horse
-up by the bridle. Half off the saddle, with empty stirrups dangling,
-he went at a canter for the yawn of the wood. His slashed arm burnt as
-though it had been touched with a branding-iron; blood dripped down
-upon his horse's white shoulder. He was soon steady in the saddle
-and galloping full pelt after Igraine, the ground slipping under his
-horse's hoofs like water, the long grass flying like spray.
-
-Igraine's horse lost ground up the slope; he had less heart than
-Gorlois's beast, and was weaker in the haunches. By the time they
-reached the trees, Igraine had twenty yards to her credit and no more.
-She saw her chance gone, and heard Gorlois close in her wake, caught
-sideways a glimpse of plunging hoofs and angry harness. Drawing aside
-suddenly with all her strength, she let Gorlois sweep up on her flank
-and pass her by some yards. Before he could turn, she rode into him as
-fast as she could gather; her sword clattered on his helmet,--sparks
-flew.
-
-Gorlois wrenched round and put his shield above his head.
-
-"By God,--hold off,--would you have me fight a woman?"
-
-A swinging cut rattled on his shoulder-plate for answer.
-
-Gorlois rapped out an oath and drew his sword.
-
-"Hold off!"
-
-His roar seemed to shake the trees. To Igraine it was the mere
-meaningless threatening of a sea. She struck home again and again while
-Gorlois foined with her; more than once she reached his flesh.
-
-Gorlois's grim patience gave way at last; a clean cut drew spurting
-blood from his shoulder.
-
-"God curse you!--take it then."
-
-He swung his sword with a great downward sweep, a streak of steel that
-struck crackling fire from the burnished casque. Igraine's arm dropped
-like a broken bough; for half a breath she sat straight in the saddle,
-swayed, sank slantwise, and slid down into the long grass. Her horse
-stood still at her side, looking at her with mild blue eyes.
-
-Gorlois gave a queer short laugh. He looked frightened for the moment;
-the flush of anger had passed and left him pale. He dismounted, bent
-over Igraine, unstrapped her helmet. She was only dazed by the blow;
-blood trickled red amid her hair, and her blue eyes stared him in the
-face.
-
-She lifted up a hand with a bitter cry of defiance.
-
-"Strike, strike, and make an end."
-
-Gorlois's grimness came back, and his eyes hardened.
-
-"That were too good for you."
-
-"Devil!"
-
-"By God, I shall tame you--never fear!"
-
-
-
-
-BOOK IV
-
-TINTAGEL
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-The castle of Tintagel stood out above the sea on a headland that rose
-bluffly above the white foam that girdled it. The waves swinging in
-from the west seemed to lift ever a hoarse chant about the place with
-their perpetual grumbling against the cliff. Colour shifted upon the
-bosom of the sea. Blue, green, and grey it would sweep into the west,
-netted gold with the sun, banded with foam, or spread with purple
-beneath the drifting shadow of a cloud. Hills rose in the east. Between
-these crags and the sea rolled a wilderness cloven by green valleys and
-a casual stream. Tintagel seemed to crown a region grand and calamitous
-as the sea itself.
-
-The sun was going down over the waters, watched by a flaxen-haired lad
-squatting on the wall of an outstanding turret. His legs dangled over
-the battlements, and his heels smote against the weathered stone. There
-was a premature look of age upon his face, a certain wistful wisdom
-as though he had completed his novitiate early in the world. His blue
-eyes, large and sensitive as a dog's, stared away over the golden edge
-of the sea.
-
-This was Jehan the bastard, a pathetic shred of humanity, thin and
-motherless, blessed with nothing save a dreamy nature that stood him in
-poor stead in such a hold as Tintagel. Like any mongrel owned of none,
-he was given over largely to the cuffs and curses of the community.
-Men called him a fool, and treated him accordingly. He was scullion,
-horse-boy, pot-bearer, by turns. The men of the garrison could make
-nothing of a lad who wept at a word, never showed fight, but crept
-away to mope and snivel in a corner. He had earned epithets enough, but
-little else; and the rude Philistines of the place, beings of beer and
-bone, knew little of those finer instincts with which Nature chooses on
-occasion to endow a soul.
-
-At times Jehan would creep away up this turret stair to live and
-breathe for a season with no friend save the ever-complaining sea.
-He would perch himself on the battlements with the salt wind blowing
-through his hair, the rocks beneath him boiling foam from the waves
-that swept in from the west. The perch was perilous enough, but the lad
-had no fear of the windy height, or of the waves breaking against the
-pediment of the cliff. To him man alone was terrible. There appeared
-to be a confident understanding between Nature and himself, a sense of
-good fellowship with his surroundings, such as the chamois may feel for
-its mountain pinnacle, and the bird for the tree that bears its nest.
-
-Jehan's thin face was turned often towards the central tower of the
-castle, a square campanile that stood in the centre of the main court,
-forming a species of citadel or keep. High up in the wall there was
-a window, a streak of gloom that showed nothing of the room within.
-Over Jehan this window possessed a peculiar influence. It was the
-casement-royal of romance. Day by day, ever since Gorlois had come
-south again, the lad had watched for the white oval of a face that
-would look out momentarily from the shadow. Sometimes he saw a woman's
-hand, a golden head glimmering in the sun. Jehan had seen Gorlois's
-wife brought a second time into Tintagel. Her staring grief had taken
-strange hold upon his heart. Ever since, with the kindled chivalry of a
-boy, he had done great deeds in dreams, handled a sword, taken strong
-men by the throat. The imagined event had fired the soul in him, and
-made him the disciple of these sad and wistful eyes.
-
-A bell smote in the court below. Its iron clapper dinned the fancies
-out of Jehan's head, calling him to the menial realities of life. It
-was the supper hour, and the men of the guard would be strenuously
-inclined over the steaming pot, the wine-jar, and the twisting spit.
-Jehan left his turret with the pathetic cynicism of an autumn twilight.
-Little drudge that he was, he yet had the inward independence to
-despise the folk who fed like swine, and terrorised him with pure
-blatant barbarism. He could listen to their blasphemy, their ribald
-songs, and breathe the moral garlic of their tongues with a disrelish
-that never wavered. He had none of the innate impudence of youth.
-Had he been of coarser fibre the men would soon have made a lewd
-and insolent imp of him, but he was spared such a fate by a certain
-spiritual instinct that recoiled from the vapouring brutality of it all.
-
-There seemed more ribaldry abroad in the guard-room that night than was
-customary even in so pious a place. The company, much like a pack of
-hounds, hunted jest after jest from cover, and gave tongue royally with
-a zest that would have been admirable in any other cause. Lamps swirled
-ill-smelling smoke about the room. There was a lavish scattering of
-armour along the benches, and the floor was dirtier than the floor of
-any tavern.
-
-Jehan's ears tingled as he went among the men, climbing over sprawling
-legs, edging between stools and benches. The air reeked of mead, and
-the miasma of loose talk rising from twenty throats. A woman's name was
-tossed from tongue to tongue, bandied about with a familiar insolence
-that made him blush for her like a brother. His heart burnt with the
-bestial impudence, the sweat, the foul breath of it all. Yet before
-these red-bearded faces, these vociferous mouths, he was a coward,
-hating himself for his fear, hating the men for the sheer tyranny of
-the flesh that awed him.
-
-To hear in this den such things spoken of a woman, and of such a woman!
-That she was true his quick instinct could aver in the very maw of the
-world. There was the silver calm of the full moon in her face, and
-she had for him the steadfastness, the incomprehensible eloquence, of
-the stars. Were these men blind, that the staring grief, the divine
-scorn, that had smitten him from the first with a vague awe, were
-invisible to them? Their coarse cynicism was brutally incomprehensible
-to Jehan. Having a soul, he could not see with the eyes of the sot or
-the adulterer, nor had he learnt to mistrust the intelligence of his
-own heart.
-
-As he laboured from man to man with his jug of mead to keep the brown
-horns brimming, he thought of the golden head that had glimmered in
-the criss-cross light of the yews in the castle garden. The woman had
-been faithless, to put popular report mildly; and Gorlois was a hard
-man; he would see her dead before he pitied her. Jehan was so far gone
-in dreams for the moment that he tripped over an outstretched pair of
-legs, and shattered his stone jar on the floor.
-
-A "God curse you," and lavish largesse in the way of kicks, recompensed
-the dreamer for this contempt of office. Jehan, bruised, spattered
-with mead, crawled away under the benches, and took refuge in a dark
-corner, where he could recover his wits behind the piled pikes of the
-gentlemen who cursed him. Such incidents were the trivialities of a
-menial existence. Jehan wiped his face on his sleeve, choked down his
-sobs with a dirty fist, and devoutly hoped to be forgotten.
-
-Meanwhile a broad figure had stood framed in the doorway, and drawn the
-attention of the company from the boy squirming like an eel along the
-floor. Jehan, peeping round the pile of pikes, saw a woman in a scarlet
-gown standing under a lamp that flared on the threshold. The woman was
-of unusual girth and height. Her black hair streamed about her sensual
-red face like clouds about a winter sun. Her neck was like the neck of
-a bull, and her bare arms would have shamed the arms of a smith. Jehan
-watched her as he would have watched a natural enemy, a thing whose
-destiny was to be brutish and to destroy.
-
-Men called her Malmain, the evil-handed. She was a cub of the forest,
-strong as a bear, cruel as any wolf. Years ago she had been caught as a
-child in the woods, tracked down to a rocky hole, a whelp that clawed
-and bit, and knew nothing of the speech of men. She had been brought
-to Tintagel and bred in the place, the pet of the soldiery, who had
-taught her the use of arms and the smack of wine. In ten years she had
-grown to her full strength, a creature wise in all the uncomely things
-of life, coarse, bold, and violent. Last of all, Gorlois, with a genius
-for vengeance, had given her charge of Igraine, his wife.
-
-The woman was good to look upon in a large, florid fashion. She came in
-and sat herself down on a stool at the end of one long wooden table,
-and stared round with her hard brown eyes. One man passed her a cup,
-another the wine jar. She tossed the former aside with an air of scorn,
-and buried her face in the mouth of the jar. When she had taken her
-pull she spat on the floor with a certain quaint deliberation, and
-wiped her mouth on the back of her bare arm.
-
-A wicked innuendo came from a man grinning at her elbow. Malmain
-laughed and pulled at her lip. Her presence conferred no leavening
-influence upon the place, and her sex made no claim for decorum. She
-was more than capable of caring for herself in the company of these
-gentlemen of the guard, for she could take her laugh and liquor with
-the best of them, and claim a solid respect for a fist that could smite
-like a mace.
-
-She flustered up a sigh that ended in a hiccough. "I am tired," she
-said, stretching her arms and showing the breadth and depth of her
-great chest.
-
-"Go to bed, fragile one, and shake the castle."
-
-"Little chance of that; who says I snore?"
-
-"Gildas the trumpeter."
-
-"Curse him; how should he know?"
-
-The man questioned grinned, and shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I meddle no further," he said. "How is the lord's wife?"
-
-Malmain licked her lips and reached for the pot. She tilted it with
-such gusto that the liquor overflowed and ran down her chin. After more
-cat's-pawing and a snivel she waxed communicative with a matter-of-fact
-coarseness, and like an old hound soon had the rest tonguing in her
-track.
-
-"Gorlois will break her yet," quoth one.
-
-"Or bury her."
-
-"A fit fellow, too,--and a gentleman; why can't she knuckle to him and
-play the lady?"
-
-"The woman's worth three of that chit with the white face; a fine brat
-ought to come of it."
-
-Malmain showed her strong white teeth.
-
-"Somehow," she said, "there's no more cross-grained creature than a
-woman with a grievance, especially when she has been baulked of her
-man. Let a woman speak for a woman, though I break the spirit of her
-with a whip. There's less fighting now; by Jesus, you should see her
-bones staring through her skin."
-
-Jehan had listened to their talk behind the pile of pikes in the
-corner. The blatant cynicism of it all chilled him like a March wind.
-He thought of the sad, strong face, the patient scorn, the youth, the
-prophetic May of her of whom they spoke. There was a certain terrible
-realism here that tore the tender bosom of his dreams.
-
-The room stifled him with its smoke and stew. Crawling round by the
-wall on all fours, he gained the door and crept out unnoticed into the
-dark. In the sky above the stars were shining. The world seemed big
-with peace, and the face of the heavens shone mild and clear as the
-face of God.
-
-Jehan stood under the shadow of the wall and looked at the window high
-up in the tower. It was black and lustreless, and only the dust of the
-stars shone up in the vast canopy of gloom. Jehan shook his fist at the
-dark pile of stone. Then he went up to the roof of the little turret
-and watched the sea foaming dimly on the rocks below.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-"I would have you know, madame, that every woman is pleasing to
-man,--saving his own wife."
-
-"Who in turn is pleasing to his friend,--even if he chance to be a
-king."
-
-The woman on the couch tossed her slipper from her small foot, and
-struck a series of snapping chords from the guitar that she held in
-her bosom. There was a certain rich insolence in her look,--a sensuous
-wickedness that was wholly poetic. The man bent forward from his stool,
-lifted the slipper, and kissed the foot whence it had fallen. He won a
-smile from the face bowered up in cushions, a smile like sunlight on
-a brazen mirror, brilliant, clear, metallic. There was a fine flush
-on her face, and the star on her bosom rose and fell as her breathing
-seemed to quicken and deepen for the moment. Her fingers plucked
-waywardly at the strings as she looked out from the window towards the
-sea.
-
-"I love life," she said.
-
-"Surely."
-
-"The pomp, the pride, the glory of being great. I have a future for
-you."
-
-A kind of spiritual echo burnt in the man's eyes.
-
-"And my wife?"
-
-"You are still something of a madman."
-
-"So you say."
-
-"I--indeed!"
-
-He bent forward with a sudden eruption of passion and kissed her foot
-again, till she drew it away under the folds of her dress.
-
-"Ah, you are still a little mad," she said, turning and smiling at him
-with her quick eyes; "bide so, my dear lord; I can suffer it."
-
-"And yet--"
-
-"I hate her! I hate her! I hate her!"
-
-"Bah!--she cannot harm you."
-
-"I hate her for being a martyr, for being strong, for thinking herself
-a saint. Pah!--how I could scratch her proud, big face. She humiliates
-me because of her misery, because she is contented to suffer. It is
-impossible to trample such a woman underfoot."
-
-The man gave a queer laugh.
-
-"You are still envious."
-
-"I envious,--I!"
-
-"Because she is never humbled, never asks mercy."
-
-"Curse her, let her die! Come and fan me, I am sleepy."
-
-On the southern side of the central tower, between it and the State
-quarters of the castle, lay the garden of Tintagel. It was a lustrous
-nook, barriered by grey walls, sheltered from the sea wind, and open to
-the full stare of the sun. Sombre cypresses lifted their spires above
-flower-beds mosaicked red, gold, and blue. The paths were tiled with
-coloured stones, and bordered with helichryse. In the centre of all a
-pool glimmered from a square of bright green grass.
-
-The window in the tower that had so seized upon the lad Jehan's heart
-looked out upon this square of colour that shone beneath the extreme
-blue of the summer sky. The casement was an open mihrab whence tragedy
-could look out upon the world. The glory of the sea, the sky, the
-cliffs, contrasted with the twilight tint of the prison room.
-
-Gorlois's wife sat in the window-seat and watched the waves and the
-horizon with vacant eyes. She was clad in a tattered gown of grey. Her
-hair had been shorn close, leaving but a golden aureole over neck,
-ears, and forehead. One hand was wrapped in a blood-stained cloth, and
-there were marks left by a whip upon her face. Her gown reached hardly
-to her ankles, showing bare feet and wheals, where the scourge had
-been. She was very frail, very worn, very spiritual.
-
-Her face was the face of one who looks into the solemn sadness of the
-past. Her lips were pressed together as in pain, and a certain divine
-despair dwelt in her deep eyes like light reflected from some twilight
-pool. The muscles stood limned in her neck like cords, and the fingers
-of one hand were hooked in the neck-band of her gown.
-
-Many days had passed since the life in Garlotte's valley. They had
-taught Igraine the deeds that might result from the stirring of the
-passions of such a man as Gorlois. It was a strenuous age, and men's
-souls were cast in large mould either to the image of good or evil.
-Even Boethius could not escape the malice of a great king. Attila had
-scourged the nations with a scourge of steel. Old things were passing
-amid disruption and despair. Gorlois had caught the Titanic, violent
-spirit of the age. His personality had won a lurid emphasis from
-tragedies that shook the world.
-
-Igraine had suffered many things, shame, torture, famine, since she had
-fallen again into his power. The man had shown no pity, only a fine
-fecundity in his devices for the breaking of her spirit. He could be
-barbarous as any Hun, and though she had guessed his fibre, it was not
-till these latter days that she learnt to know him more fully to her
-own distress. It was not the physical alone that oppressed her; Gorlois
-had imagination, ingenuity; he made her moral sufferings keener than
-the lash, and subordinated the flesh to the spirit. Igraine withstood
-him through it all. She felt in her heart that she was going to die.
-
-As she sat at the window, the sound of laughter came up suddenly from
-the garden, glowing in the sunlight. Mere mockery might have been its
-inspiration, so light, so merry, and so mellow was it. Igraine heard
-it, and leant forward over the sill to gain a broader view of the tiled
-walks and flower-beds below. She saw a woman dart out of a doorway in
-the wall opposite, and run in very dainty fashion, holding her skirts
-gathered in one hand, the other flourishing a posy of red roses. As
-she ran she laughed with an unrestrained extravagance that had in it
-something sensual and alluring.
-
-Igraine watched her with a badge of colour in her cheeks. The woman
-in the garden was clad in a tunic of sky-blue silk that ran down her
-body like flowing water. The tunic was cut low at the neck so as to
-show her white breast, whereon shone a little cross of gold. Her hair
-shimmered loose about her in the sunlight like an amber veil. Her
-lips were tinctured with vermilion; her face seemed white as apple
-blossom, and shadows had been painted under her lids. She moved with
-a graceful, sinuous air, her blue gown rippling about her, her small
-feet, slippered with silver embroidery, flashing glibly over the stones.
-
-A man was following her among the cypresses, and Igraine saw that it
-was Gorlois, sunburnt and strong, with ruddy arms, and the strenuous
-zest of manhood. There was something unpleasing in the muscular
-movement of his mood. He was Græcian and antique, a Mars striding with
-the red face of no godly love; sheer bovine vigour in the curves of his
-strong throat.
-
-Igraine saw the woman run round the garden, laughing as she went, her
-hair blowing behind her in the sunlight. She turned up the central
-path that led to the pool, with its little lawn closed by a balustrade
-of carved stone. Morgan la Blanche stood by the water and watched
-Gorlois abjuring the paths and striding towards her, knee-deep in blue
-and purple. He leapt the balustrade, and stood looking at the woman
-laughing at him through her hair.
-
-The red roses were thrust into Gorlois's face as he came to closer
-quarters. There was a short scuffle before the girl abandoned herself
-to him with a kind of sensuous languor. Igraine saw her body wrapped up
-in the man's brown arms.
-
-It was a minute or more before the two became aware of the face at
-the window overhead. Igraine found them staring up at her, Gorlois's
-swarthy face close to the woman's light aureole of hair as she stood
-buttressed against his broad chest. By instinct Igraine drew back
-into the room, till pride conquered this shrinking impulse. She leant
-forward upon her hands and stared down at the two, allegorical as Truth
-shaming Falsehood.
-
-The woman, meanwhile, had drawn aside from Gorlois's arms. She was
-pulling the roses to pieces, and scattering the red petals on the
-water, and there was a peevish sneer upon her lips.
-
-"Ever this white death," she said.
-
-Igraine saw the impatient gesturing of Morgan's hands, the tap of
-the embroidered slipper on the grass. The woman's words seemed to
-trouble Gorlois; he stood aside, and did not look at her, even when
-she edged away, watching him over her shoulder. It was a conflict of
-dishonourable sensations. Morgan jerked a quick look from her large
-blue eyes at the window overhead. There was nothing but rampant egotism
-upon her face, and it was evident that she trusted on Gorlois to follow
-her. He was staring swarthily into the water as though he watched the
-fish moving in the shallow basin. He hardly heeded Morgan as she picked
-up her pride and left him. Other thoughts seemed to have strong hold
-upon his mind, and he stood at gaze till the blue gown disappeared
-under the arch of the door it had so lately quitted.
-
-Gorlois leant against the balustrade and pulled his moustachios. His
-eyes had no very spiritual look, and his red lower lip drooped like an
-unfurled scroll. More than once he cast a quick, restless glance at
-the window in the tower. Irresolution seemed to run largely through
-his mood, and it was some while before he gathered his manhood and
-passed up an avenue of cypresses towards the tower. At the foot of the
-stairway he stood pulling his lip, and staring at the stones, oppressed
-by a certain dubiousness of thought.
-
-Climbing the stairs, he found the woman Malmain in an alcove, asleep
-on a settle. Her head had fallen back against the wall, her mouth was
-agape, and she was snoring with her black hair tumbled over her face.
-Gorlois woke her with his foot.
-
-The woman started up with the growl of a watch-dog, stared, and stood
-silent. Gorlois, curt as a man burdened with a purpose, spoke few words
-to her. She opened a door by a certain, mechanical catch, went in, and
-closed it after her.
-
-Half an hour passed.
-
-The door rolled again on its hinges. Malmain came out and stood before
-Gorlois on the threshold. She was breathing hard, and sweat stood on
-her face. Gorlois gave her a look and a word, passed in, and slammed
-the door after him. Malmain sat down on the settle, wiped her face, and
-listened.
-
-For a minute or more she heard nothing. An indefinite sound broke the
-silence, like the moving of branches in a wind at night. There was the
-sound of hard breathing, and the creaking of wood. Something clattered
-to the floor.
-
-"God judge between you and me."
-
-The voice was half-stifled as with the choking bitterness of great
-shame. Malmain grinned in her corner, and leant her head against the
-door to listen the better.
-
-"What of God!" said the man's voice with a certain hot scorn; "what is
-God?"
-
-"Take your knife and end it."
-
-"Madame wife, there is good in you yet."
-
-There was silence again, like a lull betwixt ecstasies of rain.
-Presently the woman's voice was heard, low, sullen, shamed.
-
-"Man--man, let me die!"
-
-"Own me master."
-
-"You--you! How can I lie in my throat!"
-
-"Is truth so new a thing?"
-
-"You have taught me to love death."
-
-Malmain heard Gorlois's hand upon the door. She opened it forthwith;
-he came out upon the threshold. His hands were trembling, and his face
-seemed dull, his eyes passionless.
-
-"I shall tame you yet," he said.
-
-"You can kill me!" came the retort from the room.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-There was in Tintagel a certain man named Mark, a legionary of the
-guard. The castle had known him two months or less, when he had come
-south into Cornwall with Gorlois's troop from Caerleon. He was an
-olive-skinned mercenary, black of beard and black of eye. In the
-guard-room he had become vastly popular; he could harp, tell a tale,
-hurl the bar, with any man in the garrison. He was strong and agile as
-a panther, and as ready with his tongue as he was with his sword. His
-comrades thought him a merry rapscallion enough, a good fellow whose
-life was rounded comfortably by the needs of the flesh. He could drink
-and jest, eat, sleep, and be happy.
-
-Women have quick instinct for a man of mettle, one whose capabilities
-for pleasing are somewhat of a perilous kind. Malmain of the Forest
-had taken note of Mark's black eyes, his olive skin, the immense
-self-control that seemed to bridle him. He had a fine leg, and a most
-gentlemanly hand. Moreover, his inimitable impudence, his supple wit,
-took her fancy, seeing that he was a man who professed a superb scorn
-for petticoats, and posed as being wise beyond his generation. There
-was a certain insolent independence about him that seemed to make of
-him a philosopher, a person pleased with the puerilities of others.
-
-It came about that Malmain--clumsy, lumbering creature--took to heaving
-stupendous sighs under the very nose of Mark of the guard. She had not
-been bred to reservations. If she liked a man, she told him the truth,
-with a certain admirable frankness. If she hated him, he could always
-rely upon her fist. Any ethical principle was like a book to her--very
-curious, no doubt, but absolutely beyond her understanding.
-
-Now the man Mark was a person of intelligence and discretion. He needed
-the woman's friendship for diplomatic reasons snared up in his own
-long skull, and since such partisanship could be won by a look and a
-word, he soon had Malmain very much at his service. Shrewd and cunning
-wench that she was in the course of nature, she was somewhat easily
-fooled by the man's suave impudence. She haunted Mark like a shadow
-when off her duty,--a very substantial shadow, be it noted,--and made
-it extravagantly plain that she was blessed after all with some of the
-sentiments of a woman.
-
-One evening, being in the mood, she caught him in a bye-passage as he
-came off guard. He was in armour, and carried a spear slanted over his
-shoulder. His burnished casque seemed to give a fine setting to his
-strong, sallow face.
-
-Malmain, generous creature, filled the passage like a gate. Her face
-matched her scarlet smock, and she was grinning like some grotesque
-head from the antique. Mark came to a halt, and leaning on his spear,
-looked at her in the most bland manner possible. He did not trust
-women overmuch, and he mistrusted Malmain in particular. Moreover, she
-smacked of the wine-cask.
-
-The woman edged close, and shook a fist in his face with a certain
-bluff enthusiasm.
-
-"A bargain! a bargain!"
-
-The passage was open to the west, and a glare of sunlight shimmered
-into Mark's eyes. He could only see the woman as a great blur, a mass
-of trailing hair, a loose, exuberant smock haloed with gold.
-
-"Ha! my cherub, you seem in fettle."
-
-The fist still flickered in his face.
-
-"A bargain! a bargain!"
-
-"Mother of mercy! you are in such a devil of a hurry."
-
-"A kiss for what's in my hand."
-
-"A buffet--big one--a rush-ring, or a garter?"
-
-"That tongue of yours; look and see, look and see!"
-
-Malmain spread her fingers. The man saw a ring of gold carved in the
-form of a dragon, with rubies for eyes, and a collar of emeralds about
-its throat. Lying in the woman's moist, fat palm, it glimmered in the
-slant light of the sun. Mark's eyes glittered as he looked at it.
-
-"I had the thing from the woman above," quoth Malmain, jerking her
-thumb over her shoulder.
-
-"A bribe?"
-
-"Who'd bribe me? Not a woman!"
-
-"Honest soul."
-
-"'That ring looks well on your finger,' said I. 'I shall have it.'
-'Never!' said she. 'That's too big a word,' said I. So I forced it off,
-for all her temper, and broke her finger in the doing of it."
-
-A transient shadow seemed to pass across the man's face, the wraith of
-a ghost-wrath insensible to the world.
-
-"Close the bargain, cherub."
-
-"A buss for it."
-
-"Twenty kisses in a week, and my mug of supper beer." He had the ring.
-
-Malmain did not stand alone in her devotion to Mark of the guard. The
-man had come by another friend in Tintagel, a friend without influence,
-it is true, but one, at least, who possessed abundant individuality,
-and the charm of an ingenuous nature. Mark was no mere bravo when he
-turned partisan to the lad Jehan, and took him within the pale of his
-mothering wit. He had a profound knowledge of men, and a philosophic
-insight into character that had not been gained solely on the march or
-in the ale-house. By profession he appeared a devil-may-care gentleman
-of the sword, a man of bone and muscle, the possessor of a vigorous
-stomach. These attributes were mere stage properties, so to speak,
-necessary to him for the occasion. For the rest, he knew what he knew.
-
-Mark had seen more than cowardice in the sensitive face of the lad.
-He had discovered the soul beneath the surface, the warmer, bolder
-personality behind the deceit of the flesh. Jehan appealed to him as
-a friendless thing, a vial of glass jostled in the stream of life by
-rough potsherds and sounding bowls. Mark took the lad in hand and made
-a disciple of him in less than a week. He humoured the lad, encouraged
-him, treated him like a comrade, drew the soul out of his limp,
-starved body. Jehan had never fallen upon such a friend before. He was
-bewitched by the man's personality. This Mark with the strong face and
-the falcon's eye seemed to see deep into the finer sentiments of life,
-to think as he thought, to conceive as he conceived. Jehan, unconscious
-little idealist that he was, bubbled over into innumerable confidences
-and confessions of feeling. This dark-eyed man, who never laughed at
-him, whose voice was never blatant and threatening, seemed to exert
-a magnetic influence upon his spirit. Jehan throned him a species of
-demigod, and idolised him as he had idolised few living things on earth
-before.
-
-There was more method in Mark's friendship than his comrades of the
-guard ever dreamt of in their thick noddles. They had many a laugh at
-Malmain and many a jest at her expense, but their wit never worked
-beyond vulgar banality. As for Jehan, his existence certainly seemed
-to better itself so far as they were concerned, though what the man
-Mark could see worth patronising in the lad, they were at a loss
-to discover. Jehan grew less servile, less diffident, more open of
-countenance. He hided a cook-boy of his own age in a casual scuffle.
-Mark had used a strong arm and a stronger wit for him on occasion, and
-the little bastard was no longer cuffed at the random pleasure of every
-gentleman of Gorlois's guard.
-
-Jehan often spoke to Mark of the lady of the tower whose hair was like
-the red-gold cloak of autumn. The man seemed ready to hear of her
-beauty and her distress, and all the multitudinous tales concerning her
-given from the guard-room. He kindled to the romantic possibilities
-of the affair, and was as full of sentiment as Jehan himself could
-wish. Saying little at first, he watched the lad with keen, discerning
-eyes, as though tracing out the trend, depth, and sincerity of his
-sympathies; nor was he long ignorant of the strain of chivalry that was
-sounding in the lad's heart. The more generous sentiments leapt out
-in a look, a word, a colouring of the cheek. Given inspiration, it was
-possible to make a fanatic of the boy, a hero in the higher rendering
-of the term.
-
-In due course the man grew more communicative, less of a listener.
-Jehan heard of Avangel, of the island manor in Andredswold, of Pelleas,
-and of the days in Winchester. The whole tragedy was spread before
-him like a legend, some mighty passion throe of the past. He listened
-open-mouthed, with blue eyes that searched the man's face. Mark had
-taken to himself of a sudden an air of mystery and peril. Jehan knew by
-intuition that these matters were to be kept secret as the grave. Great
-pride rose in him at being held worthy of such trust. He felt even
-aggrieved when Mark spoke to him of discretion, with a finger on his
-lip. Such a secret was like a hoard of gold to the lad. It pleased him
-with a sense of responsibility and of faith, and Jehan loved honour,
-for all his novitiate amid the morals of the guard-room.
-
-He had drunk deep of old songs, and of the heroics of the harp. Such
-things were like moonlight to him, touching his soul with a lustre of
-idyllic truth. He began to dream dreams, and to speculate extravagantly
-as to the things that were yet hid from his knowledge. It was borne
-in upon his mind that Mark was this Pelleas in disguise, come to save
-Igraine from Gorlois and the towers of Tintagel. The notion took his
-heart by storm, and his sympathies hovered over the woman like so many
-scarlet-winged moths. He desired greatly to speak to Mark of that
-which was in his heart, but feared to seem mischievous and lacking in
-discretion.
-
-Some three days after Malmain had given Mark the Lady Igraine's ring,
-Gorlois rode hunting with Morgan la Blanche and a train of knights
-and damsels. Half the castle turned out to see them sally with their
-ten couple of hounds in leash, and a goodly company of prickers and
-beaters. Gareth the minstrel rode with the company on a white horse
-and sang to the harp a hunting song, and then a chant d'amour.
-Morgan's laugh was as clear as a bell pealing over water as she rode at
-Gorlois's side in the sunlight, her silks and samites and gold-green
-tissues fluttering in the wind.
-
-Jehan ran over the bridge to see them go down into the valley. The dogs
-tugged at the thongs, the boar spears glittered, the dresses threaded
-the maze of green as roses thread a briar. Jehan climbed a rock,
-exulting in the life, the spirit, the colour of it all. Gareth's strong
-voice came up from the valley as he sang of love and of the fairness of
-women. Jehan envied him his harp and the honour that it won him. It was
-his own hope to sing of the beauty of the world, the green ecstasy of
-spring, of autumn forests flaming to the sky, the eternal sorrow of the
-tortured sea. He came by this same desire in later years when he sang
-to Arthur and Guinevere and Launcelot of the Lake in the gardens of
-Caerleon.
-
-A hand plucked him by the heel as he lay curled on the rock watching,
-the cavalcade flickering away into the green. Looking down, he saw the
-strong face of Mark of the guard. There was a smile on the man's lips,
-and to Jehan there seemed something prophetic in his eyes. He climbed
-down and stood looking into the other's face, the mute, trusting look
-of a dog.
-
-Mark took him by the shoulder.
-
-"The sea is blue and gold, and the 'Priest's Pool' like a violet well."
-
-"There is time for a swim."
-
-"We will watch for a sail from the cliffs."
-
-"And you will tell me more of Pelleas and Igraine."
-
-Mark was in a visionary mood; he used his spear as a staff and talked
-little. A sleepy sea bubbled a line of foam along the shore. Bleak
-slopes rolled greenly against an azure sky, and landwards crag and
-woodland stood steeped in a mist of sunlight. Jehan, sedulous and
-reverent, watched the passionless calm of thought upon the man's face.
-His eyes were turned constantly towards the sea with the hope of one
-waiting for a white sail from the underworld.
-
-When they had gone a mile or more along the cliffs, they came to a
-path leading to a bay whose lunette of sand shone red gold above the
-foam. It was a place of crags and headlands, poised sea billows, purple
-waters pressing from the west. Jehan sat on a stone and waited. Mark
-took his cloak and bound it to the staff of his spear. Jehan watched
-him as he stood at his full height like a tall pine on the edge of the
-cliff and lifted his spear at arm's length above his head. Seawards,
-dim and distant like a pearl over the purple sea, Jehan saw a sail
-strike out of the vague west. Mark still held the cloak upon his spear.
-Jehan understood something of all this. His mind, packed with plots and
-subtleties, shone with the silvery aureole of romance.
-
-The sail grew against the sky, and a ship loomed gradual out of the
-west. Mark shook the cloak from his spear, and climbed down the path
-that curled from the cliff with Jehan at his heels. Below, the waves
-swirled in amid the rocks and ran ripple on ripple up the yellow sand.
-The whole place seemed filled with the hoarse underchant of the sea.
-
-In a narrow part of the track Mark stopped suddenly, and stood leaning
-on his spear. Jehan nearly blundered into him, but saved himself by the
-help of a tuft of grass. The man's face was on a level with the lad's,
-and his eyes seemed to look into Jehan's soul.
-
-He pointed to the distant headland, where the towers of Tintagel rose
-against the sky.
-
-"Death waits yonder," he said.
-
-"For whom?"
-
-"Igraine,--Gorlois's wife."
-
-Jehan looked at him with all his soul. The man was no longer the
-quaint, vapouring soldier, but a being of different mould, keen,
-solemn, even magnificent. Jehan felt himself on the verge of romance;
-the man's face seemed to stare down fear.
-
-"And Pelleas!" he said.
-
-"Pelleas?"
-
-"Art thou not Pelleas?"
-
-Mark smiled in his eyes.
-
-"Your dreams fly too fast," he said.
-
-"And yet--"
-
-"You would see some one play the hero. Who knows but that a bastard may
-save a kingdom."
-
-Mark moved on down the path, stopping now and again to watch the ship
-at sea; Jehan followed at his heels. They reached the beach, and saw
-the waves rolling in on them from the west, with the white belly of
-a sail showing over the water. Mark made no further tarrying in the
-matter. Standing on a stretch of sand levelled smooth by the water, he
-traced a cross thereon with the point of his spear.
-
-"Swear by the cross."
-
-Jehan's face was turned to the man's, eager and enquiring.
-
-"To whom shall I swear troth?" he said.
-
-"To Gorlois's wife."
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"And to the King."
-
-"The King!"
-
-Jehan crossed himself with great good-will.
-
-"By the blood of the Lord Jesu, I swear troth."
-
-They went down close to the waste of waters, and let the spume sweep
-almost to their feet. A vast blue bank of clouds mountained the far
-west; the sea seemed deep in colour as an amethyst. Gulls were winging
-and wailing about the cliffs. Tintagel stood out in its strength
-against the sky, and they could see the waves white upon its rocks.
-
-Mark took the ring Malmain had given him from a pouch at his belt, and
-held the gold circle before the lad's eyes.
-
-"From the hand of Gorlois's wife," he said.
-
-Jehan nodded.
-
-"This ring was given her by that Pelleas."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Who is Uther Pendragon, the King."
-
-Jehan's blue eyes seemed to dilate till they looked strangely large in
-his thin white face.
-
-"The King!" he said, in a kind of whisper.
-
-Mark made all plain to him in a few words.
-
-"The Lady Igraine loved Pelleas, as well she might, not knowing him to
-be Ambrosius's brother. It was this same great love that brought her in
-peril of Gorlois's sword. It is this same love that draws her down to
-her death--there in Tintagel. Uther Pendragon is at Caerleon; her hope
-is with him. You, Jehan, shall carry word of this to the King."
-
-The lad's heart was beating like the heart of a giant. The world seemed
-to expand about him, to grow luminous with the glory of great deeds;
-he had the braying of a hundred trumpets in his ears. He heard swords
-ring, saw banners blow, and towers topple like smitten trees.
-
-"I am the King's servant," he said.
-
-"You have sworn troth; so be it. You shall go to the King, to Uther
-Pendragon, at Caerleon. Tell him you had this ring from a soldier,
-bribed to deliver it by the Lady Igraine. Tell him the evil that is
-done to her in the castle of Tintagel. Tell him all--withhold nothing."
-
-Jehan flushed to the temples; his lips moved, but no words came from
-them. He stood stiff and erect, looking out to sea, following with his
-eyes the sweep of Mark's spear.
-
-"I am the King's servant," he said.
-
-The ship had drawn in towards the shore. She was lying to with her
-sails put aback, her black hull rising and falling morosely against
-the tumultuous purple of the clouds. Nearer still a small galley came
-heading for the shore with a gush of foam at her prow as the men in her
-bent to the oars. The galley came swinging in on the broad backs of the
-sluggish waves, and shooting the surf, grounded on the sands, the men
-in her leaping out and dragging her beyond the reach of the sea.
-
-There was a more mellow light on Mark's face as he pointed Jehan to
-the boat, and the ship swaying on the sun-gilded waves.
-
-"They will carry you to Caerleon," he said.
-
-"And you, sire?"
-
-"There is need of me at Tintagel."
-
-"I have sworn troth."
-
-Jehan stood and looked into the west at the clouds gold-ribbed, domed,
-snow, and purple. His face might have been lit by the warm glow of a
-lamp, so clear and radiant was it. He had thrust the King's ring into
-his bosom.
-
-"The Lord Jesu speed me," he said; "through the Lady Igraine's face I
-am no longer a coward. God speed me to save her!"
-
-Mark kissed him on the forehead.
-
-"You have a soul in you," he said.
-
-The man stood on the strand under the black cliffs and watched the boat
-climb the waves. He saw the galley hoisted up, the sails flapping in
-the wind as the ship sheered out and ran for the open sea. Her sails
-gleamed white against the tumultuous west, and the ridged waters hid
-her hull. Overhead, the gulls screamed and circled. Mark, shouldering
-his spear, turned back and climbed the cliff, with his face towards the
-towers of Tintagel.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-A galley came up the Usk towards dawn, towards dawn when the woods were
-hung with mist, and a vast quiet brooded over the world. The river made
-a moist murmur through reeds and sedge, seeming to chant of golden
-meads as it ran to wed the sea. All the eastern casements of Caerleon
-glimmered gold as the dawn struck over wood and hill; the city's walls
-smiled out of the night; her vanes and towers were noosed as with fire.
-The galley drew to the great quay, and poled to the steps as the city
-awoke.
-
-A lad, with his russet mantle turned up over his girdle, passed up
-from the galley and the quay towards the southern gate of the city of
-Caerleon. His step was sanguine, his face deep with dreams. He seemed
-to personate "Youth" entering that city of woeful magic that poets and
-painters name "Romance."
-
-Within the walls the stir of life had been sounded in by the clarions
-of the dawn. Seafaring men went down to the river and their ships. At
-the gate arms rang, tumbrils rumbled. Slim girls passed out into the
-orchards and the fields, under the trees all heavily grained, russet
-and green and gold. Women drew water at the wells. The merchant folk in
-the market square spread their stalls for the day--fruit, flesh, fish,
-cloth, and the fabrics of the East, armour and brazen jars, vases of
-strange device.
-
-The city pleased the lad as he passed through its stirring streets, and
-took the vigour of it, the human symbolism, into his soul. His idealism
-shed a glamour over the place; how red and white were its maidens;
-how fair its stately houses; how splendid the clashing armour of its
-guards. In the market square he asked a wizened apple-seller concerning
-the palace, and was pointed to the wooded hill where white walls rose
-above the green. Jehan solaced himself with a couple of ruddy apples
-from the stall. It was early yet for the palace, so the seller said,
-and Jehan sat down by a fountain where doves flew, and thought of his
-errand as he watched the folk go by.
-
-The sun was high before he came to the great gate leading to the
-gardens of the King. It chanced to be a great day at Caerleon, a day
-of public appeal, when Uther played patriarch to his people, and sat
-to hear the prayers of the wronged or the oppressed. Hence it followed
-that Jehan, pressing in at the gate, found himself one among many,
-one of a herd, a boy among his elders. In the antechamber of the
-palace he was edged into a corner, elbowed and kept there by stouter
-clients who, as a mere matter of course, shouldered a boy to the wall.
-Argument availed nothing. Men were used to plausible tales for winning
-precedence, and each considered his especial matter the most pressing
-in the eyes of justice. The crowd overawed him. The doorkeepers thrust
-him back with their staves when he waxed importunate and attempted to
-parley. Often he bethought him of the ring, but, being quick to suspect
-theft in such a mob, he kept the talisman tight in his tunic, and
-trusted to time and the powers of patience.
-
-What with giving way to women whose sex commended them, and men whose
-strength and egotism seemed vested in their elbows, Jehan was fended
-far from the door all day. A squabbling, querulous crowd filled the
-place; women with grievances, merchants who had been plundered on the
-road; peasants, priests, soldiers; beggars and adventurers; a Jew
-banker whom some Christian had taken by the beard; a farmer whose
-wife had taken a fancy to a gentleman's bed. It was a stew of envy,
-discontent, and misfortune. Jehan, whose none too sumptuous clothing
-did him little service, was shouldered casually into the background.
-"Take second place to a brat of a boy! God forbid such an indignity!"
-The vexed folk believed vigorously in the premiership of years.
-
-It was well towards evening when Jehan, who had gone fasting save for
-a rye-cake, found himself the last to claim audience of the King. A
-fat pensioner, yawning phenomenally and dreaming of supper, eyed him
-with little favour from the top step of the stair. The day had been a
-crowded one, and the savoury scent of roast flesh assailed the senses
-of the gentleman of the "white wand." Jehan braved the occasion with
-heart thumping, produced the ring, and held it as a charm under the
-doorkeeper's nose.
-
-There was an abrupt revulsion in the methods of this domestic demigod.
-Doors opened as by a magic word; servants went to and fro; bells
-sounded. A grey-bearded Pharisee appeared, scanned the lad over with an
-aristocratic contempt, beckoned him to follow. The man with the white
-wand refrained for a moment from yawning over the paltriness of the
-world at large.
-
-Jehan, taken by galleries and curtained doors, and disenchanted
-somewhat with the palatial régime, found himself in a chapel casemented
-towards the west. Lamps burnt upon the altar, and a priest knelt upon
-the steps as in prayer. Sacramental vessels glimmered at the feet of
-the frescoed saints. A fragrant scent of musk and lavender lay heavy on
-the air.
-
-Jehan saw a man standing by a window, a man girded with a sword, and
-garbed in no light and joyous fashion. The man's face possessed a kind
-of sorrowful grandeur, a solemn kindliness that struck home into the
-lad's heart. The eyes that met his were eyes such as women and children
-trust. Jehan guessed speedily enough that this was the King.
-
-There was a certain intuition big in him, prophesying of the pain that
-burdened his message. He faltered for the moment, knelt down, looked
-into the man's eyes, and took courage. There was a questioning calm in
-them that quieted him like the dew of prayer. He took the ring and gave
-it into the King's hand.
-
-"From the Lady Igraine," was his plea.
-
-Now Jehan, though he looked no higher than Uther's knees, saw him rock
-and sway like some great poplar in a storm. A strange lull seemed to
-fall sudden upon the world. The lad listened to the beating of his own
-heart, and wondered. He had soul enough to imagine the large utterance
-of those few words of his.
-
-A deep voice startled him.
-
-"Your message."
-
-He knelt there and told his tale, simply, and without clamour.
-
-"It is the truth, sire," he said at the end thereof, "so may I drink
-again of the Lord's blood, and eat his bread at the holy table."
-
-"My God, what truth!"
-
-The man's voice swept the chapel like a wind, deep, sonorous, and
-terrible. The large face, the broad forehead, the deep-set eyes were
-turned to the casement and the west. The face was like the face of one
-who looks into hell. Jehan, on his knees, looked up and shivered. He
-had told the truth, and the storm awed him like a miracle. It seemed
-almost impious to be witness of a wrath that was as the righteous
-passion of a god.
-
-"Gorlois tortures her?"
-
-"To her death, sire."
-
-"The whole--spare nothing."
-
-"She is starved and scourged, and harlots mock her."
-
-"God!"
-
-"They drag her soul in the mire."
-
-It was sunset, and all the sky burnt gold and crimson in the west.
-Every lozenge of glass in the casement shone red as with fire. Beyond
-Caerleon a mysterious gloom of trees rolled blackly against the chaos
-of the decline. The whole world seemed glamoured and steeped in a
-ghostly quiet. Usk, a band of shadowy gold, ran with vague glimmerings
-to the sea.
-
-The King spread his arms to the west, and under his black brows his
-eyes smouldered.
-
-"Am I Uther of Britain--and a King?"
-
-And again in a deep half-heard whisper--
-
-"Igraine! Igraine! thou art true unto death."
-
-From the terrace below came sudden the sound of harping. It was
-Rivalin, the Court minstrel, singing as the sun went down--
-
- "Quenched be all the bitter pain,
- When the roses bloom again
- Eyes shall smile through glimmering tears."
-
-The face of the King was like the face of a man who sees a vision.
-All the glow of the hills seemed in his eyes. His hands shook as he
-stretched them to the west, the west that was a chasm of torrential
-gold.
-
-"Igraine," he said, as in a dream.
-
-And again--
-
-"Tintagel will I hurl into the sea."
-
-Jehan knelt and looked mutely at the King. The gloom of the roof seemed
-to cover him like a canopy, and the frescoes glimmered through the
-blue shadows. Uther wore a small crucifix about his neck. Jehan, full
-of a sense of tragedy, saw him tear the crucifix from its chain, and
-cast it at his feet. The priest at the altar, haloed by the glowing of
-his lamps, looked at the King, white and wondering. It was an exultant
-voice that made the chalice quiver.
-
-"Hitherto I have served a God," it said; "now I will serve my own soul!"
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-The woman's face, haloed by the gloom of the casement, still looked out
-from Tintagel over the solitary grandeur of sea and cliff. Igraine saw
-ships pass seldom athwart the west, but they brought no hope for her,
-for she thought herself alone, and served of none. How should Uther the
-King know that she was mewed in Tintagel at Gorlois's pleasure! Had he
-not commended her to the calm orchards and cloisters of a nunnery? Even
-the ring he had given her had been stolen by sheer force. Days came and
-went, dawn flooded the eastern woods with gold, and evening tossed her
-torches in the west. To Igraine they were as alike as the gulls that
-wheeled and winged white over the blue waters.
-
-There are few men of such despicable fibre that they are wholly ruled
-by the egotism of the flesh. Your complete villain is no frequent
-prodigy, being more the denizen of the regions of romance than of the
-common, trafficking, trivial world. There are bad men enough, but few
-Neros. Give a human being passions, pride, and intense egotism, and
-his potential energy for evil is unbounded. Virtue is often a mere
-matter of habit or circumstance. Joseph might have ended otherwise if
-Potiphar's wife had had more wit; and as for Judas, he was unfortunate
-in being made banker to a God.
-
-Gorlois of Cornwall was beholden to his own strenuous, north-winded
-nature for any trouble he might incur in his madness against Igraine.
-However much he braved it out to his own conscience, he knew well
-enough whether he was content or no. He was a strong man, and selfish,
-resentful, and very human. He was no Oriental monster, no mere Herod.
-What magnanimity he possessed towards his wife had been frozen into a
-wolfish scorn by the things that had passed in Garlotte's valley in
-Wales. Moreover, he had a bad woman at his elbow. Like many a vexed and
-restless man, he had turned to ambition, and the darker features of his
-character were being developed thereby. A king had wronged him; it was
-easy for a great noble to lay plots against a king. War and the clamour
-of war became like the prophetic sound of a storm from afar in his ears.
-
-Little comment had followed upon the disappearance of the lad Jehan on
-the day when Gorlois and his knights had ridden hunting. No one cared
-for the lad; no one missed him materially. Casual gossip arose thereon
-in the guard-room. The lad had risked the halter or the branding-iron,
-and sundry threats were launched after him at random. Mark of the guard
-shrugged his shoulders and laughed.
-
-"There's pluck in the lad," he said, "for all your bullying. By my
-faith, I guess he grew tired of kicks and leavings, and of being cursed
-by so many sons of the pot. Bastard or no bastard, the lad's no fool."
-
-The guard-room scoffed complacently at the notion. Jehan do anything in
-the world but snivel! Not he! These gentlemen judged of a man's worth
-by the animal propensities of the creature. They weighed a man as they
-would weigh an ox--for flesh, and the breed in him. Mark, making a
-show of warming to his wine, enlightened his men further as to Jehan's
-disappearance.
-
-"The lad and I went to bathe," he said; "there was a ship in the
-offing, and sailors had come ashore to get water by St. Isidore's
-spring. They wanted a lad for cabin service, so I took two gold pieces,
-and told them to kidnap Jehan."
-
-A laugh hailed the confession, a laugh that changed to a cheer when
-Mark won accomplices by casting largesse for a scramble on the
-guard-room floor.
-
-"I wish them luck of him," said the captain, pocketing silver; "devil
-of a spark could I ever knock out of the lad."
-
-"May be you hit too hard."
-
-"May be not. I'll lay my fist against a rope's-end for education."
-
-"Mark takes his wine like a gentleman," quoth one.
-
-"May he get drunk on pay day."
-
-"And sell another Joseph into Egypt."
-
-The woman Malmain came in to join them, corpulent and thirsty.
-Superabundant and colossal, she impressed a strenuous and didactic mood
-upon the company, grumbling like a volcano, emitting a smoke of mighty
-unfeminine gossip. Her black eyes wandered continually towards Mark of
-the guard. She watched him with a certain air of possession amid all
-her sweat and jabber, laughing when he laughed, making herself a coarse
-echo to his will.
-
-Some one spoke of Gorlois's wife. So personal a subject moved Malmain
-to mystery on the instant. She tapped her forehead with her finger;
-shook her head with a significance that was sufficient for the occasion.
-
-"Mad!" said the captain of the guard.
-
-Malmain sucked her lips and yawned with her great chasm of a mouth.
-
-"She was always that," she said with a hiccough.
-
-"Paradise, eh?"
-
-"And golden harps!"
-
-"And, damme, no beer!"
-
-There was a certain flavour in the last remark that made the men roar.
-
-"I wonder where they'll bury her," said the captain.
-
-"Throw her into the sea."
-
-"Gorlois's little wench won't weep her eyes out."
-
-Malmain smote a stupendous hip, and tumbled to the notion. The settle
-shook and creaked under her as though in protest.
-
-"We'll all get married," she said; "Mark, my man, don't blush."
-
-Babylon was compassed round! The same evening a soldier on the walls
-of Tintagel saw a dim throng of sails rise whitely out of the west.
-The streaks of canvas stood above the sea touched by the light of
-the setting sun. There was something ominous in these gleaming sails
-sweeping in a wide half-circle out of the unknown. A motley throng of
-castle folk gathered on the walls. Men spoke of the barbarians and of
-Ireland as they watched the ships rising solemn and silent from the
-west. Gorlois himself climbed up into a tower and gazed long at these
-sails whose haven was as yet unknown. He learnt little by the scrutiny.
-The ships had hardly risen above the purple twilight when night came
-and shrouded the whole in vague and impenetrable gloom.
-
-Gorlois ordered the castle into a state of siege, and with the night an
-atmosphere of suspense gathered about Tintagel.
-
-About midnight some dozen points of fire burst out redly on the hills.
-Sudden and sinister they shone like beacon fires, but by whom lit
-the castle folks could not tell. Men idled on the walls, shoulder to
-shoulder, talking in undertones, with now and again a bluff oath to
-invoke courage. The black infinite, above, around, seemed to hem the
-place as eternity hems the soul. War and death lurked in the dark, and
-on the rocks the sea kept up a perpetual moan.
-
-Gorlois walked the walls with several of his knights. He was restless,
-and in no Christian temper, for the dark muzzled him. Not that he
-feared the unknown, or the perils that might lurk on hill or sea. He
-had the soul of a soldier, loved danger for its own sake, and took a
-hazard as he would take wine. Yet there are certain thoughts that haunt
-a man for all his hardihood, thoughts that may not weaken him though
-they may chafe his temper. Such to Gorlois was the memory of a starved
-face looking out at him scornfully from the gloom, the face of Igraine,
-his wife.
-
-That night Gorlois's mind was prophetic in dual measure. Like a good
-captain he scanned the human horizon for snares and enmities, old feuds
-and the vengeances of men. The dark sky seemed to hold out two scrolls
-to him tersely illumined as to the near future. To Gorlois they read--
-
-THE BARBARIANS,
-
-OR
-
-THE KING!
-
-Forewarned thus in spirit, he kept to the walls till dawn. The sea sang
-for him stern epics of tumult and despair. Large projects were moving
-in his mind like waters that bubble up darkly in a well. He was in a
-mood for great deeds, alarms and plottings, lusts, gnashings, and the
-splendid agonies of war.
-
-When the grey veil rose from the world many faces looked out east and
-west from Tintagel for sign of legions or of ships at sea. Strange
-truth! not a sail showed upon the ocean, not a spear or shield
-glimmered on the eastern hills. The threatenings of the night seemed to
-have cleared like the leaden cloudscape of a stormy sky.
-
-Gorlois, scarred, brooding, sinister, appealed his knights as to the
-event.
-
-"Not a ship, not a shield," he said, "yet I'll swear we saw watchfires
-on the hills. Were we scared for nothing?"
-
-"Devil's beacons," quoth one.
-
-"I have heard sailors tell of the phantom fleet of the Phœnicians."
-
-"Have a care," said Sir Isumbras of the wrinkled face; "I remember me
-of the taking of Genorium; given the chance of an ambuscado, the good
-captain--"
-
-Gorlois cut in upon his prosings.
-
-"Scour the country, well and good," he said, "send out your riders; we
-will see whether there is a Saxon betwixt Tintagel and Glastonbury."
-
-Gorlois had hardly delivered himself, and the company was passing from
-the battlements, when a trumpet-cry thrilled the solitary morning
-air. Gorlois and his knights halted at the head of the turret-stair,
-and looked out from the walls towards the east. A single figure on
-horseback was moving along the ridge leading to the headland. The rider
-was clad in black, and his horse-trappings were of sable. He carried
-neither spear nor shield, but only a herald's long trumpet balanced
-upon his thigh. He rode very much at his leisure, as though the whole
-world could abide his business.
-
-Gorlois eyed him blackly under his hand.
-
-"I was wrong, sirs," he said.
-
-Old Isumbras's wrinkles deepened. He tapped the walls with the scabbard
-of his sword, and waxed oracular after an old man's fashion. Gorlois
-turned his broad back on him.
-
-"There is trouble in yonder gentleman's wallet," he said.
-
-They passed with clashing arms down the black well of the stairway to
-the court. Gates were rumbling on their hinges. The herald had ridden
-over the bridge, and the guards had given him passage. He was brought
-into the court where Gorlois stood in the centre of a half-circle of
-knights. The herald wore a cap of crimson velvet and a mask over his
-face. He walked with a certain stately swagger; it was palpable that he
-was no common fellow.
-
-There was no parley on either part. Those who watched saw that this
-emissary carried a case of scarlet cloth and a naked poniard. He gave
-the case into Gorlois's hands, but threw the poniard on the stones at
-his feet. A fine insolence burnt in his stride and gesturing. Gorlois's
-scar seemed to show up duskily upon his cheek, and he looked as though
-tempted to tear the mask from the stranger's face. An incomprehensible
-dignity waved him back, and while he dallied with his wrath, the man
-turned his back on him and marched unconcernedly for the gate. The
-court bristled with steel, but none hindered or molested him. They
-heard the gate roll to, and the rattle of hoofs on the bridge. The
-sound died rapidly away, leaving Tintagel silent as a ruin.
-
-Gorlois picked up the poniard, for none of his men stirred, and cut
-the woven band that held the lappets of the case. The white corner of
-a waxen tablet came to light. Gorlois drew the tablet out, held it at
-arm's length, and read the inscription thereon. His face grew hard and
-vigilant as he read, and he seemed to spell the thing over to himself
-several times before satisfied to the letter. He stood awhile in
-thought, and then leaving his knights to their conjectures, walked away
-to that quarter of the castle where Morgan la Blanche had her lodging.
-
-He found the woman couched by the window that looked out towards the
-sea. Though dawn had but lately come, she was awake, and sat combing
-her hair, while a kitten slept on the blue coverlet covering her lap.
-Wine and fruit stood on the table near the bed, with scented water, a
-rouge-pot, and a bowl of flowers. Morgan was smothered in fine white
-linen, banded at neck and wrists with sky-blue silk. A kerchief of gold
-gossamer work covered her shoulders.
-
-Gorlois touched her lips, and let her hair run through his fingers like
-water.
-
-"Minion, you are awake early."
-
-Morgan's face shone white, and her eyes looked tired and faded.
-She had heard rumours and had watched the night through, being
-tender-conscienced as to her own skin. Adversity, even in its meaner
-forms, was a thing insufferably insolent, a cloud in the absolute gold
-of a sensuous existence. Being quick to mark any shadowing of the
-horizon, she was undeceived by Gorlois's mere smile. She caught his
-hand and stared up at him.
-
-"Well!"
-
-"What troubles you?"
-
-"Is it to be a siege?"
-
-Gorlois stretched his strong neck, laughed, and eschewed subtlety. It
-interested him to see this worldling ruffled, Morgan, whose chief care
-was how the world might serve her.
-
-"Read," he said, putting the tablet into her hands.
-
-Morgan sat up in bed with her fair hair streaming over her shoulders.
-She traced out the words hurriedly with a white finger-tip. Her eyes
-seemed to grow large as she read; her hands trembled a very little.
-At the end thereof she dropped the tablet into her lap and looked at
-Gorlois with a certain petulant dread.
-
-"How did the man hear of all this?"
-
-"God knows!"
-
-"Treachery!"
-
-Gorlois jerked his belt and said nothing.
-
-The woman Morgan sat and hugged her knees. She looked out to sea with a
-frown on her face, and the blue coverlet dragged in tight folds about
-her waist. The kitten woke up and began to play with Morgan's hair as
-it trailed down upon the bed. She cuffed the little beast aside, and
-looked at Gorlois. Her eyes now were steely and clear, and very blue
-under her white forehead.
-
-"Obviously, he has learnt all," she said.
-
-Gorlois nodded morosely.
-
-"And this matter is to be between you alone?"
-
-"I have his word."
-
-"And he is a fool for truth."
-
-Silence held them both awhile, and Morgan seemed to dally with her
-thoughts. Her lips worked loosely as though moving with her mind. The
-kitten clawed its way up the coverlet and rubbed its glossy flank
-against the woman's arm.
-
-"What of an ambush?" she suggested mildly.
-
-Gorlois darted a look at her and shook his head.
-
-"No; it shall be fair between us."
-
-"Honour!"--with a sneer.
-
-"I am a soldier."
-
-"By the prophet, that is the strange part of it all. You go out to kill
-a man, and yet trouble about the method."
-
-"There honour enters."
-
-"You kill him, all the same."
-
-Morgan tossed the quilt aside, thrust a pair of glimmering feet out of
-the bed, and stood at Gorlois's elbow. She took the tablet of wax and
-held it over a lamp that was burning till the wax softened and suffered
-the lettering to be effaced. Gorlois's great sword hung from the carved
-bed-post. Morgan took it and buckled it to the man with her plump,
-worldly little hands.
-
-"Let it not fail," she said.
-
-Gorlois kissed her lips.
-
-"There will be no King; and the heir--well, you are a great soldier,
-and men fear your name."
-
-She kept him with her awhile and then bade him farewell. The sun was
-high in the heavens when Gorlois, in glittering harness, rode out alone
-from Tintagel, and passed away into the wilds.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-There was a preternatural brightness over sea and cliff that day.
-Headland and height stood limned with a luminous grandeur; the sea was
-a vast opal; mountainous clouds sailed solemn and stupendous over the
-world. Towards evening it grew still and sultry, and storms threatened.
-A vapoury leviathan lowered black out of the east, devouring the blue,
-with scudding mists spray-like about his belly. The sky changed to a
-sable cavern. In the west the sun still blazed through mighty crevices,
-candescent gold; the world seemed a chaos of glory and shadow.
-Sea-birds came screaming to the cliffs. The walls of Tintagel burnt
-athwart the west.
-
-Presently out of the blue bosom of an unearthly twilight a vague wind
-rose. Gusts came, clamoured, and died into nothingness. The world
-seemed to shudder. The dry bracken and grass on the hillsides hissed
-as the wind came seldom and tumultuous. The roadway smoked. In the
-valleys the trees moaned, shivered, and stood still.
-
-Mark of the guard stood in the garden leaning on his spear, watching
-the storm gathering above. It was his guard that night over the
-stairway leading to Igraine's room, and he stood under the shadow of
-the tower.
-
-A red sword flashed sudden out of the east, and smote the hills.
-Thunder followed, growling over the world. Then rain came, and a
-whirlwind seemed to fly from the face of the storm. In the west a
-burning crater still poured gold upon a restless and afflicted sea.
-
-It grew dark very rapidly, and a thundering canopy soon overarched
-Tintagel. Now and again flaming cracks of fire ran athwart the dome
-of the night, lighting battlements and sky with a weird momentary
-splendour. Rain rattled on the stones and drifted whirling against door
-and casement. Small torrents formed along the walks; every spout and
-gully gushed and gurgled. Like an underchant came the hoarse cry of the
-sea.
-
-Mark had withdrawn under the arch of the tower's entry. A cresset
-flamed and spluttered higher up the stairway, throwing down an
-ineffectual gleam upon the man's armour as he stood and looked into the
-night. The storm fires lit his face, making it start out of the dark
-white and spiritual, with largely luminous eyes. He held motionless at
-his post like a Roman soldier watching the downfall of Pompeii.
-
-Solitude possessed garden, court, and battlement, for no one stirred
-on such a night. The knights of the garrison were making merry in the
-great hall, and the men of the guard, unpestered by their superiors,
-had gathered a great company in the guard-room to emulate their
-officers. The scullion knaves and wenches had fled the kitchen; the
-sentinels had sneaked from the walls. There was no fear now of a
-leaguer. Had not Duke Gorlois declared as much before his sally?
-
-Mark alone stood to his post, listening to the laughter that reached
-him between the stanzas of the storm. His face was like the face of
-a statue, yet alert and eager for all its calm. More than once he
-went out through the storm of rain to the great gate and stood there
-listening while the wind howled overhead. About midnight the noise of
-gaming and revelling seemed suddenly to cease, as when folk hear the
-tolling of a bell for prayer. Only the wind kept up its hooting over
-the walls.
-
-Mark stood a long while by the guard-room door with his ear to the
-planking. Seldom a quavering cry came out to him, and the place grew
-empty of human sound. All Tintagel seemed asleep, though many casements
-still shone out yellow against the gloom. Mark slipped to the main
-gate. There was a postern in it for service after dark. He drew back
-the bolts and loosed the chain from the staple, and leaving the small
-door ajar, passed back to the tower's entry.
-
-Thunder went rolling over the sea. Mark left his spear by the porch and
-went up the first few steps of the stairway. He took the cresset from
-its bracket, carried it down, and tossed it into the court, where the
-flames spluttered out in the rain. Darkness accomplished, he went up
-the stairway to the short gallery leading to Igraine's room. At the top
-he stood and listened. He heard the sound of breathing, and knew that
-it came from the woman Malmain who slept in the alcove before the door.
-
-Mark smote the wall a ringing blow with the handle of his poniard. A
-bench creaked; some one yawned and began to grumble. It was so dark
-that the very walls were part of the prevailing gloom.
-
-"Who's there?"
-
-Mark stood aside.
-
-"The cresset's out on the stairs."
-
-Two arms came groping along the wall.
-
-"You've been asleep, cherub."
-
-"Mark!"
-
-"You were forgetting our tryst."
-
-A thick sensual laugh sounded from the stairhead. Something opaque
-moved in the dark; a pair of arms felt along the passage; a hand
-touched Mark's face. Malmain's arms wrapped the man's body; she lifted
-him to her with her great strength, and kissed his lips.
-
-"Rogue!"
-
-Once, twice, a streaking shadow rose and fell with the faintest
-glinting of steel. There was a staggering sound, a wet cough, a
-sharp-drawn breath, and then silence. Malmain fell against the wall
-with her hands to her side, held rigid a moment, and then slid into a
-heap. Mark bent over the woman and gripped her wrist.
-
-In a short while he left the body lying there and moved to the door.
-Sliding his long fingers over the panels, he found the spring that
-marked the catch. Light streamed through into the gallery and fell upon
-Malmain as she lay huddled against the wall, her hair trailing along
-the floor like rills of blood.
-
-A lamp burnt in the room, showering a thin silvery lustre from its
-pedestal, leaving the angles in dull brown shadow. The room was bare
-and bleak as a beggar's attic. The one window had been shuttered up
-against the rain, and the crazy lattice shook in the wind. The whole
-tower seemed to quake, pressed upon by the broad shoulders of the storm.
-
-Gorlois's wife lay asleep on a rough bed in the centre of the room.
-Mark went forward and stood over her. The light fell upon Igraine's
-face and haloed it with a quiet radiance. Her hands were folded over
-her breast, and the man looking upon her face saw it drawn and haggard
-even in sleep. It had a kind of tragic fairness, a stained beauty like
-the wistful strangeness of an autumnal garden. It was pale, piteous,
-thin, and spiritual. The flesh shone like white wax; the short hair
-glimmered like a net of gold.
-
-So changed, so ethereal, was the face of the sleeper, that the man
-stood and looked at her with gradual awe. Passed indeed was the
-blood-red rose of life, green summer with its ecstasy of song.
-Autumn's rich tapestries of bronze and gold were falling before the
-wind of winter and the shrill sword of death. The woman on the bed
-looked like some pale princess slumbering out her doom in some baleful
-tower.
-
-Igraine's sleep was shallow and ineffectual, a restless stupor
-impressed upon a troubled mind. The storm seemed to figure in her
-dreams. A kind of splendid misery played upon her face, such misery as
-floods forth from some old legend, strange and sad. Her hands tossed to
-and fro over the coverlet like fallen flowers stirred by a wind. Her
-lids drooped over half-opened eyes.
-
-A sudden gust broke the catch of the casement, and swung the frame into
-the room. All the boisterous laughter of the storm seemed to sweep in
-with the wind. With the racket Igraine woke and started up in bed upon
-her elbow. The lamp flame, draught-slanted over the rim, gave but a
-feeble light; the room was filled with wavering darkness.
-
-Mark stood back from the bed. There was blood upon his tunic. For a
-moment he was speechless like a man caught in a theft.
-
-In the dim light and to the half-awakened senses of the sleeper,
-the intruder stood for Gorlois, beard, face, and figure. A moment's
-hesitancy lost Mark the lead. The door stood wide. What ensued came
-crowded into the compass of a few seconds.
-
-Igraine, quick to conceive, jerked the coverlet from the bed. Before
-Mark could prevent her, she had thrown it over the lamp and smothered
-the flame. The room sank into instant darkness and confusion. Mark's
-voice sounded above the storm. Then came the slamming of a door, and
-silence save for the blustering of the wind.
-
-Igraine stood on the threshold in the dark, and drew her breath fast.
-She had shut the man in the room, and the door opened only from without
-by a spring catch. Mark of the guard was trapped.
-
-And Malmain!
-
-Igraine remembered the woman, and heeding nothing of the voice that
-called to her from the room, groped her way to the stairhead, expecting
-at every step to hear the woman's challenge start out of the gloom. At
-the end of the gallery she nearly tripped and fell over some inanimate
-thing. Reaching down out of curiosity she drew her hand back with a
-half cry, her fingers fouled with a thick warm ooze. An indefinite
-terror seized her in the dark. She went reeling down the stairway,
-clutching at the walls, grasping the air. A faint outcry still followed
-her from the room above.
-
-In the garden rain still rattled, and scud blew from the pools. Igraine
-stood motionless under the shadow of a cypress, with her face turned
-to the sky. Her ragged gown blew about her bare ankles, and the wind
-whirled rain into her face. She drew deep breaths and stretched out her
-hands to the night, for there was the kiss of liberty in this cold,
-shrill shower.
-
-Anon the old fear urged her on, companioned now by a reawakened
-courage. She was weak and starved, but what of that! The storm seemed
-to enter into her soul with its blustery vigour, crying to her with the
-multitudinous echoes of the night. What was the mere peril of the flesh
-to one who had faced spiritual torture more keen than death!
-
-Creeping round under the shadow of the wall with quick glances darted
-into the dark she made her way round the court to the great gate. The
-gate-house was dark as the sky, and there was no tramping of sentinels
-from wall to wall. Igraine crept into the yawn of the archway, brushing
-along the stones. With each step she listened for the rattle of a
-spear, and looked for the armed figure that should clash out on her
-from the gloom. She won the gate and leant against it, breathless from
-mere suspense. Her fingers groped over the great beams, touched an
-outstanding edge, and tugged at it. The edge moved; a door came open
-and let in the wind.
-
-Igraine stood a moment and pondered this mystery in her heart. She had
-chanced on nothing in the whole castle save one man and a corpse. Some
-strange doom might have fallen upon the place like the doom that smote
-the Assyrians in their sleep.
-
-Plain before her stood the open gate and liberty. The hint was
-sufficient for the occasion. Igraine, leaving Tintagel to the unknown,
-gathered her rags round her and passed out into the night.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-A rolling country spread with moor, wood, and crag. A storm creeping
-black out of the east over the tops of a forest of pines. On the slope
-of a hill covered with a mauve mist of nodding scabei and bronzed
-tracts of bracken, two horsemen motionless in armour. Far away, the
-glimmer of a distant sea.
-
-Uther the King wheeled his horse and pointed northwards towards the
-pine woods with his sword. The challenge came plainly in the gesture.
-There was no need for vapouring or for heroics; a quick stare--eye for
-eye--said everything a soldier could desire.
-
-Uther, on his black horse, rode with loose bridle, looking straight
-ahead into the darkness of the woods. He carried his naked sword
-slanted over his shoulder. Frequent streams of sunlight flashed down
-upon his harness and made it burn under the boughs, leaving his face
-calm and solemn under the shadow of his helm. Gorlois held some
-paces away, stiff and arrogant, watching the man on his flank with
-restless, smouldering eyes. It was a silent pilgrimage for them both,
-a pilgrimage to a shrine whence, for one of them, there might be no
-return.
-
-A shimmering curtain of sunlight spread itself suddenly before them
-among the pines. The two men rode out into an oval glade palisaded by
-the innumerable pillars of the wood, bowered in by rolling heights of
-dusky green. On all sides the spires made a jagged circle of the sky.
-A pool, black as obsidian, slept in the sun. Heather bloomed there,
-girdling the confines of wood and water with a blaze of purple.
-
-Uther dismounted and tied his horse to a tree. His deliberation in no
-way pandered to Gorlois's self-esteem; there was to be no flurry or
-bombast in the event. No one was to witness this judgment of the sword;
-chivalry and malice alike were to be locked up in the heart of the
-forest. A smooth circle of grass lay on the northern side of the pool,
-promising well to the two who moved thither with nothing more eloquent
-than an exchange of gestures.
-
-The heather swept away, a purple dirge to the black sounding of the
-pines, and a whorl of storm-laden clouds swam towards the sun. Uther,
-with a face strong as a god's, swung his sword from his shoulder and
-grounded the point in the sod. His destiny waxed great in him in that
-hour. There was something inevitable in the quiet of his eyes.
-
-"You are ready," he said very simply.
-
-Gorlois jerked a quick glance at him, and licked his lips. He, too, was
-in no mood for words or matters ethical. Temporal lusts ran strong in
-his blood.
-
-"For a woman's honour!"
-
-"As you will, sire," with a shrug.
-
-"We have no need of courtesies."
-
-"Over a harlot!"
-
-"Guard, and God pardon you."
-
-Both swords flickered up hotly in the sunlight. Gorlois, sinewy and
-full of fettle, gave a half-shout and sprang to engage. He had vast
-faith in himself, having come scatheless out of many such tussles; nor
-had he ever been humbled by man or beast. Vigorous as a March morning
-he launched the first blow, a grim cut laid in with both hands, a cut
-that rattled home half-parried on the other's shoulder. Uther, quick
-for all his calmness, gave the point in retort, a lunge that slid
-under the Cornishman's sword and made the muscles gape in Gorlois's
-neck. There was blood to both.
-
-The swords began to leap and sing in the sunlight, and the forest
-echoed to the clangour of arms. Both men fought without shields, and
-for a season well within themselves, and there was much craft on either
-part. Cut and counter-cut rang through the pine alleys like the cry of
-axes whirled by woodmen's hands. As yet there was no bustle, no wild
-smiting. Every stroke came clean and true, lashed home with the weight
-of arms and body.
-
-Hate overset mere swordsmanship anon, and reason grew less and less
-as the men waxed warm. Gorlois, running in with a swinging buffet,
-stumbled over a heather tuft and caught a counter full in the face.
-The smart of it and a split lip quickened him immeasurably. The
-blades began to whirl with more malice, less precision. Matters grew
-tumultuous as leaves in a whirlwind. For some minutes there seemed
-nothing but a tangle of swords in the sun, a staggering chaos of red
-and gold.
-
-Such fighting burnt itself to a standstill in less than three minutes.
-Uther drew back like a boar pressed by hounds. There was no whit of
-weakening in his mood, only a reassertive reason that would trust
-nothing to the fortune of a moment. The muscles stood out in his strong
-throat, blood ran from his slashed tunic, and he was breathing hard;
-but his manhood burnt strong and true. Gorlois, with mouth awry, eyed
-him with sword half up, and drew back in turn. His face streamed. He
-spat blood upon the heather.
-
-"God! what work."
-
-It was Gorlois's testimony, wrung from him by the stress of sheer
-hard fighting. The storm-cloud crept across the sun and overcharged
-the world with gloom. The pool grew more black in its purple bed; the
-forest began to weave the twilight into its columned halls.
-
-"You lack breath, sire."
-
-"I wait for you," Uther said.
-
-But the man of Tintagel was in a sinister mood for the moment. Genius
-moved his sweating brain. He dropped into philosophic brevities as he
-spat blood from his bruised lips.
-
-"All for a woman," he said thickly.
-
-"True."
-
-"Are you much in love, sire?"
-
-Uther answered him nothing, but waited with his sword over his shoulder.
-
-"She made fuss enough."
-
-Still silence.
-
-"I never knew a woman so obstinate in making an end. And we buried her
-in the sand, where the waves roll at flood. Now, you and I lose our
-brains over a corpse."
-
-Uther's sword shone again.
-
-"Guard," he said quietly.
-
-A sudden gust came clamouring through the wood. The darkening boughs
-tossed and jerked against the sky, breathing out a multitudinous moan,
-a hoarse cry as of a smitten host. The east piled thunder over the
-world. It was the same storm that swept the battlements of Tintagel.
-
-By the pool swords rang; red and gold strove and staggered over the
-heather. It was the death tussle and a sharp one at that. Destiny or
-not, matters were going all against Gorlois; his blows were out of
-luck; he was rent time on end and gave little in return. Rabid, dazed,
-he began making blind rushes that boded ill for him. More than once he
-stumbled, and was mired to the knees in the pool.
-
-The end came suddenly enough as the light failed. Both men smote
-together; both swords met with a sound that seemed to shake the woods,
-Gorlois's blade snapped at the hilt.
-
-He stood still a moment, then plucked out his poniard and made a
-spring. A merciless down-cut beat him back. The fine courage, the
-strenuous self-trust, seemed to ebb from him on a sudden as though the
-blow had broken his soul. He fell on his knees and held his hands up
-with a thick, choking cry.
-
-"Mercy! God's mercy!"
-
-"Curse you! Had you pity on the woman?"
-
-"Sire, sire!"
-
-Thunder rolled overhead, and the girdles of the sky were loosed. A
-torrent of rain beat upon the man's streaming face; he tottered on his
-knees, and still held his hands to the heavens.
-
-"I lied," he said. "God witness, I lied."
-
-"Ah--!"
-
-"The woman lives--is at Tintagel."
-
-"Man--"
-
-"Give me life, sire, give me life; you shall have her."
-
-Uther looked at him and heaved up his sword. Gorlois saw the King's
-face, gave a great cry, and cowered behind his hands. It was all ended
-in a moment. The rain washed his gilded harness as he lay with his
-blood soaking into the heather.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-As the world grew grey with waking light Uther the King came from the
-woods, and heard the noise of the sea in the hush that breathed in the
-dawn. The storm had passed over the ocean, and a vast quiet hung upon
-the lips of the day. In the east a green streak shone above the hills.
-The sky was still aglitter with sparse stars, and an immensity of gloom
-brooded over the sea.
-
-Gaunt, wounded, triumphant, he rode up beneath the banners of the dawn,
-eager yet fearful, inspired and strong of purpose. Wood and hill slept
-in a haze of mist; the birds were only beginning in the thickets, like
-the souls of children yet unborn calling to eternity. Beyond, on the
-cliffs, Tintagel, wrapped round with night, stood silent and sombre
-athwart the west.
-
-Uther climbed from the valley as the day came with splendour, a glow
-as of molten gold streaming from the east. Wood and hillside glimmered
-in a smoking mist, dew-brilliant, wonderful. As the sun rose the sea
-stretched sudden into the arch of the west--a great pavement of gold.
-A mysterious lustre hovered over the cliffs; waves of light beat like
-saffron spray upon Tintagel.
-
-The dawn-light found an echo on Uther's face. He came that morning the
-ransomer, the champion, a King indeed; Spring bursting the thongs of
-Winter; Day thrusting back the Night. His manhood smote in him like the
-deep-throated cry of a great bell, voluminous and solemn. The towers on
-the cliff were haloed with magic hues. Life, glory, joy, lay locked in
-the grey stone walls. His heart sang in him, and his eyes were afire.
-
-As he walked his horse with a hollow thunder of hoofs over the bridge,
-he took his horn and blew a blast thereon. There was a quiet, a
-lifelessness, about the place that smote his senses, bodying forth
-mystery. The walls were void against the sky. At the sound of the
-horn there came no stirring of armed men, no answering fanfare, no
-glimmering of faces at the casements. Only the gulls circled from the
-cliffs, and the sea made its moan along the strand.
-
-Uther sat in the saddle and looked from tower to battlement, from
-battlement to gate. There was something tragic about the place, the
-silence of a sacked town, the ghostliness of a ship sailing the seas
-with a dead crew upon her deck. Uther's glance rested on the open
-postern, an empty streak in the great gate. His face darkened somewhat;
-his eyes lost their sanguine glow. There was something betwixt death
-and treachery in all this quiet.
-
-He dismounted and left his horse on the bridge. The postern beckoned
-him. He went in like a man nerved for peril, with sword drawn and
-shield above his head, ready for blows in dark corners. Again he blew
-his horn. The blast rang and resounded under the arch of the gate. No
-man came to answer or avenge it.
-
-The guard-room door stood ajar; Uther thrust it open with the point
-of his sword and looked in. A grey light filtered through the narrow
-windows. The place was like the cave of the Seven Sleepers. Men, women,
-guards, servants, were huddled on the benches and on the floor. Some
-lay fallen across the settles; others sat with their heads fallen
-forwards upon the table; a few had crawled towards the door. They were
-cast in every posture, every attitude, bleak, stiff, and motionless.
-Some had froth upon their lips, glistening eyes, clenched fingers. The
-shadow of death was over the whole.
-
-The King's face was as grey as the faces of the dead. He had looked for
-human throes, perils, strong hands, and the vehemence of man. There
-was something here, a calm horror, a mystery that hurled back the warm
-courage of the heart. Prophecy lurked open-mouthed in the shadows.
-Uther shouldered his sword, passed out, and drew to the door.
-
-In the great court he looked round him like a traveller who has
-stumbled upon a city wrapped in a magic sleep. Urged on by manifold
-forebodings, and knowing the place of old, he went first to the State
-quarters and hunted the rooms through and through. The same silence met
-him everywhere. In the great hall he came upon a ring of corpses round
-a table, a ring of men in armour, stiff and rigid as stone, with wine
-and fruit mocking their staring eyes. In the lodging of the women he
-found a lady laid on a couch by an open window. Her fair hair swept the
-pillow; her eyes were wide and glazed; an open casket lay on the bed,
-and strings of jewels were scattered on the coverlet. The woman's face
-was white as apple blossom; she had a half-eaten pomegranate in her
-hand.
-
-Uther passed from the death-chamber of Morgan la Blanche to the garden.
-The shadows of the place, the staring faces, the stiff hands clawing
-at things inanimate, were like phantasms of the night. He took the sea
-air into his nostrils, and looked into the blue realism of the sky.
-All about him the garden glistened in the dawn, the cypresses shimmered
-with dew, the pool was like a steel buckler on cloth of green. Here was
-the placid life of flowers making very death the more apparent to his
-soul.
-
-As he stood in deep thought, half dreading what he still half knew,
-a voice called to him, breaking suddenly the ponderous silence of
-the place. A face showed overhead at the upper window in the tower;
-a hand beckoned and pointed towards the tower's entry. Here at last
-was something quick and tangible in the flesh, something that could
-speak of the handicraft of death. Uther climbed the stairs and found
-Malmain's body by the well. When he had looked at the woman's face and
-seen blood he paid no more heed to her. She was only one among many.
-
-Guided by a voice, Uther unlatched the door and passed in with sword
-drawn. A man met him on the threshold, a man with the face of a Dante,
-and shaven lip and chin. It was the face of Merlin.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Without the gate of Tintagel stood Uther the King looking out towards
-the eastern hills clear against the calm of the sky. He stood
-bare-headed, like one in prayer; his face was strong, yet wistful and
-patient as a sick child's. At his elbow waited Merlin, silent and
-inscrutable. Much had passed between them in that upper room, that room
-more hallowed to Uther than the rock tomb of the Christ.
-
-"Ever, ever night," he said, stretching out his hands as to an eternal
-void.
-
-Merlin's eyes seemed to look leagues away over moor, hill, and valley.
-A strange tenderness played upon his lips, and there was a radiance
-upon his face impossible to describe. It was like the face of a lover,
-a dreamer of dreams.
-
-"A man is a mystery to himself," he said.
-
-"But to God?"
-
-"I know no God, save the god my own soul. Let me live and die, nothing
-more. Why curse one's life with a 'to be'?"
-
-Uther sighed heavily.
-
-"It is a kind of fate to me," he said, "inevitable as the setting of
-the sun, natural as sleep. Not for myself do I fear it."
-
-"Let Jehovah follow Jupiter into the chaos of fable. Sire, look yonder."
-
-Merlin's eyes had caught life on the distant hillsides, life surging
-from the valleys, life, and the glory of it. Harness, helm, and shield
-shone in the sun. Gold, azure, silver, scarlet, were creeping from the
-bronzed green of the wilds. Silent and solemn the host rolled gradual
-into the full splendour of the day.
-
-Uther's eyes beheld them through a mist of tears.
-
-"King Nentres, King Urience, and the host," he said.
-
-"Even so, sire."
-
-"They were bidden to follow."
-
-"Loyal to their king."
-
-Uther watched them with a great pride stealing into his eyes; he smiled
-and held his head high.
-
-"All these are mine," he said.
-
-Merlin's face had kindled.
-
-"Grapple the days to come," he said; "let Scripture and old ethics rot.
-You have a thousand knights; let them ride by stream and forest, moor
-and mere. Let them ride out and sunder like the wind."
-
-"The quest of a King's heart!"
-
-"Sire, like a golden dawn shall she rise out of the past. Blow thy
-horn. Let us not tarry."
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Six days had passed. Once more the sun had tossed night from the sky,
-and kindled hope in the hymning east. The bleak wilderness barriered by
-sea and crag had mellowed into the golden silence of autumnal woods.
-The very trees seemed tongued with prophetic flame. The world like a
-young lover leapt radiant out of the dawn.
-
-Through the reddened woods rode Uther the King with Merlin silent at
-his side. Gloom still reigned on the gaunt, strong face, and there was
-no lustre in the eyes that challenged ever the lurking shade of death.
-Six nights and six days had the quest been baffled. Near and far armour
-glimmered in the reddened sanctuaries of the woods. Not a trumpet
-brayed, though the host had scattered in search of a woman's face.
-
-At the seventh dawn the trees drew back before the King, where the
-shimmering waters of a river streaked the meads. Peace dwelt there, and
-a calm eternal, as of the Spirit that heals the throes of men. Rare and
-golden lay the dawn-light on the valley. The song of birds came glad
-and multitudinous as in the burgeoning dawn of a glorious May.
-
-Uther had halted under a great oak. His head was bare in the
-sun-steeped shadows; his face was as the face of one weary with long
-watching under the voiceless stars. Hope, like a dewless rose, drooped
-shaken and thirsty with desire. Great dread possessed him. He dared not
-question his own soul.
-
-A horn sounded in the woods, wild, clamorous and exultant. It was as
-the voice of a prophet cleaving the despair of a godless world. Even
-the trees stood listening. Far below in the green shadows of the valley
-a horseman moved brilliant as a star that portents the conception of a
-king.
-
-Uther's eyes were on the horseman in the valley.
-
-"I am even as a child," he said.
-
-Merlin's lips quivered.
-
-"The dawn breaks, sire, the night is past. Tidings come to us. Let us
-ride on."
-
-Uther seemed sunk in thought; he bowed his head, and looked long into
-the valley.
-
-"Am I he who slew Gorlois?"
-
-"Courage, sire."
-
-"My blood is as water, my heart as wax. Death and destiny are over my
-head."
-
-"Speak not of destiny, sire, and look not to the skies. In himself is
-man's power. Thou hast broken the crucifix. Now trust thine own soul.
-So long as thou didst serve a superstition, thou didst lose thy true
-heaven."
-
-"And yet--"
-
-"Thou hast played the god, sire, and the Father in heaven must love
-thee for thy strength. God loves the strong. He will let thee rule
-destiny, and so prosper."
-
-"Strange words!"
-
-"But true. Were I God, should I love the priest puling prayers in a
-den? Nay, that man should be mine who moved godlike in the world, and
-strangled fate with the grip of truth. Great deeds are better than
-prayers. See! it is young Tristan who comes."
-
-The horseman in the valley had swept at a gallop through a sea of
-sun-bronzed fern. He was a young knight on a black horse, caparisoned
-in green and gold. A halo of glistening curls aureoled his boyish face;
-his eyes were full of a restless radiance, the eyes of a man whose
-heart was troubled. He sprang from the saddle, and leading his horse by
-the bridle, kissed the scabbard of Uther's sword.
-
-"Tidings, sire."
-
-"Tristan, I listen."
-
-The knight looked for a moment into the King's face, but dared not
-abide the trial. There was such a stare of desperate calm in the dark
-eyes, that the lad's courage whimpered, and quailed from the truth. He
-hung his head, and stood mute.
-
-"Tristan, I listen."
-
-"Sire--"
-
-"My God, man, speak out!"
-
-"Sire--"
-
-"The truth."
-
-"She lives, sire!"
-
-A great silence fell within the hearts of the three, an ecstasy of
-silence such as comes after the wail of a storm. Merlin stroked his
-lip, and smiled, the smile of one who dreams. The King's face was as
-the face of one who thrusts back hope out of his soul. He sat rigid
-on his horse, a scarlet image fronting Fate, grim-eyed and steadfast.
-There were tears in the eyes of Tristan the knight.
-
-"What more?"
-
-Tristan leant against his horse, his arm hooked over the brute's neck.
-
-"In the valley, sire, is a sanctuary; you can see it yonder by the
-ford. Two holy women dwell therein. To them, sire, I commend you."
-
-"You know more!"
-
-"Sire, spare me. The words are for women's lips, not for mine."
-
-"So be it."
-
-The three rode on in silence; Merlin and Tristan together, looking
-mutely in each other's faces. Uther's chin was bowed on his breast. The
-reins lay loose on his horse's neck.
-
-A grey cell of unfaced stone showed amid the green boughs beyond the
-water. At its door stood a woman in a black mantle. A cross hung from
-her neck, and a white kerchief bound her hair. She stood motionless,
-half in the shadow, watching the horsemen as they rode down to the
-rippling ford.
-
-Autumn had touched the sanctuary garden, and the King's eyes beheld
-ruin as he climbed the slope. The woman had come from the cell, and
-now stood at the wicket-gate, with her hands folded as in prayer.
-Tristan took Uther's bridle. The King went on foot alone to speak with
-the anchoress.
-
-"Sire," she said, kneeling at his feet, "God save and comfort you."
-
-The man's brow was twisted into furrows. His right hand clasped his
-left wrist. He looked over the woman's head into the woods, and
-breathed fast through clenched teeth.
-
-"Speak," he said.
-
-"Sire, the woman lives."
-
-"I can bear the truth."
-
-The anchoress made the sign of the cross.
-
-"She came to us, sire, here in this valley, a tall lady, with golden
-hair loose upon her neck. Her feet were bare and bleeding, her robe
-rent with thorns. And as she came, she sang wild snatches, such as
-tell of love. We took her, sire, and gave her meat and drink, bathed
-her torn feet, and gave her raiment. So, she abode with us, gentle and
-lovely, yet speaking like one who had suffered, even to death. And yet,
-even as we slept, she stole away from us last night, and now is gone."
-
-The woman had never so much as lifted her eyes to the man's face. Her
-hands held her crucifix, and she was pale as new-hewn stone.
-
-"And is this all?"
-
-The man's voice trembled in his throat; his face shone in the sun.
-
-"Not all, sire."
-
-"Say on."
-
-The anchoress had buried her face in her black mantle; her voice was
-husky as with tears.
-
-"Sire, you seek one bereft of reason."
-
-"Mad!"
-
-"Alas!"
-
-"My God, this then is the end!"
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-An indefinite melancholy overshadowed the world. Autumn breathed in the
-wind; the year was rushing red-bosomed to its doom.
-
-On the summit of a wood-crowned hill, rising like a pyramid above moor
-and forest, two men stood silent under the shadow of an oak. In the
-distance the sea glimmered; and by a rock upon the hillside, armed
-knights, a knot of spears, shone like spirit sentinels athwart the
-west. Mists were creeping up the valleys as the sun went down into the
-sea. A few stars, dim and comfortless, gleamed out like souls still
-tortured by the platitudes of Time. An inevitable pessimism seemed to
-challenge the universe, taking for its parable the weird afterglow in
-the west.
-
-Deep in the woods a voice was singing, wild and solitary in the
-gathering gloom. Like the cry of a ghost, it seemed to set the silence
-quivering, the leaves quaking with a windless awe. The men who looked
-towards the sea heard it, a song that echoed in the heart like woe.
-
-"Sire, there is yet hope."
-
-"Life grows dim, and dreams elapse in fire."
-
-Merlin pointed into the darkening woods. His eyes shone crystal bright,
-and there was a great radiance upon his face.
-
-"Sire, trust thine own heart, and the god in thee. Through superstition
-thou hast been brought nigh unto death and to despair. Trust not in
-priestcraft, grapple God unto thy soul. The laws of men are carven upon
-stone, the laws of heaven upon the heart. Be strong. From henceforth
-scorn mere words. Trample custom in the dust. Trust thyself, and the
-god in thy heart."
-
-The distant voice had sunk into silence. Uther listened for it with
-hand aloft.
-
-"Yonder--heaven calls," he said.
-
-"Go, sire."
-
-"I must be near her--through the night."
-
-"And lo!--the moon stands full upon the hills. You shall bless me yet."
-
-Dim were the woods that autumn evening, dim and deep with an ecstasy of
-gloom. Stars flickered in the heavens; the moon came, and broidered the
-trees with silver flame. A primæval calm lay heavy upon the bosom of
-the night. The spectral branches of the trees were rigid and prayerful
-towards the sky.
-
-Uther had left Merlin gazing out upon the shimmering sea. The voice
-called him from the woods with plaintive peals of song. The man
-followed, holding to a grass-grown track that curled purposeless into
-the gloom. Moonlight and shadow were alternate upon his armour. Hope
-and despair were mimicked upon his face. His soul leapt voiceless and
-inarticulate into the darkened shrine of prayer.
-
-The voice came to him clearer in the forest calm. The gulf had
-narrowed; the words flew as over the waters of death. They were pure,
-yet reasonless, passionate, yet void, words barbed with an utter pathos
-that wounded desire.
-
-For an hour the King followed in the woods, drawing ever nearer, waxing
-great with prayer. Anon the voice failed him by a little stream that
-quivered dimly through the grass. A stillness that was ghostly held
-the woods. The moonlight seemed to shudder on the trees. A stupendous
-stupor weighed upon the world.
-
-A hollow glade opened sudden in the woods, a white gulf in the forest's
-gloom. Water shone there, a mere, rush-ringed, and full of mysterious
-shadows, girded by the bronzed foliage of stately beeches. Moss grew
-thick about the roots; dead leaves covered the grass.
-
-The man knelt in a patch of bracken, and looked out over the glade.
-A figure went to and fro by the water's brim, a figure pale in the
-moonlight, with a glimmering flash of unloosed hair. The man kneeling
-in the bracken pressed his hands over his breast; his face seemed to
-start out of the gloom like the face of one who struggles in the sea,
-submerged, yet desperate.
-
-Uther saw the woman halt beside the mere. He saw her bend, take water
-in her palms, and dash it in her face. Standing in the moonlight she
-smoothed her hair between her fingers, her hands shining white against
-the dark bosom of her dress. She seemed to murmur to herself the while,
-words wistful and full of woe. Once she thrust her hands to the sky and
-cried, "Pelleas! Pelleas!" The man kneeling in the shadow quivered like
-a wind-shaken reed.
-
-The moon climbed higher, and the woman by the mere spread her cloak
-upon a patch of heather, and laid herself thereon. Not a sound
-ravaged the silence; the woods were mute, the air rippleless as the
-steel-surfaced water. An hour passed. The figure on the heather lay
-still as an effigy upon a tomb. The man in the bracken cast one look at
-the stars, crossed himself, and crept out into the moonlight.
-
-Holding the scabbard of his sword, he skirted the mere with shimmering
-armour, went down upon his knees, and crawled slowly over the grass.
-Hours seemed to elapse before the black patch of heather spread crisp
-and dry beneath his hands. Breathing through dilating nostrils, he
-trembled like a craven who creeps to stab a sleeping friend. The
-moonlight showered vivid as with a supernatural glory. Tense anguish
-crowded the night with sound.
-
-Two more paces, and he was close at the woman's side. The heather
-crackled beneath his knees. He held his breath, crept nearer, and
-knelt so near that he could have kissed the woman's face. Her head lay
-pillowed on her arm, her hair spread in a golden sheet beneath it. Her
-bosom moved with the rhythmic calm of dreamless sleep. Her lips were
-parted in a smile. One hand was hid in the dark folds of her robe.
-
-Uther knelt with upturned face, his eyes shut to the sky. He seemed
-like one faint with pain; his lips moved as in prayer. A hundred
-inarticulate pleadings surged heavenwards from his heart.
-
-[Illustration: "SHALL I NOT BE YOUR WIFE"]
-
-Again he bowed himself and watched the woman as she slept. A strange
-calm fell for a season upon his face; his eyes never wavered from the
-white arm and the glimmering hair. Vast awe possessed him. He was like
-a child who broods tearless and amazed over the calm face of a dead
-mother.
-
-Hours passed, and the man found no sustenance save in prayer. The
-unuttered yearnings of a world seemed molten in his soul. The moon
-waned; the stars grew dim. Sounds oracular were moving in the forest,
-the mysterious breathing of a thousand trees. Life ebbed and flowed
-with the sigh of a moon-stupored sea. Visions blazed in the night sky.
-The portals of heaven were open; the sound of harping fell like silver
-rain out of the clouds; the faces of saints shone radiant through
-purple gloom.
-
-Hours passed, and neither sleeper nor watcher stirred. The night grew
-faint, the water flickered in the mere. The very stars seemed to gaze
-upon the destinies of two wearied souls. Death hid his countenance.
-Christ walked the earth.
-
-A sudden sound of light, and the stirring of a wind. Far and faint came
-the quaver of a bird's note. Grey and mysterious stood the forest's
-spires. Light! Spears of amber darting in the east. A shudder seemed to
-shake the universe. The vault kindled. The sky grew great with gold.
-
-It was the dawn.
-
-Even as the light increased the man knelt and lifted up his face unto
-the heavens. Hope, glorious, seemed to fall sudden out of the east, a
-radiant faith begotten of spirit power. Banners of gold were streaming
-in the sky. The gloom elapsed. A vast expectancy hung solemn upon the
-red lips of the day.
-
-Igraine sighed in her sleep. Her mouth quivered, her hair stirred
-sudden in the heather, tendrils of gold that shivered in the sun.
-Uther, kneeling, lifted up his hands with one long look to heaven.
-Prayer burnt upon his face. He strove, Jacob-like, with God.
-
-A second sigh, and the long lashes quivered. The lips moved, the eyes
-opened.
-
-"Igraine! Igraine!"
-
-Sudden silence followed, a vast hush as of hope. The woman's eyes were
-searching silently the man's face. He bent and cowered over her like
-one who weeps. His hands touched her body, yet she did not stir.
-
-"Igraine! Igraine!"
-
-It was a hoarse, passionate cry that broke the golden stupor of the
-dawn. Sudden light leapt lustrous in the woman's eyes; her face shone
-radiant amid her hair.
-
-"Pelleas!"
-
-The man's arms circled her. She half crouched in his bosom, her face
-peering into his.
-
-"Pelleas!"
-
-"At last!"
-
-A great shudder passed through her; her eyes grew big with fear.
-
-"Speak!"
-
-"Igraine."
-
-"Gorlois?"
-
-"Gorlois is dead."
-
-Great silence held for a moment. The woman's head sank down upon the
-man's shoulder; madness had passed; her eyes were fixed on his with a
-wonderful earnestness, a splendid calm.
-
-"Is this a dream?"
-
-"It is the truth."
-
-Presently she gave a great sigh, and looked strangely at the sun. Her
-voice came soft as music over water.
-
-"I have dreamed a dream," she said, "and all was dark and fearful.
-Death seemed near, and shadows, and things from hell. I knew not what
-I did, nor where I wandered, nor what strange stupor held my soul. All
-was dark about me, horrible midnight peopled with foul forms. It has
-passed; now, I behold the dawn."
-
-The man lifted up his voice and wept.
-
-"My God! my God! out of hell hast thou brought my soul. Never again
-shall my vile lips blaspheme."
-
-And Igraine comforted him.
-
-"Shall I not be your wife?" she said.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
-
-Minor punctuation and printer errors repaired.
-
-Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
-possible, including obsolete and variant spellings, inconsistent
-hyphenation, and other inconsistencies.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Uther and Igraine, by Warwick Deeping
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Uther and Igraine, by Warwick Deeping
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Uther and Igraine
-
-Author: Warwick Deeping
-
-Illustrator: W. Benda
-
-Release Date: May 23, 2016 [EBook #52139]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UTHER AND IGRAINE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Christopher Wright and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p class="half-title">
-UTHER AND IGRAINE
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_003.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>&ldquo;PELLEAS WATCHED HER AS HER GREY GOWN WENT AMID THE
- GREEN AND RED&rdquo;</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<h1 class="mt4 break-before">UTHER AND IGRAINE</h1>
-
-
-<p class="ph4">BY</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">WARWICK DEEPING</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph3 mt2"><i>ILLUSTRATED BY W. BENDA</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="mt4 mb4 ph3">
-NEW YORK<br />
-THE OUTLOOK COMPANY<br />
-1903
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="ph4"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1903, by</span></p>
-<p class="ph3">THE OUTLOOK COMPANY.</p>
-
-<p class="ph4">ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.</p>
-
-<p class="ph4"><span class="smcap">Published October, 1903.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="oldeng ph3">To</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">MAUDE MERRILL</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">WITH THE AUTHOR&rsquo;S HOMAGE</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
- <th>&nbsp;</th>
- <th><span class="smcap">PAGE</span></th>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="book" colspan="2">BOOK I</td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">The Way to Winchester</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="book" colspan="2">BOOK II</td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">Gorlois</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="book" colspan="2">BOOK III</td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">The War in Wales</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="book" colspan="2">BOOK IV</td>
-</tr><tr>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">Tintagel</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_325">325</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>BOOK I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE WAY TO WINCHESTER</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a><br /><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>I</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Beneath the dark cornices of a thicket of wind-stunted
-pines stood a small company of women looking out into the
-hastening night. The half light of evening lay over the
-scene, rolling wood and valley into a misty mass, while
-the horizon stood curbed by a belt of imminent clouds. In
-the western vault, a vast rent in the wall of grey gave out
-a blaze of transient gold that slanted like a spear-shaft to a
-sullen sea.</p>
-
-<p>A wind cried restlessly amid the trees, gusty at intervals,
-but tuning its mood to a desolate and constant moan.
-There was an expression of despair on the face of the west.
-The woods were full of a vague woe, and of troubled breathing.
-The trees seemed to sway to one another, to fling
-strange words with a tossing of hair, and outstretched hands.
-The furze in the valley&mdash;swept and harrowed&mdash;undulated
-like a green lagoon.</p>
-
-<p>The women upon the hill were garbed after the fashion
-of grey nuns. Their gowns stood out blankly against the
-ascetic trunks of the pines. They were huddled together
-in a group, like sheep under a thorn hedge when storms
-threaten. The dark ovals of their hoods were turned
-towards the south, where the white patch of a sail showed
-vaguely through the gathering grey.</p>
-
-<p>Between the hill and the cliffs lay a valley, threaded by
-a meagre stream, that quavered through pastures. A mist
-hung there despite the wind. Folded by a circle of oaks
-rose the grey walls of an ecclesiastical building of no inconsiderable
-size, while the mournful clangour of a bell came
-up upon the wind, with a vague sound as of voices chanting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-Valley, stream, and abbey were rapidly melting into the
-indefinite background of the night.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a snarling murmur seemed to swell the plaining
-of the bell. A dark mass that was moving through the
-meadows beneath like a herd of kine broke into a fringe of
-hurrying specks that dissolved into the shadows of the circle
-of oaks. The bell still continued to toll, while the women
-beneath the pines shivered and drew closer together as
-though for warmth and comfort. There was not one
-among them who had not grasped the full significance of
-the sinister sound that had come to them from the valley.
-A novice, taller than her sisters, stood forward from the
-group, as though eager to catch the first evidence of the
-deed that was to be done on that drear evening. She held
-up a hand to those behind her, in mute appeal to them to
-listen. The bell had ceased pulsing. In its stead sounded
-a faint eerie whimper, an occasional shrill cry that seemed
-to leap out of silence like a bubble from a pool where death
-has been.</p>
-
-<p>The women were shaken from their strained vigilance as
-by a wind. The utter grey of the hour seemed to stifle
-them. Some were on their knees, praying and weeping;
-one had fainted, and lay huddled against the trunk of a pine.
-It was such a tragedy as was often played in those days of
-disruption and despair, for Rome&mdash;the decrepit Saturn of
-history&mdash;had fallen from empire to a tottering dotage. Her
-colonies&mdash;those Titans of the past&mdash;still quivered beneath
-the doom piled upon them by the Teuton. In Britain, the
-cry of a nation had gone out blindly into the night.
-Vortigern had perished in the flames of Genorium. Reculbuum,
-Rhutupiæ, and Durovernum had fallen. The fair
-fields of Kent were open to the pirate; while Aurelius,
-stout soldier-king, gathered spear and shield to remedy the
-need of Britain.</p>
-
-<p>The women upon the hill were but the creatures of
-destiny. Realism had touched them with cynical finger.
-The barbarians had come shorewards that day in their ships,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-and at the first breathing of the news the abbey dependants
-had fled, leaving nun and novice to the mercies of the
-moment. It had become a matter of flight or martyrdom.
-Certain fervent women had chosen to remain beside their
-abbess in the abbey chapel, to await with vesper chant and
-bell the coming of sword and saexe. Those more frail of
-spirit had fled with the novices from the valley, and now
-knelt numb with a tense terror on the brow of that windswept
-hill, watching fearfully for the abbey&rsquo;s doom. They
-could imagine what was passing in the shadowy chapel
-where they had so often worshipped. The face of the
-Madonna would be gazing placidly on death&mdash;and on more
-than death. It was all very swift&mdash;very terrible. Thenceforward
-cloister and garden were theirs no more.</p>
-
-<p>A red gleam started suddenly from the black mass in the
-valley. The nuns gripped hands and watched, while the
-gleam became a glare that poured steadily above the dark
-outline of the oaks. A long flame leapt up like a red finger
-above the trees. The belfry of the chapel rose blackly from
-a circlet of fire, and gilded smoke rolled away nebulously
-into the night. The barbarians had set torch to the place.
-The abbey of Avangel went up in flame.</p>
-
-<p>The tall novice who had been kneeling in advance of the
-main company rose to her feet, and turned to those who
-still watched and prayed under the pines. The girl&rsquo;s hood
-had fallen back; the hair that should have been primly
-coifed rolled down in billowy bronze upon her shoulders.
-There was infinite pride on the wistful face&mdash;a certain
-scorn for the frailer folk who wept and found sustenance in
-prayer. The girl&rsquo;s eyes shone largely even in the meagre
-light under the trees, and there was a straight courage about
-her lips. She approached and spoke to the women who
-knelt and watched the burning abbey in a cataleptic stupor.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Will you kneel all night?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>The words were scourges in their purpose. Several of
-the nuns looked up from the flames in the valley.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Shame on you, worldling!&rdquo; said one of thin and thankless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-visage; &ldquo;down on your knees, brat, and pray for the
-dead.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The novice gave a curt, low laugh. The reproofs of a
-year rankled in her like bitter herbs.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let the dead bury their dead,&rdquo; quoth she. &ldquo;I am for
-life and the living.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Shame, shame!&rdquo; came the ready response. &ldquo;May the
-Mother of Mercy melt your proud heart, and punish you
-for your sins. You are bad to the core.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Shame or no shame,&rdquo; said the girl, &ldquo;my heart can grieve
-for death as well as thine, Sister Claudia; and now the
-abbey&rsquo;s burnt, you may couch here and scold till dawn if
-you will. You may scold the heathen when they come to
-butcher you all. I warrant they will give such a beauty
-short shrift.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lean nun ventured no answer. She had been
-worsted before by this rebellious tongue, and had discovered
-expediency in silence. Several of the women had risen, and
-were thronging round the novice Igraine, querulous and
-fearful. Implicit faith, though pious and admirable in the
-extreme, neither pointed a path nor provided a lantern.
-Southwards lay the sea and the barbarians; the purlieus of
-Andredswold came down to touch the ocean. There was
-night in the sky; no refuge within miles, and wild folk
-enough in the world to make travelling sufficiently perilous.
-Moreover, the day&rsquo;s deed had harried the women&rsquo;s emotions
-into a condition of vibrating panic. The unknown seemed
-to hem them in, to smother as with a cloak. They were
-like children who fear to stir in the dark, and shrink from
-impalpable nothingness as though a strange hand waited to
-grip them to some spiritual torture. As it was, they were
-fluttering among the pines like birds who fear the falcon.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It grows dark,&rdquo; said one.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let Claudia pray for us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine, you are wiser in the world than we!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Truth,&rdquo; said the girl, &ldquo;you may bide and snivel with
-Claudia if you will. I am for Anderida through the woods.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But the woods,&rdquo; said a child with wide, dark eyes,
-&ldquo;the woods are fearful at night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They are kinder than the heathen,&rdquo; said Igraine, taking
-the girl&rsquo;s hand. &ldquo;Come with me; I will mother you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Even as she spoke the novice saw a point of fire disjoint
-itself from the dark circle of the oaks below. Another and
-another followed it, and began to jerk hither and thither in
-the meadows. The dashes of flame gradually took a
-northern trend, as though the torch-bearers were for
-ascending the long slope that idled up to the ragged thicket
-of pines. She turned without further vigil, and made the
-most of her tidings in an appeal to the women under the
-trees.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Look yonder,&rdquo; she said, pointing into the valley. &ldquo;Let
-Sister Claudia say whether she will wait till those torches
-come over the hill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was instant hubbub among the nuns. Cooped as
-they had been within the mothering arms of the Church,
-peril found them utterly impotent when self-reliance and
-natural instinct were needed to shepherd them from danger.
-The night seemed to sweep like a wheel with the burning
-pyre in the meadows for axle. The torches were moving
-hither and thither in fantastic fashion, as though the men
-who bore them were doubling right and left in the dark, like
-hounds casting about for a scent. The sight was sinister,
-and stirred the women to renewed panic.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine, help us,&rdquo; came the cry.</p>
-
-<p>Even tyranny is welcome in times of peril. Witless,
-resourceless, they gathered about her in a dumb stupor.
-Even Claudia lost her greed for martyrdom and became
-human. They were all eager enough for the forest now,
-and hungry for a leader. Igraine stood up among them
-like a tall figure of hope. Her eyes were on the east, where
-a weird glow above the tree tops told her that the moon
-was rising.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;See,&rdquo; she said, "we shall have light upon our way.
-There is a bridle-path through the wold here that goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-north, and touches the road from Durovernum. I am going
-by that path, follow who will."</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We will follow Igraine,&rdquo; came the answer.</p>
-
-<p>North, east, and west lay Andredswold, sinister as a sea
-at night. The hill, tangled with gorse and bracken, and
-sapped by burrows, dipped to it gradually like an outjutting
-of the land. To the east they could see a wide tangle of
-pines latticing the light of the moon. It was dark, and the
-ground more than dubious to the feet. The women, nine
-in all, herded close on Igraine, who walked like an Eastern
-shepherdess with the sheep following in her track. First
-came Claudia, who had held sway over the linen, with
-Malt, the stout cellaress, next Elaine and Lily, twin sisters,
-two nuns, and two novices. There was much stumbling,
-much clutching at one another in the dark; but, thanks to
-holy terror, their progress was in measure ungracefully
-speedy.</p>
-
-<p>The girl Igraine led with a keen gleam in her eyes and
-a queer cheerfulness upon her face, as she stepped out
-blithely for the dark mass where the wold began. Her
-sojourn in the abbey had been brief and stormy, a curt
-attempt at discipline that had failed most nobly. One
-might as well have sought to hem in spring with winter as
-to curb desire that leapt towards greenness and the dawn
-like joy. She had ever thought more of a net for her hair
-than of her rosary. The little pool in the pleasaunce had
-served her as her mirror, casting back a full face set with
-amber shadowed eyes, and a bosom more attuned to passion
-than to dreams of quiet sanctity. She had been the wayward
-child of the abbey flock, flooded with homilies, surrendered
-to eternal penances, yet holding her own in a fair
-worldly fashion that left the good women of the place
-wholly to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>Thrust out into the world again she took to the wild
-like a fox to the woodland, while her more tractable comrades
-were like caged doves baffled by unaccustomed freedom.
-Matins, complines, vespers were no more. Cold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-stone arched no more to tomb her fancies. Above stretched
-the free dome of the sky; around, the wilderness free and
-untainted; in lieu of psalms she heard the gathering cry of
-the wind, and the great voice of the forest at night.</p>
-
-<p>In due course they came to where a dark mass betokened
-the rampart thickets of the wold, rising like a wall across
-the sky. Igraine hoped for the track, and found it running
-like a white fillet about the brow of a wood. They followed
-till it thrust into the trees, a thin thread in the shadows.
-As they went, great oaks overreached them with sinuous
-limbs. The vault was fretted innumerably with the faint
-overdome of the sky. Now and again a solitary star
-glimmered through. To the women that place seemed
-like an interminable cavern, where grotto on grotto dwindled
-away into oblivious gloom. But for the track&rsquo;s narrow
-comfort, Igraine and her company would have been impotent
-indeed.</p>
-
-<p>The prospect was sad for these folk who had lived for
-peace, and had tuned their lives to placid chants and the
-balm of prayer. In Britain Christ was worshipped and the
-Cross adored, yet abbeys were burnt, and children martyred,
-and strong towns given over to sack and fire. Truth
-seemed to taunt them with the apparent impotence of their
-creed. The abbess Gratia had often said that Britain, for
-its sloth and sin, deserved to meet the scourge of war, and
-here were her words exampled by her own stark death.
-The nuns talked of the state of the land, as they plodded
-on through the night. There was no soul among them
-that had not been grossly stirred by the fate that had overtaken
-Avangel, Gratia, and her more zealous nuns. It was
-but natural that a cry for vengeance should have gained
-voice in the hearts of these outcast women, and that a certain
-querulous bitterness should have found tongue against
-those in power.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, walking in the van, listened to their words, and
-laughed with some scorn in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are very wise, all of you,&rdquo; she said presently over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-her shoulder. &ldquo;You speak of war and disruption as though
-the whole kingdom were in the dust. True, Kent is lost,
-the heathen have burnt defenceless places on the coast, and
-have stormed a few towns. The abbey of Avangel is not
-all Britain. Have we not Aurelius and the great Uther?
-Our folk will gather head anon, and push these whelps into
-the sea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God grant it,&rdquo; said Claudia, with a smirk heavenward.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We need a man,&rdquo; quoth Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you will find him, pert one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Peril will,&rdquo; said the girl; &ldquo;there is no hero when there
-is no dragon or giant in need of the sword. Britain will
-find her knight ere long.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lud,&rdquo; said Malt, the cellaress, &ldquo;I wish I could find
-my supper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Thereat they all laughed, Igraine as heartily as any.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps Claudia will pray for manna dew,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Scoffer!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It will be cranberries, and bread and water, till better
-seasons come. I have heard that there are wild grapes in
-the wold.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bread!&rdquo; quoth Malt; &ldquo;did some kind soul say bread?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have a small loaf here under my habit.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine, girl, I would chant twenty psalms for a
-morsel of that loaf.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Chant away, sister. Begin on the &lsquo;Attendite, popule.&rsquo;
-I believe it is one of the longest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t trifle with a hungry wretch.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The psalms, Malt, or not a crust.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Keep it yourself, greedy hussy; I can go without.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We will share it, all of us, presently,&rdquo; said the girl,
-&ldquo;unless Malt wants to eat the whole.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They held on under the ban of night, following the track
-like Theseus did his thread. At times the path struck out
-into a patch of open ground, covered with scrub and bracken,
-or bristling thick with furze. Igraine had never seen such
-timid folk as these nuns from Avangel. If a stick cracked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-they would start, huddle together, and vow they heard footsteps.
-They mistook an owl&rsquo;s hoot for a heathen cry, and
-a night-jar&rsquo;s creaking note made them swear they caught
-the chafe of steel. Once they suffered a most shrewd fright.
-They drove a herd of red deer from cover, and the rush and
-tumultuous sound of their galloping created a most holy
-panic among the women. It was some time before Igraine
-could get them on the march again.</p>
-
-<p>As the night wore on they began to lag from sheer
-weariness. Two or three were feeble as sickly children, and
-the abbey life had done little for the body, though it had
-done much to deform the mind. Igraine had to turn tyrant
-in very earnest. She knew the women looked to her for
-courage and guidance, and that they would be hopeless
-without her stronger mind to lead them. She put this
-knowledge to effect, and held it like a lash over their
-weakly spirits.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine found abundant scope for her ingenuity. When
-they voted a halt for rest, she vowed she would hold on alone
-and leave them. The threat made the whole company trail
-after her like sheep. When they grumbled, she told tales of
-the savagery and lust of the heathen, and made their fears
-ache more lustily than did their feet. By such devices she
-kept them to it for the greater portion of the night, knowing
-that the shrewdest kindness lay in seeming harshness,
-and that to humour them was but mistaken pity.</p>
-
-<p>At last&mdash;heathen or no heathen&mdash;they would go no
-further. It was some hours before dawn. The trees had
-thinned, and through more open colonnades they looked out
-on what appeared to be a grass-grown valley sleeping peacefully
-under the moon. A great cedar grew near, a pyramid
-of gloom. Malt, the cellaress, grumbling and
-groaning, crept under its shadows, and commended Igraine
-to purgatorial fire. The rest, limp and spiritless, vowed
-they would rather die than take another step. Huddling
-together under the branches, they were soon half of them
-asleep in an ecstasy of weariness. Igraine, seeing further<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-effort useless, surrendered to the inevitable, and lay down
-herself to sleep under the tree.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>II</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Day came with an essential stealth. The great trees
-stood without a rustling leaf, in a stupor of silence. A
-vast hush held as though the wold knelt at orisons. Soon
-ripple on ripple of light surged from the hymning east, and
-the night was not.</p>
-
-<p>The sleep of the women from Avangel had proved but
-brief and fitful, couched as they had been under so strange
-a roof. They were all awake under the cedar. Igraine,
-standing under its green ledges, listened to their monotonous
-talk as they rehearsed their plight dismally under the
-shade. The nun Claudia&rsquo;s voice was still raised weakly
-in pious fashion; she had learnt to ape saintliness all her
-life, and it was a mere habit with her. The cellaress&rsquo;s red
-face was in no measure placid; hunger had dissipated her
-patience like an ague, and she found comfort in grumbling.
-The younger women were less voluble, as age and custom
-behoved them to be. Unnaturally bred, they were like
-images of wax, capable only of receiving the impress of the
-minds about them. Such a woman as Malt owed her
-individuality solely to the superlative cravings of the
-flesh.</p>
-
-<p>About them rose the slopes of a valley, set tier on tier
-with trees, nebulous, silent in the now hurrying light.
-Grassland, moist and spangled, lay dew-heavy in the lap
-of the valley, with the track curling drearily into a further
-tunnel of green.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, scanning the trees and the stretch of grassland,
-found on a sudden something to hold her gaze. On the
-southern side of the valley the walls of a building showed
-vaguely through the trees. It was so well screened that a
-transient glance would have passed over the line of foliage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-without discovering the white glimmer of stone. She
-pointed it out to her companions, who were quickly up
-from under the cedar at the thought of the meal and the
-material comforts such a forest habitation might provide.
-They were soon deep in the tall grass, their habits wet to
-the knee with dew, as they held across the valley for the
-manor amid the trees.</p>
-
-<p>The place gathered distinctness as they approached.
-Two horns of woodland jutted out&mdash;enclosing and holding
-it jealously from the track through the valley. There were
-outhouses packed away under the trees. A garden held it
-on the north. The building itself was modelled somewhat
-after the fashion of a Roman villa, with a porch&mdash;whitely
-pillared&mdash;leading from a terrace fringed with flowers.</p>
-
-<p>The silence of the place impressed itself upon Igraine
-and the women as they drew near from the meadowlands.
-The manor seemed lifeless as the woods that circled it.
-There were no cattle&mdash;no servants to be seen, not even a
-hound to bay warning on the threshold. Passing over a
-small stone bridge, they went up an avenue of cypresses
-that led primly to the garden and the terrace. They
-halted at the steps leading to the portico. The garden,
-broken in places, and somewhat unkempt, glistened with
-colour in the early sun; terrace and portico were void and
-silent; the whole manor seemed utterly asleep.</p>
-
-<p>The women halted by the stairway, and looked dubiously
-into one another&rsquo;s faces. There was something sinister
-about the place&mdash;a prophetic hush that seemed to stand
-with finger on lip and bid the curious forbear. After
-their march over the meadows, and considering the hungry
-plight they were in, it seemed more than unreasonable to
-turn away without a word. None the less, they all hesitated,
-beckoning each to her fellow to set foot first in this
-house of silence. Igraine, seeing their indecision, took
-the initiative as usual, and began to climb the steps that
-led to the portico. Claudia and the rest followed her in a
-body.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Within the portico the carved doors were wide. The
-sun streamed down through a latticed roof into a peristylum,
-where flowers grew, and a pool shone silverly. There were
-statues at the angles; one had been thrown down, and lay
-half buried in a mass of flowers. The place looked wholly
-deserted, though, by the orderly mood of court and garden,
-it could not have been long since human hands had
-tended it.</p>
-
-<p>The women gathered together about the little font in
-the centre of the peristylum, and debated together in low
-tones. They were still but half at ease with the place, and
-quite ready to suspect some sudden development. The
-house had a scent of tragedy about it that was far from
-comforting.</p>
-
-<p>Said Malt, &ldquo;I should judge, sisters, that the folk have
-fled, and that we are to be sustained by the hand of grace.
-Come and search.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Claudia demurred a moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is it lawful,&rdquo; quoth she, &ldquo;to possess one&rsquo;s self of food
-and raiment in a strange and empty house?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense,&rdquo; said the cellaress with a sniff.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But, Malt, I never stole a crust in my life.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Better learn the craft, then. King David stole the
-shewbread.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was given him of the priests.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tut, sister, then are we wiser than David; we can
-thieve with our own hands. I say this house is God-sent
-for our need. May I stifle if I err.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Malt is right,&rdquo; said Igraine, laughing; &ldquo;let us deprive
-the barbarians of a pie or a crucifix.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; chimed Malt, &ldquo;want makes thieving honest.
-<i>Jubilate Deo.</i> I&rsquo;m for the pantry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A colonnade enclosed the peristylum on every quarter.
-Beneath the shadows cast by the architrave and roof, showed
-the portals of the various chambers. Igraine led the way.
-The first room that they essayed appeared to have been a
-sleeping apartment, for there were beds in it, the bedding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-lying disordered and fallen upon the floor as though there
-had been a struggle, or a sudden wild flight. It was a
-woman&rsquo;s chamber, judging by its mirror of steel, and the
-articles that were scattered on floor and table. The next
-room proved to be a species of parlour or living-room. A
-meal had been spread upon the table, and left untouched.
-Platter and drinking cups were there, a dish of cakes, a
-joint on a great charger, bread, olives, fruit, and wine.
-Armour hung on the walls, with mirrors of steel, and
-paintings upon panels of wood.</p>
-
-<p>The women made themselves speedily welcome after
-the trials of the night. Each was enticed by some special
-object, and character leaked out queerly in the choosing.
-Malt ran for a beaker of wine; the cakes were pilfered by
-the younger folk; Claudia&mdash;whispering of Saxon desecration&mdash;possessed
-herself with an obeisance of a little silver
-cross that hung upon the wall. Igraine took down a bow,
-a quiver of arrows, and a sheathed hunting knife; she slung
-the quiver over her shoulder, and strapped the knife to her
-girdle. The clear kiss of morning had sharpened the hunger
-of a night, and the meal spread in that woodland manor
-proved very comforting to the fugitives from Avangel.</p>
-
-<p>Satisfied, they passed out to explore the rooms as yet
-unvisited. A fine curiosity led them, for they were like
-children who probe the dark places of a ruin. The eastern
-chambers gave no greater revealings than did those upon
-the west. The kitchen quarters were empty and soundless,
-though there was a joint upon the spit that hung over the
-ashes of a spent fire. It seemed more than likely that the
-inmates had fled in fear of the barbarians, leaving the house
-in the early hours of some previous dawn.</p>
-
-<p>As yet they had not visited a room whose door opened
-upon the southern quarter of the peristyle. Judging by its
-portal, it promised to be a greater chamber than any
-of the preceding, probably the banqueting or guest room.
-The door stood ajar, giving view of a frescoed wall
-within.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Malt, who had waxed jovial since her communion with
-the tankard, pushed the door open, and went frankly into the
-half light of a great chamber. She came to an abrupt halt
-on the threshold, with a fat hand quavering the symbol of
-a cross in the air. The women crowded the doorway, and
-looked in over the cellaress&rsquo;s stout shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>In a gilded chair in the centre of the room sat the
-figure of a man. His hands were clenched upon the
-lion-headed arms of the siege, and his chin bowed down
-upon his breast. He was clad in purple; there were rings
-upon his fingers, and his brow was bound with a band of
-gold. At his feet crouched a great wolf-hound, motionless,
-dead.</p>
-
-<p>The women in the doorway stared on the scene in
-silence. The man in the chair might have been thought
-asleep save for a certain stark look&mdash;a bleak immobility that
-contradicted the possibility of life. Here they had stumbled
-on tragedy with a vengeance. The mute face of death
-lurked in the shadows, and the vast mystery of life seemed
-about them like a cold vapour. It was a sudden change
-from sunlight into shade.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine pushed past Malt, and ventured close to the
-crouching hound. Bending down, she looked into the dead
-man&rsquo;s face. It was pinched and grey, but young, none the
-less, and bearing even in death a certain sensuous haughtiness
-and dissolute beauty. The man had been dark, with hair
-turbulent and lustrous. In his bosom glinted the silver
-pommel of a knife, and there were stains upon cloak and
-tessellated pavement. Clasped in one hand was a small cross
-of gold that looked as though it had been plucked from a
-chain or necklet, and held gripped in the death agony.
-The wolf-hound had been thrust through the body with
-a sword.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hum,&rdquo; said Malt, with a sniff,&mdash;&ldquo;Christian work here.
-And a comely fellow, too&mdash;more&rsquo;s the pity. Look at the
-rings on his fingers; I wonder whether I might take one
-for prayer money? It would buy candles.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Igraine was still looking at the dead man with strange
-awe in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Keep off,&rdquo; she said, thrusting off Malt; &ldquo;the man has
-been stabbed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, haven&rsquo;t I eyes too, hussy?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Claudia came in, white and quavering, with her crucifix
-up.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Poor wretch!&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;can&rsquo;t we bury him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bury him!&rdquo; cried Malt.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sister.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thanks, no. It would spoil my dinner.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Claudia gave a sudden scream, and jumped back, holding
-her skirts up.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s blood on the floor! Holy mother! did the
-dog move?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Move!&rdquo; quoth Malt, giving the brute a kick; &ldquo;what
-a mouse you are, Claudia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you sure the man&rsquo;s dead?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dead, and cold,&rdquo; said Igraine, touching his cheek, and
-drawing away with a shiver. &ldquo;Come away, the place makes
-my flesh creep. Shut the door, Malt. Let us leave him so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The women from Avangel had seen enough of the manor
-in the forest. Certainly, it held nothing more perilous than
-a corpse, perched stiffly in a gilded chair; but the dead man
-seemed to exert a sinister influence upon the spirits of the
-company, and to stifle any desire for a further sojourn in the
-place. Folk with murder fresh upon their hands might
-still be within the purlieus of the valley. The women
-thought of the glooms of the forest, and of the strong walls
-of Anderida, and discovered a very lively desire to be free
-of Andredswold, and the threats of the unknown.</p>
-
-<p>They left the man sitting in his chair, with the hound at
-his feet, and went to gather food for the day&rsquo;s journey.
-Bread they took, and meat, and bound them in a sheet,
-while Malt filled a flask with wine, and bestowed it at her
-girdle. Igraine still had her bow, shafts, and hunting knife.
-Before sallying, they remembered the dead. It was Igraine&rsquo;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-thought. They went and stood before the door of the
-great chamber, sang a hymn, and said a prayer. Then they
-left the place, and held on into the forest.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing befell them on their way that morning. It was
-noon before they struck the road from Durovernum to
-Anderida, a straight and serious highway that went whitely
-amid wastes of scrub, thickets, and dark knolls of trees.
-The women were glad of its honest comfort, and blessed
-the Romans who had wrought the road of old. Later
-in the day they neared the sea again. Between masses of
-trees, and over the slopes, they caught glimpses of the blue
-plain that touched the sky. From a little hill that gave
-broader view, they saw the white sails of ships that were
-ploughing westward with a temperate wind. They took
-them for the galleys of the Saxons, and the thought hurried
-them on their way the more.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they came to a mild declivity, with a broken
-toll-house standing by the roadside, and two horsemen on
-the watch there, as the distant galleys swept over the sea
-towards the west. The men belonged to the royal forces
-in Anderida. They were reticent in measure, and in no
-optimistic mood. They told how the heathen had swept
-the coast, how their ships had ventured even to Vectis, to
-burn, slay, and martyr. The women learnt that Andred&rsquo;s
-town was some ten miles distant. There was little likelihood,
-so the men said, of their getting within the walls that
-night, for the place was in dread of siege, and was shut up
-like a rock after dusk.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine and the nuns elected, none the less, to hold upon
-their way. Despite their weariness, the women preferred to
-push on and gain ground, rather than to lag and lose courage.
-For all they knew, the Saxons might be soon ashore, ready
-to raid and slay in their very path. They left the soldiers
-at the toll-house, and went downhill into a long valley.</p>
-
-<p>Possibly they had gone a mile or more when they heard
-the sound of galloping coming in their wake. On the slope
-of the hill they had left, they could see a distant wave of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-dust curling down the road like smoke. The two men from
-Andred&rsquo;s town were coming on at a gallop. They were
-very soon within bowshot, but gave no hint of halting.
-Thundering on, they drew level with the women, shouted
-as they went by, and held on fast,&mdash;dust and spume flying.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God&rsquo;s curse upon the cravens,&rdquo; said Malt, the cellaress.</p>
-
-<p>Cravens they were in sense; yet the men had reason on
-their side, and the women were left staring at the diminishing
-fringe of dust. There was much frankness in the
-phenomenon, a curt hint that carried emphasis, and advised
-action. &ldquo;To the woods,&rdquo; it said; &ldquo;to the woods, good
-souls, and that quickly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The road ran through the flats at that place, with marsh
-and meadowland on either hand. Further westward, the
-wold thrust forth a finger from the north to touch the
-highway. Southward, scrub and grassland swept away to
-the sea. It was when looking southwards that the nuns
-from Avangel discovered the stark truth of the soldier&rsquo;s
-warning. Against the skyline could be seen a number of
-jerking specks, moving fast over the open land, and holding
-north-west as though to touch the road. They were the
-figures of men riding.</p>
-
-<p>The outjutting of woodland that rolled down to edge the
-highway was a quarter of a mile from where the women
-stood. A bleak line of roadway parted them from the mazy
-refuge of the wold. They started away at a run; Igraine
-and another novice dragging the nun Claudia between them.
-The display was neither Olympic nor graceful; it would
-have been ridiculous but for the stern need that inspired it.
-Igraine and her fellows made the best of the highway. In
-the west, the wold seemed to stretch an arm to them like
-a mother.</p>
-
-<p>The heathen raiders were coming fast over the marshes.
-Igraine, dragging the panting Claudia by the hand, looked
-back and took measure of the chase. There were some
-score at the gallop three furlongs or more away, with others
-on foot, holding on to stirrups, running and leaping like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-madmen. The girl caught their wild, burly look even at
-that distance. They were hallooing one to another, tossing
-axe and spear&mdash;making a race of it, like huntsmen at full
-pelt. Possibly there was sport in hounding a company of
-women, with the chance of spoil and something more
-brutish to entice.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine and her flock were struggling on for very life.
-Their feet seemed weighted with the shackles of an impotent
-fear, while every yard of the white road appeared
-three to them as they ran. How they anguished and prayed
-for the shadows of the wood. A frail nun, winded and
-lagging, began to scream like a hare when the hounds are
-hard on her haunches. Another minute, and the trees
-seemed to stride down to them with green-bosomed kindness.
-A wild scramble through a shallow dyke brought
-them to bracken and a tangled barrier about the hem of the
-wood. Then they were amid the sleek, solemn trunks of a
-beech wood, scurrying up a shadowed aisle with the dull
-thudding of the nearing gallop in their ears.</p>
-
-<p>It was borne in upon Igraine&rsquo;s reason as she ran that the
-trees would barely save them from the purpose of pursuit.
-The women&mdash;limp, witless, dazed by danger&mdash;could
-hardly hold on fast enough to gain the deeper mazes of the
-place, and the sanctuary the wold could give. Unless the
-pursuit could be broken for a season, the whole company
-would fall to the net of the heathen, and only the Virgin
-knew what might befall them in that solitary place. Sacrifice
-flashed into the girl&rsquo;s vision&mdash;a sudden ecstasy of
-courage, like hot flame. These abbey folk had been none
-too gentle with her. None the less she would essay to
-save them.</p>
-
-<p>She cast Claudia&rsquo;s hand aside, and turned away abruptly
-from the rest. They wavered, looking at her as though for
-guidance, too flurried for sane measures. Igraine waved
-them on, with a certain pride in her that seemed to chant
-the triumph song of death.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What will you do, girl? Are you mad?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go!&rdquo; was all she said. &ldquo;Perhaps you will pray for
-me as for Gratia the abbess.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They will kill you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Better one than all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They wavered, unwilling to be wholly selfish despite
-their fear and the sounding of pursuit. There shone a fine
-light on the girl&rsquo;s face as they beheld her&mdash;tyrannical even
-in heroism. Her look awed them and made them ashamed;
-yet they obeyed her, and like so many winging birds they
-fled away into the green shadows.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine watched them a moment, saw the grey flicker of
-their gowns go amid the trees, and then turned to front her
-fortune. Pursing her lips into a queer smile, she took post
-behind a tree bole, and waited with an arrow fitted to her
-string. She heard a sluthering babel as the men reined in,
-with much shouting, on the forest&rsquo;s margin. They were
-very near now. Even as she peered round her tree trunk
-a figure on foot flashed into the grass ride, and came on
-at the trot. The bow snapped, the arrow streaked the
-shadows, and hummed cheerily into the man&rsquo;s thigh.
-Igraine had not hunted for nothing. A second fellow edged
-into view, and took the point in his shoulder. Igraine
-darted back some forty paces and waited for more.</p>
-
-<p>In this fashion&mdash;slipping from tree to tree, and edging
-north-west&mdash;she held them for a furlong or more. The
-end came soon with an empty quiver. The wood seemed
-full of armed men; they were too speedy for her, too near
-to her for flight. She threw the empty quiver at her feet,
-with the bow athwart it, put a hand in the breast of her
-habit, and waited. It was not for long. A man ran out
-from behind a tree and came to a curt halt fronting her.</p>
-
-<p>He was young, burly, with a great tangle of hair, and a
-yellow beard that bristled like a hound&rsquo;s collar. A naked
-sword was in his hand, a buckler strapped between his
-shoulders. He laughed when he saw the girl&mdash;the coarse
-laugh of a Teuton&mdash;and came some paces nearer to her,
-staring in her face. She was very rich and comely in a way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-foreign to the fellow&rsquo;s fancy. There was that in his
-eyes that said as much. He laughed again, with a
-guttural oath, and stretched out a hand to grip the girl&rsquo;s
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>An instant shimmer of steel, and Igraine had smitten him
-above the golden torque that ringed his throat. Life rushed
-out in a red fountain. He went back from her with a
-stagger, clutching at the place, and cursing. As the blood
-ebbed he dropped to his knees, and thence fell slantwise
-against a tree. He had found death in that stroke.</p>
-
-<p>A hand closed on the girl&rsquo;s wrist. The knife that had
-been turned towards her own heart was smitten away and
-spurned to a distance. There were men all about her&mdash;ogrish
-folk, moustachioed, jerkined in skins, bare armed,
-bare legged. Igraine stood like a statue&mdash;impotent&mdash;frozen
-into a species of apathy. The bearded faces thronged
-her, gaped at her with a gross solemnity. She had no glance
-for them, but thought only of the man twitching in the death
-trance. The wood seemed full of gruff voices, of grotesque
-words mouthed through hair.</p>
-
-<p>Then the barbaric circle rippled and parted. A rugged-faced
-old man with white hair and beard came forward
-slowly. There was a tense silence over the throng as the
-old man stood and looked at the figure at his feet. There
-were shadows on the earl&rsquo;s face, and his hands shook, for
-the smitten man was his son.</p>
-
-<p>Out of silence grew clamour. Hands were raised, fingers
-pointed, a sword was poised tentatively above the girl&rsquo;s head.
-The wood seemed full of bearded and grotesque wrath, and
-the hollow aisles rang with the clash of sword on buckler.
-But age was not for sudden violence, though the blood of
-youth ebbed on the grass. The old man pointed to a tree,
-spoke briefly, quietly, and the rough warriors obeyed him.</p>
-
-<p>They stripped Igraine, cast her clothes at her feet, and
-bound her to the trunk of the tree with their girdles. Then
-they took up the body of the dead man, and so departed
-into the forest.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>III</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was well towards evening when the men disappeared
-into the wood, leaving the girl bound naked to the tree.
-The day was calm and tranquil, with the mood of June on
-the wind, and a benign sky above. Igraine&rsquo;s hair had fallen
-from its band, and now hung in bronze masses well-nigh
-to her knees, covering her as with a cloak. Her habit, shift,
-and sandals lay close beside her on the grass. The barbarians
-had robbed her of nothing, according to their old earl&rsquo;s
-wishes. She was simply bound there, and left unscathed.</p>
-
-<p>When the men were gone, and she began to realise what
-had passed, she felt a flush spread from face to ankle, a glow
-of shame that was keen as fire. Her whole body seemed
-rosily flaked with blushes. The very trees had eyes, and
-the wind seemed to whisper mischief. There were none to
-see, none to wonder, and yet she felt like Eve in Eden when
-knowledge had smitten the pure flesh with gradual shame.
-Though the place was solitary as a dry planet, her aspen
-fancy peopled it with life. She could still see the heavy-jowled
-barbaric faces staring at her like the malign masks
-of a dream.</p>
-
-<p>The west was already prophetic of night. There was
-the golden glow of the decline through the billowy foliage
-of the trees, and the shadows were very still and reverent,
-for the day was passing. A beam of gold slanted down
-upon Igraine&rsquo;s breast, and slowly died there amid her hair.
-The west flamed and faded, the east grew blind. Soon the
-day was not.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine watched the light faint above the trees, wondering
-in her heart what might befall her before another sun could
-set. She had tried her bonds, and had found them lacking
-sympathy in that they were staunch as strength could make
-them. She was cramped, too, and began to long for the
-hated habit that had trailed the galleries of Avangel, and
-had brought such scorn into her discontented heart. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-was no hope for it. She was pilloried there, bound body,
-wrist, and ankle. Philosophy alone remained to her, a poor
-enough cloak to the soul, still worse for things tangible.</p>
-
-<p>Her plight gave her ample time for meditation. There
-were many chances open to her, and even in mere possibilities
-fate had her at a vantage. In the first place, she might
-starve, or other unsavoury folk find her, and her second
-state be worse than her first. Then there were wolves in
-the wold; or country people might find and release her, or
-even Claudia and the women might return and see how she
-had fared. There was little comfort in this last thought.
-She shrewdly guessed that the abbey folk would not stop
-till they happened on a stone wall, or the heathen took
-them. Lastly, the road was at no very great distance, and
-she might hear perchance if any one passed that way.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the moon rose upon Andredswold with a
-stupendous splendour. The veil of night seemed dusted
-with silver as it swept from her tiar of stars. Innumerable
-glimmering eyes starred the foliage of the beeches. Vague
-lights streamed down and netted the shadows with mysterious
-magic. Here and there a tree trunk stood like a ghost,
-splashed with a phosphor tunic.</p>
-
-<p>The wilderness was soundless, the billowy bastions of
-the trees unruffled by a breath. The hush seemed vast,
-irrefutable, supreme. Not a leaf sighed, not a wind wandered
-in its sleep. The great trees stood in a silver stupor, and
-dreamt of the moon. The solemn aisles were still as Thebes
-at midnight; the smooth boles of the beeches like ebony
-beneath canopies of jet.</p>
-
-<p>The scene held Igraine in wonder. There was a mystery
-about a moonlit forest that never lessened for her. The
-vasty void of the night, untainted by a sound, seemed like
-eternity unfolded above her ken. She forgot her plight for
-the time, and took to dreaming, such dreams as the warm
-fancy of the young heart loves to remember. Perhaps
-beneath such a benediction she thought of a pavilion set amid
-water lilies, and a boy who had looked at her with boyish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-eyes. Yet these were childish things. They lost substance
-before the chafing of the cords that bound her to the tree.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she began to sing softly to herself for the
-cheating of monotony. She was growing cold and hungry,
-too, despite all the magic of the place, and the hours seemed
-to drag like a homily. Then with a gradual stealthiness
-the creeping fear of death and the unknown began to steal
-in and cramp even her buoyant courage. It was vain for her
-to put the peril from her, and to trust to day and the succour
-that she vowed in her heart must come. Dread smote into
-her more cynically than did the night air. What might be
-her end? To hang there parched, starved, delirious till life
-left her; to hang there still, a loathsome, livid thing, rotting
-like a cloak. To be torn and fed upon by birds. She knew
-the region was as solitary as death, and that the heathen had
-emptied it of the living. The picture grew upon her distraught
-imagination till she feared to look on it lest it should
-be the lurid truth.</p>
-
-<p>It was about midnight, and she was beginning to quake
-with cold, when a sound stumbled suddenly out of silence,
-and set her listening. It dwindled and grew again, came
-nearer, became rhythmic, and ringing in the keen air.
-Igraine soon had no doubts as to its nature. It was the
-steady smite of hoofs on the high-road, the rhythm of a
-horse walking.</p>
-
-<p>Now was her chance if she dared risk the character of
-the rider. Doubts flashed before her a moment, hovered,
-and then merged into decision. Better to risk the unknown,
-she thought, than tempt starvation tied to the tree. She
-made her choice and acted.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Help, there! Help!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words went like silver through the woods. Igraine,
-listening hungrily, strained forward at her bonds to catch
-the answer that might come to her. The sound of hoofs
-ceased, and gave place to silence. Possibly the rider was
-in doubt as to the testimony of his own hearing. Igraine
-called again, and again waited.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Stillness held. Then there was a stir, and a crackling as
-of trampled brushwood, followed by the snort of a horse
-and the thrill of steel. The sounds came nearer, with the
-deadened tramp of hoofs for an underchant. Igraine, full of
-hope and fear, of doubt and gratitude, kept calling for his
-guidance. Presently a cry came back to her in turn.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By the holy cross, who are you that calls?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A woman,&rdquo; she cried in turn, &ldquo;bound here by the
-heathen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Here, in a grass ride, tied to a tree.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words that had come to her were very welcome,
-heralding, as they did, a friend, at least in race, and there
-was a manly depth in the voice, too, that gave her comfort.
-She saw a glimmer of steel in the shadows of the wood as
-man and horse drew into being from the darkness. Moonlight
-played fitfully upon them, weaving silver gleams amid
-a smoke of gloom, making a white mist about the man&rsquo;s
-great horse. A single ray burnt and blazed like a halo
-about the rider&rsquo;s casque, and his spear-point flickered like a
-star beneath the vaultings of the trees. He had halted, a
-solitary figure wrapped round with night, and rendered
-grand and wizard by the misty web of the moon.</p>
-
-<p>The sight was pathetic enough, yet infinitely fair.
-Light streamed through, and fell full upon the tree where
-Igraine stood. The girl&rsquo;s limbs were white and luminous
-against the dark bosom of the beech, and her rich hair fell
-about her like mist. As for the strange rider, he could at
-least claim the inspiration accorded to a Christian. The
-servant of the Galilean has, like Constantine, a symbol in
-the sky, prophetic in all need, generous of all guidance.
-The Cross is a perpetual Delphi oracular on trivial matters
-as on the destinies of kingdoms. The man dismounted,
-knelt for a moment with sword held before him, and then
-rose and strode to the tree with shield held before his
-face.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was looking at the figure in armour, kindly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-redly, from amid the masses of her hair. The small noblenesses
-of his bearing towards her had won her trust with a
-flush of gratitude. The man saw only the white feet like
-marble amid the moss as he cut the thongs where they
-circled the tree. The bands fell, he saw the white feet
-flicker, a trail of hair waving under his shield. Then he
-turned on his heel without a word, and went to tether his
-horse.</p>
-
-<p>The interlude was as considerate as courtesy had intended.
-Igraine darted for her habit with a rapturous sigh.
-When the man turned leisurely again, a tall girl met him,
-cloaked in grey, with her hair still hanging about her, and
-sandals on her feet.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mother Virgin, a nun!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words seemed sudden as an echo. Igraine bent her
-head to hide the half-abashed, half-smiling look upon her
-face. It had been thus at Avangel. Nun and novice had
-worn like habits, and there had been nothing to distinguish
-them save the final solemn vow. The man&rsquo;s notions were
-plainly celibate, and, with a sudden twinkling inspiration,
-she fancied they should bide so. It would make matters
-smoother for them both, she thought.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My prayers are yours, daily, for this service,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>The man bent his head to her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am thankful, madame,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;that I should
-have been so good fortuned as to be able to befriend you.
-How came you by such evil hazard?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was of Avangel,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You speak as of the past,&rdquo; quoth he, with a keen
-look.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Avangel was burnt and sacked but yesterday,&rdquo; she said.
-&ldquo;Many of the nuns were martyred; some few escaped. I
-was made captive here, and bound to this tree by the
-heathen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine could see the man&rsquo;s face darken even in the
-moonlight, as though pain and wrath held mute confederacy
-there. He crossed himself, and then stood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-with both hands on the pommel of his sword, stately and
-statuesque.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And the Lady Gratia?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dead, I fear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A half-heard groan seemed to come from the man&rsquo;s
-helmet. He bent his head into the shadows and stood stiff
-and silent as though smitten into thought. Presently he
-seemed to remember himself, Igraine, and the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And yourself, madame?&rdquo; he said, with a twinge of
-tenderness in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>The girl blushed, and nearly stammered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am unscathed,&rdquo; she hastened to say, &ldquo;thanks to heaven.
-I am safe and whole as if I had spent the day in a convent
-cell. My name is Igraine, if you would know it. I fear
-I have told you heavy tidings.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man turned his face to the sky like one who looks
-into other worlds.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is nothing,&rdquo; he said, gazing into the night; &ldquo;nothing
-but what we must look for in these stark days. Our altars
-smoke, our blood is spilt, and yet we still pray. Yet may I
-be cursed, and cursed again, if I do not dye my sword for
-this.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a sudden bleak fierceness in his voice that
-betrayed his fibre and the strong thoughts that were
-stirring in his heart that moment. His face looked almost
-fanatical in the cold gloom, gaunt, heavy-jawed, lion-like.
-Igraine watched this thunder-cloud of thought and passion
-in silence, thinking she would meet the man in the wrack
-of life rather as friend than as foe. The brief mood seemed
-to pass, or at least to lose expression. Again, there was
-that in the kindness of his face that made the girl feel
-beneath the eye of a brother.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You will ride with me?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine hesitated a moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was for Anderida,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and it is only three
-leagues distant. Now that I am free I can go through the
-wold alone, for I am no child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;An insult to my manhood,&rdquo; said the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But the heathen are everywhere, and I should but
-cumber you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, you talk like a fool.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a sheer sincerity about the speech that pleased
-Igraine. His spirit seemed to overtop hers, and to silence
-argument. Proud heart! yet without thought of debate
-she gave way in the most placid manner, and was content
-to be shepherded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I might walk at your stirrup,&rdquo; she said meekly.</p>
-
-<p>The man seemed to ponder. He merely looked at her
-with dark, solemn eyes, showing a quiet disregard for her
-humility.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen to me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you, a woman, must not
-attempt Anderida alone. The town will be beleaguered,
-or I am no prophet. To Anderida I cannot go, for I have
-folk at Winchester who wait my coming. If you can put
-trust in me, and will ride with me to Winchester, you will
-find harbour there.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She considered a moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Winchester,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;yes, and most certainly I trust
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man stretched out a hand to her with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God willing,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I will bear you safe to the
-place. As for your frocks and vows, they must follow
-necessity, and pocket their pride. It will not damn you
-to ride before a man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I trow not,&rdquo; she said, with a little laugh that seemed to
-make the leaves quiver. So they took horse together, and
-rode out from the beech wood into the moonlight.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IV</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When they were clear of the solemn beeches, and saw the
-road white as white before them, Igraine began to tell the
-man of the doom of Avangel, and the great end made by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-Gratia the abbess. The knight had folded his red cloak
-and spread it for her comfort. Her tale seemed very
-welcome to him despite its grievous humour, and he
-questioned her much concerning Gratia, her goodness and
-her charity. Now it had been well known in Avangel that
-Gratia had come of noble and excellent descent, and seeing
-that this stranger had been familiar with her in the past,
-Igraine guessed shrewdly that he himself was of some
-ancient and goodly stock. To tell the truth, she was very
-curious concerning him, and it was not long before she
-found a speech ready to her tongue likely to draw some
-confession from his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have promised to pray for you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and pray
-for you I will, seeing that you have done me so great a
-blessing to-night. When I bow to the Virgin and the
-Saints, what name may I remember?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man did not look at her, for her face was in the
-shadow of her hood and his clear and white in the light of
-the moon.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To some I am known as Sir Pelleas,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As Sir Pelleas, if it please you, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine understood that she was to be pleased with the
-name, whether she liked it or not.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then for Sir Pelleas I will pray,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and may
-my gratitude avail him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was silence for a space, broken by the rhythmic
-play of hoofs upon the road, and the dull jar of steel.
-Igraine was meditating further catechism, adapting her
-questions for the knowledge she wished for.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You ride errant,&rdquo; she said presently.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I ride alone, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The wold is a rude region set thick with perils.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very true,&rdquo; quoth the man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you are a venturesome spirit.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I believe that I am often as careful as death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine made her culminating suggestion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Some high deed must have been in your heart,&rdquo;
-she said, &ldquo;or probably you would not have risked so
-much.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man Pelleas did not even look at her. She felt the
-bridle-arm that half held her tighten unconsciously, as
-though he were steeling himself against her curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said very gravely, &ldquo;every man&rsquo;s business
-should be for his own heart, and I do not know that I have
-any need to share the right or wrong of mine with others.
-It is a grand thing to be able to keep one&rsquo;s own counsel.
-It is enough for you to know my name.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine none the less was not a bit abashed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is one thing I would hear,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and that
-is how you came to know of the abbess Gratia.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For the moment the man looked black, and his lips were
-stern&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You may know if you wish,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, the Lady Gratia was my mother.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine felt a flood of sudden shame burst redly into her
-heart. Gratia was the man&rsquo;s mother, and she had been
-plying him with questions, cruelly curious. She caught a
-short, shallow breath, and hung her head, shrinking like a
-prodigal.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Set me down,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I am not worthy to ride
-with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; quoth the man; &ldquo;you did not think, not
-knowing I was in pain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Set me down,&rdquo; was all she said; &ldquo;set me down&mdash;set
-me down.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man Pelleas changed his tone.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said, with a sudden gentleness that made
-her desire to weep, &ldquo;I have forgiven you. What, then,
-does it matter?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine hung her head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am altogether ashamed,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>She drew her hood well over her face, and took her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-reproof to heart like a veritable penitent. Even religious
-solemnities make little change in the notorious weaknesses
-of woman. Igraine was angry, not only for having blundered
-clumsily against the man&rsquo;s sorrow, but also because
-of the somewhat graceless part she seemed to have played
-after the deliverance he had vouchsafed her. As yet her
-character seemed to have lost honour fast by mere brief
-contrast with the man&rsquo;s.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas meanwhile rode with eyes watching the wan
-stretch of road to the west. On either hand the woods
-rose up like nebulous hills bowelled by tunnelled mysteries
-of gloom. He had turned his horse to the grass beside the
-roadway, so that the tramp of hoofs should fall muffled on
-the air. Igraine, close against his steeled breast, with his
-bridle-arm about her, looked into his face from the shadows
-of her hood, and found much to initiate her liking.</p>
-
-<p>If she loved strength, it was there. If she desired the
-grand reserve of silent vigour, it was there also. The
-deeply caverned eyes watching through the night seemed
-dark with a quiet destiny. The large, finely moulded face,
-gaunt and white in its meditative repose, seemed fit to
-front the ruins of a stricken land. It was the face of a man
-who had watched and striven, who had followed truth like
-a shadow, and had found the light of life in the heavens.
-There was bitterness there, pain, and the ghost of a sad
-desire that had pleaded with death. The face would have
-seemed morose, but for a certain something that made its
-shadows kind.</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively, as she watched the mask of thought
-beneath the dark arch of his open casque, she felt that he
-had memories in his heart at that moment. His thoughts
-were not for her, however much she pitied him or longed
-to tell him of her shame and sympathy. Nothing could
-come into that sad session of remembrances, save the soul
-of the man and the memories of his mother. That he was
-grieving deeply Igraine knew well. His was a strong
-nature that brooded in silence, and felt the more; it must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-be a terrible thing, she thought, to have the martyrdom
-of a mother haunting the heart like a fell dream at night.</p>
-
-<p>Slipping from such a reverie, the turmoil and weariness
-of the past days returned to take their tribute. Despite
-the strangeness of the night, Igraine began to feel sleepy as
-a tired child. The magnetic calm of the man beside her
-seemed to lull to slumber, while the motion of the ride
-cradled her the more. The noise of hoofs, the dull clink
-of scabbard against spur or harness, grew faint and faint.
-The woods seemed to swim into a mist of silver. She saw,
-as in a dream, the strong face above her staring calmly into
-the night, the long spear poised heavenwards. Her head
-was on the man&rsquo;s shoulder. With scarcely a thought she
-was asleep.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that Pelleas discovered the girl heavy in his
-arms, and looked down to find her sleeping, with hood fallen
-and a white face turned peacefully to his. Strangely enough,
-the sorrow that had taken him seemed to make his senses
-vibrate strongly to the more human things of life. The
-supple warmth of the girl&rsquo;s slim body crept up the sinews
-of his arm like a subtle flame. From her half-parted lips
-the sigh of her breathing came into his bosom. Over his
-harness clouded her hair, and her two hands had fastened
-themselves upon his sword-belt with a restful trust.</p>
-
-<p>The man bent his head and watched her in some awe.
-Her lips were like autumn fruit fed wistfully on moonlight.
-To Pelleas, woman was still wonderful, a creature to be
-touched with reverence and soft delight. The drab, the
-scold, and the harlot had failed to debase the ideals of a
-staunch spirit, and the fair flesh at his breast was as full of
-mystery as a woman could be.</p>
-
-<p>He took his fill of gazing, feeling half ashamed of the
-deed, and half dreading lest Igraine should wake suddenly
-and look deeply into his eyes. He felt his flesh creep with
-magic when she stirred or sighed, or when the hands upon
-his belt twitched in their slumber. Pelleas had seen stark
-things of late, burnt hamlets, priests slaughtered and churches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-in flames, children dead in the trampled places of the slain.
-He had ridden where smoke ebbed heavenwards, and blood
-clotted the green grass. Now this ride beneath the quiet
-eyes of night, with the bosomed silence of the woods around,
-and this lily plucked from death in his arms, seemed like a
-passage of calm after a page of tempest. Little wonder that
-he looked long into the girl&rsquo;s face, and thrilled to the soft
-sway of her bosom. He thanked God in his heart that he
-had plucked her blemishless from gradual death. It was
-even thus, he thought, that a good soldier should ride into
-Paradise bearing the soul of the woman he loved.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stirred little in her sleep. &ldquo;Poor child,&rdquo; thought
-Pelleas, &ldquo;she has suffered much, has feared death, and is
-weary. Let her sleep the night through if she can.&rdquo; So
-he drew the cloak gently about her, said his prayers in his
-heart, and, holding as much as possible under the shadows
-of the trees, kept watch patiently on the track before him.</p>
-
-<p>All that night Pelleas rode, thinking of his mother, with
-the girl sleeping in his arms. He saw the moon go down
-in the west, while the grey mist of the hour before dawn
-made the forest gaunt like an abode of the dead. He heard
-the birds wake in brake and thicket. He saw the red deer
-scamper, frightened into the glooms, and the rabbits scurrying
-amid the bracken. When the east mellowed he found
-himself in fair meadowlands lying locked in the depths of
-the wold, where flowers were thick as on some rich tapestry,
-and where the scent of dawn was as the incense of many
-temples. With a calm sorrow for the dead he rode on,
-threading the meadowland, till the girl woke and looked up
-into his face with a little sigh. Then he smiled at her half
-sadly, and wished her good-morning.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, wide-eyed, looked round in a daze.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Day?&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and meadows? It was moonlight
-when I fell asleep.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It has dawned an hour or more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then I have slept the night through? You must be
-tired to death, and stiff with holding me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; said Pelleas.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am sorry that I have been selfish,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I was
-asleep before I could think. Have you ridden all night?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; quoth he, with a smile, &ldquo;and not a soul have
-I seen. I have been watching your face and the moon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine coloured slightly, and looked sideways at him
-from under her long lashes. Her sleep had chastened her,
-and she felt blithe as a bird, and ready to sing. Putting
-the man&rsquo;s scarlet cloak from her, she shook her hair from
-her shoulders, and sprang lightly from her seat to the grass.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will run at your side awhile,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and so rest
-you. Perhaps you will halt presently, and sleep an hour or
-two under a tree. I can watch and keep guard with your
-sword.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas smiled down at her like the sun from behind a
-cloud.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not yet,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;a soldier needs no sleep for a week,
-and I feel lusty as Christopher. We will go awhile before
-breakfast, if it please you. There is a stream near where I
-can water my horse, and we can make a meal from such
-stuff as I have. When you are tired, tell me, and I will
-mount you here again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded at him gravely. Grass and flowers were well-nigh
-to her waist. Her gown shook showers of dew from
-the feathery hay. Foxgloves rose like purple rods amid the
-snow webs of the wild daisy. Tangled domes of dogrose
-and honeysuckle lined the white track, and there were
-countless harebells lying like a deep blue haze under the
-green shadows of the grass.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they came to where red poppies grew thickly
-in the golden meads. Igraine ran in among them, and
-began to make a great posy, while Pelleas watched her as
-her grey gown went amid the green and red. In due course
-she came back to him holding her flowers in her bosom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Scarlet is your colour,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and these are the
-flowers of sleep and of dreams for those that grieve. Hold
-them in the hollow of your shield for me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Pelleas obeyed her mutely. She began to sing a soft
-slumberous dirge while she walked beside the great black
-horse and plaited the flowers into its mane. The man
-watched her with a kind of wondering pain. The song
-seemed to wake echoes in him, like sea surges wake in the
-caverns of a cliff. He understood Igraine&rsquo;s grace to him,
-and was grateful in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How long were you mewed in Avangel?&rdquo; he said,
-presently.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Long enough,&rdquo; quoth she, betwixt her singing, &ldquo;to
-learn to love life.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So I should judge,&rdquo; said Pelleas, curtly.</p>
-
-<p>His tone disenchanted her. She threw the rest of the
-flowers aside, and walked quietly beside him, looking up
-with a frank seriousness into his face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was placed there by my parents,&rdquo; she said, by way of
-explanation, &ldquo;and against my will, for I had no hope in me
-to be a nun. But the times were wild, and my father&mdash;a
-solemn soul&mdash;thought for the best.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But your novitiate. You had your choice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I had my choice,&rdquo; she answered vaguely. &ldquo;Did ever a
-woman choose for the best? Avangel was no place for me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas eyed her somewhat sadly from his higher vantage.
-&ldquo;The nun&rsquo;s is a sorry life,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when her thoughts
-fly over the convent walls.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A level kindness in the words seemed to loose her tongue
-like magic. Twelve long months had her sympathies been
-outraged, and her young desires crushed by the heel of a
-so-called godliness. Never had so kind a chance for the
-outpouring of her discontent come to her. Women love an
-honest grumble. In a moment all her bitterness found ready
-flight into the man&rsquo;s ears.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hated it!&rdquo; she said, "I hated it! Avangel had no hold
-on me. What were vigils, penitences, and long prayers to
-a girl? They made us kneel on stone, and sleep on boards.
-The chapel bell seemed to ring every minute of the day;
-we had vile food, and no liberty. It was Saint This, Saint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-That, from morning till night. We saw no men. We
-might never dress our hair; and, believe me, there were no
-mirrors. I had to go to a little pool in the garden to see
-my face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And they were so dull,&mdash;so dismal. No one ever
-laughed; no one ever told romances; all our legends were
-of pious things in petticoats. And what was the use of it
-all? Was any one ever a jot the better? I used to get
-into my cell and stamp. I felt like a corpse in a charnel-house,
-and the whole world seemed dead.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas scanned her half smilingly, half sadly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am sorry for your heart,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sorry! You needs must be when you are a soldier,
-with life in your ears like a clarion cry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Life is a sorry ballad, Sister Igraine, unless we remember
-the Cross.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, yes, I have all the saints in mind&mdash;dear souls; but
-then, Sir Pelleas, one cannot live on one&rsquo;s knees. I was
-made to laugh and twinkle, and if such is sin, then a sorry
-nun am I.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You misunderstand me,&rdquo; said the man. &ldquo;I would that
-a Christian held his course over the world, with a great cross
-set in the west to lead him. He can laugh and joy as he
-goes, sleep like the good, and take the fruits of life in his
-time. Yet ever above him should be the glory of the cross,
-to chasten, purge, and purify. There is no sin in living
-merrily if we live well, but to plot for pleasure is to lose it.
-Look at the sun; there is no need for us to be ever on our
-knees to him, yet we know well it would be a sorry world
-without his comfort.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, with a little gesture. &ldquo;I see you are too
-devout for me, despite my habit. Take me up again, Sir
-Pelleas, and I will ride with you, though I may not argue.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas halted his horse, and she was soon in the saddle
-before him, somewhat subdued and pensive in contrast to
-her former vivacity. The man believed her a nun, and she
-had a character to play. Well, when she wearied of it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-which would probably be soon, she could tell him and so end
-the matter. It was not long before they came to the ford
-across the stream Pelleas had spoken of. It was a green
-spot shut in by thorn trees, and here they made a halt as
-the knight had purposed.</p>
-
-<p>Before the meal Pelleas knelt by the stream and prayed.
-Igraine, seeing him so devout, did likewise, though her eyes
-were more on the man than on heaven. Her thoughts never
-got above the clouds. When they were at their meal of
-meat and bread, with a horn of water from the stream, she
-talked yet further of her life at Avangel, and the meagre
-blessing it had been to her. It was while she talked thus
-that she saw something about the man&rsquo;s person that fired her
-memory, and set her thinking of the journey of yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas was wearing a gold chain that bore a cross hanging
-above the left breast, but with no cross over the right.
-Looking more keenly, Igraine saw a broken link still hanging
-from the right portion of the chain. Instinctively her
-thoughts fled back to the silent manor in the wood, and the
-dead man seated stiffly in the great carved chair.</p>
-
-<p>Without duly weighing the possible gravity of her words,
-she began to tell Pelleas of the incident.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yesterday,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I saw a strange thing as we fled
-through the wold. We came to a villa, and, seeking food
-there, found it deserted, save for a dead man seated in a chair,
-and stricken in the breast. The dead man had a small gold
-cross clutched in his fingers, and there was a dead hound at
-his feet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man gave her a keen look from the depths of his
-dark eyes, and then glanced at the broken chain.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You see that I have lost a cross,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your reason can read the rest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is nothing like the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stared at the man in some astonishment. He
-was cold as a frost, and there was no shadow of discomfort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-on his strong face. Knowledge had come to her so sharply
-that she had no answer for him at the moment. Yet there
-stood a sublime certainty in her heart that this violent deed
-was deserving of absolute approval, so soon had her faith in
-him become like steel.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The man deserved death,&rdquo; she said presently, with a curt
-and ingenuous confidence.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas eyed her curiously.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How should you know?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have faith in you,&rdquo; was all she said.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas smiled, despite the subject.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No man deserved death better.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And so you slew him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He nodded without looking at her, and she could see
-still the embers of wrath in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I slew him in his own manor, finding him alone, and
-ready to justify himself with lies. Honour does not love
-such deeds; but what would you?&mdash;Britain is free of a
-viper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you have blood on your hand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He winced slightly, and glanced at his fingers as though
-she had not spoken in metaphor.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All is blood in these days,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And what think you of such laws?&rdquo; she ventured, with
-a supreme reaching after the requirements of her Order.
-&ldquo;What of the Cross?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There was blood upon it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But the blood of self-sacrifice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her words moved him more than she had purposed. His
-dark face flushed, and light kindled in his eyes as though
-the basal tenets of his life had been called in question. He
-glowed like a man whose very creed is threatened. Igraine
-watched the fire rising in him with a secret pleasure,&mdash;the
-love of a woman for the hot courage of a man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen to me,&rdquo; he said strongly; "which think you is
-the worthier life: to dream in a stone cell mewed from the
-world like a weak weed in a cellar, or to go forth with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-red heart and a mellow honour; to strive and smite for the
-weak and the wounded; to right the wrong; to avenge the
-fatherless? Choose and declare."</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Choose,&rdquo; she said, with a shrill laugh and a kindling
-colour, &ldquo;truth, and I will. Away with the rosary; give me
-the sword.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Like a wild echo to her human choice came the distant
-cry of a horn borne hollowly over the sleeping meadows.
-Both heard it and started. The great war-horse, grazing
-near by, tossed his head, snorted, and stood listening with
-ears twitching and head to the east. Pelleas rose up and
-scanned the road from under his hand, with the girl Igraine
-beside him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A Saxon horn,&rdquo; he said laconically; &ldquo;the heathen are
-in the woods.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>V</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As they watched, looking down betwixt two thorn trees,
-a faint puff of dust rose on the road far to the east, and
-hung like a diminutive cloud over the meadows. This
-danger signal counselled the pair. Pelleas caught his horse
-and sprang to selle; Igraine clambered by his stirrup, and
-was lifted to her seat before him. Pelleas slung his shield
-forward, and loosened his sword.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If it comes to battle,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I will set you down,
-and you must hide in the meadows or woods, while I fight.
-You would but cumber me, and be in great peril here.
-Rest assured, though, that I shall not desert you while I
-live.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With that he turned his horse to the road, and halted,
-gazing down amid the placid fields to where the little cloud
-of dust had hinted at life. It was there still, only larger,
-and sounded on by the distant triple canter of horses at the
-gallop. Pelleas and Igraine could see three mounted figures
-coming up the road amid a white haze, moving fast, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-though pressed by some as yet unseen enemy. It was soon
-evident to Pelleas and the girl that one of the fugitives was
-a woman.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We will abide them,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;and learn their
-peril. We shall be stronger, too, for company, and may
-succour one another if it comes to smiting. Look! yonder
-comes the heathen pack.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A second and larger cloud of dust had appeared, a mile
-or less beyond the first. Pelleas watched it awhile, and then
-turned and began riding at a trot towards the west, so that
-the three fugitives should overtake him. He bade Igraine
-keep watch over his shoulder while he scanned the meadows
-before them for sign of peril or of friendly harbour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have no fear, child,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I could vow, by these
-fields, that there is a manor near. I trust confidently that
-we shall find refuge.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine smiled at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am no coward,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That is well spoken.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I would, though, that you would give me your dagger,
-so that, if things come to an evil pass, I shall know how to
-quit myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dagger!&rdquo; he said, with a sudden stare. &ldquo;I left it
-in the man&rsquo;s heart in Andredswold.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Igraine; &ldquo;then I must do without.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The dull thunder of the nearing gallop came up to them&mdash;a
-stirring sound, full of terse life and eager hazard. Pelleas
-spurred to a canter, while Igraine&rsquo;s hair blew about his
-face and helmet as they began to meet the kiss of the wind.
-She clung fast to him with both hands, and told what was
-passing on the road in their rear.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How they ride,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;a tangle of dust and whirling
-hoofs. There is a lady in blue on a white horse, with
-an armed man on either flank. They are very near now.
-I can see the heathen far away over the meadows. They
-are galloping, too, in a smoke of dust. Our folk will be
-with us soon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In a minute the lady and her men were hurtling close in
-Pelleas&rsquo;s wake. He spurred to a gallop in turn, and bade
-Igraine wave them on to his side. The three were soon
-with them, stride for stride. The girl on the white horse
-drew up on Pelleas&rsquo;s right flank. She was habited in blue
-and silver&mdash;a flaxen-haired damosel, with the round face of
-a child. Seemingly she was possessed of little hardihood,
-for her mouth was a red streak in a waste of white, and her
-blue eyes so full of fear that Igraine pitied her. She cried
-shrilly to Pelleas, her voice rising above the din like the cry
-of a frightened bird.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The heathen!&rdquo; she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Many?&rdquo; shouted the man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Two score or more. There is a strong manor near.
-If we gain it we may live.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How far?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a mile over the meadows.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lead on,&rdquo; said Pelleas; &ldquo;we will follow as we may.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The damosel on the white horse turned from the road,
-and headed southwards over the meadows, with her men
-galloping beside her. The long grass swayed, water-like,
-before them, its summer seed flying like a mist of dew.
-Wood and pasture slid back on either hand. The ground
-seemed to rise and fall before them as a sea, while
-rocks here and there thrust up bluff noses in the grass
-like great lizards stirred by the hurtling thunder of the
-gallop.</p>
-
-<p>On they went, with white spume on breast and bridle;
-leaping, swerving where rough ground showed. To Igraine
-the ride was life indeed, bringing back many a whistling
-gallop from the past. She felt her heart in her leaping to
-the horse&rsquo;s stride. Now and again she took a sly look at
-Pelleas&rsquo;s face, finding it calm and vigilant&mdash;the face of a
-man whose thought ran a silent course unruffled by the
-breeze of peril. She felt his bridle-arm staunchly about her
-like a girdle of steel. Although she could see the dust
-gathering thickly on the distant road, she felt blithe as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-new bride in the man&rsquo;s company, and there was no fear at
-all in her thought.</p>
-
-<p>The grassland began to slope gradually towards the south.
-A quavering screech of joy came back to them from the
-woman riding in the van. Pelleas spoke his first word
-during the gallop.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courage,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Southwards lies our refuge.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine looked over his shoulder, and saw how their
-flight tended down the flank of a gentle hill into the lap
-of a fair valley. The grass stretch was broken by great
-trees&mdash;oaks, beeches, and huge, corniced cedars. Down in
-the green hollow below them a mere shone with the soul of
-the sky steeped in its quiet waters. It was ringed with
-trailing willows, and an island held its centre, piled with
-green shadows and the grey shape of a fair manor. The
-place looked as peaceful as sleep in the eye of the
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>The woman on the white horse bade one of her men
-take his bugle-horn and blow a summons thereon to rouse
-the folk upon the island. Twice the summons sounded
-down over the water, but there was no answering stir to be
-marked about the house or garden. The place was smokeless,
-lifeless, silent. Like many another home, its hearths
-were cold for fear of the barbarian sword.</p>
-
-<p>As they held downhill, Igraine wove the matter through
-her thought like swift silk through a shuttle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Should there be no boat,&rdquo; she said, giving voice to her
-misgivings, &ldquo;what can you do for us?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We must swim for it,&rdquo; said Pelleas, keenly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is a broad, fair water, and the horse cannot bear us
-both.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He shall, if needs be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She felt that the brute would, after Pelleas had spoken
-so. She patted the arched black neck, and smiled at the
-sky as they came down to the mere&rsquo;s edge at a canter.
-The water was lapping softly at the sedges amid a blaze
-of marsh marigolds and purple flags, the surface gleaming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-like glass in the sun. Half a score water-hens went winging
-from the reeds, and skimming low and fast towards the
-island. A heron rose from the shallows, and laboured
-heavenwards with legs trailing.</p>
-
-<p>Riding round the margin, they found to their joy a
-barge grounded in a little bay, with sweeps ready upon the
-thwarts, and a horse-board fitted at the prow. A purple
-cloak hung over one bulwark, trailing in the water; a small
-crucifix and a few trinkets were scattered on the poop, as
-though those who had used the ferry last had fled in fear,
-forgetful of everything save flight.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the embarkation. The barge would but
-hold three horses at one voyage, so Pelleas ordered Igraine
-and the rest into the boat, and bade the men row over and
-return. Igraine demurred a moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leave your horse,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;they may come before
-the boat can take you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas refused her with a smile, running his fingers
-through the brute&rsquo;s black mane.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have a truer heart than that,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>The men launched away, and pulled at the sweeps with
-a will, Igraine helping, and doing her devoir for the man
-Pelleas&rsquo;s sake. The barge slid away, with ripples playing
-from the prow, and a gush of foam leaping from each smile
-of the blades. It was a hundred yards or more to the
-island, and the craft was ponderous enough to make the
-crossing slow.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas sat still and watched the meadows. Suddenly&mdash;bleakly&mdash;a
-figure on horseback topped the low hill on the
-north, and held motionless on the summit, scanning the
-valley. A second joined the first. Pelleas caught a shout,
-muffled by the wind, as the two plunged down at full gallop
-for the mere, sleeping in its bed of green. Here were two
-gentlemen who had outstripped their fellows, and were as
-keen as could be to catch Pelleas before the barge could
-recross, and set the mere betwixt them. Pelleas saw his
-hazard in a moment. Even if the barge came before the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-heathen, there would be some peril of its capture in the
-shallows.</p>
-
-<p>He would have to fight for it, unless he cared to swim
-the mere. Provided he could deal with these two outriders
-before the main company came up, well and good, the
-raiders would find clear water between the quarry and their
-swords. He thought of Avangel, and grew iron of heart.
-Then there was the nun, Igraine, with the wonderful eyes,
-and hair warm as the dun woods in autumn. He was her
-sworn knight as far as Winchester. God helping him, he
-thought, he would yet see her face again. So he rode out
-grimly to get fair field for horsecraft, and waited for the two
-who swept the meadows.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, standing on the wooden stage at the water&rsquo;s
-edge, saw Pelleas taking ground and preparing for a tussle.
-The barge had put off again and had already half spanned
-the water. She was alone with the woman of the white
-horse, who stood beside her still quaking like a reed, and
-almost voiceless from the fulsome terror of an unshrived
-death. Igraine had no heed for her at the moment. Her
-whole thought lurked with the red shield and the black
-horse in the meadows. Worldly heart! her desire burnt
-redly in her own bosom, and found no flutter for the
-powers above.</p>
-
-<p>She saw Pelleas gathering for the course, while the
-heathen slackened so as not to override their mark. A
-crescent of steel flashed as the foremost man launched his
-axe at the knight&rsquo;s head. The red shield caught and
-turned it. In a trice Pelleas&rsquo;s spear had picked the rogue
-from the saddle, despite his crouching low and seeking to
-shun it. The second fellow came in like a whirlwind.
-His horse caught the black destrier cross counter and
-rolled him down like a rammed wall. Pelleas avoided, and
-was up with bleak sword. Smiting low, he caught the
-man&rsquo;s thigh, and broke the bone like a lath. The Saxon
-lost his seat, and came down with a snarling yell. The
-rest was easy as beating down a maimed wolf.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The main company had just topped the hill. Pelleas,
-with the skirmish ended to his credit, shook his sword at
-them, and led his horse into the shallows. The barge
-swept in, took its burden from the bank, and held back for
-the island, where Igraine stood watching on the stage,
-ready with her welcome. She was glad of Pelleas in her
-heart, as though the comradeship of half a day had given
-her the right to share his honour, and to chime her joy with
-his. The woman in her swamped the assumed sanctity of
-the nun. As the water stretch lessened between them,
-Pelleas, silent and dark-browed as was his wont, found
-himself beneath the beck of eyes that gazed like the half-born
-wonder of the sky at dawn. It was neither joy nor
-great light in them, but a kind of quiet musing, as though
-there were strange new music in her soul.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you hurt?&rdquo; she asked, as he sprang from the
-barge and stood beside her, with head thrown back and his
-great shoulders squared.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a graze.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Two to one, and a fair field,&rdquo; quoth she, with a quaver
-of triumph; &ldquo;my heart sang when those men went down.
-That was a great spear thrust.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Less and less of the rosary!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She caught his deep smile, and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am a greater heathen than either,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;God
-rest their souls.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the lady in the blue tunic had somewhat
-recovered her squandered wits and courage. She came
-forward with a simpering dignity, walking daintily, with
-her gown gathered in her right hand, and her left laid over
-her heart. Her eyes were very big and blue, their brightness
-giving her an eager, sanguine look that was upheld the
-more by an assumed simpleness of manner. Her childish
-bearing, winsomely studied, exercised its subtleties with a
-lavish embellishment of smiles and blushes. Looked at
-more closely, and in repose, her face belied in measure the
-perspicuous personality she had adopted. A sensual bold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>ness
-lurked in mouth and nostrils, and there was more
-carnal wisdom there than a pretended child should possess.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courtesy fails me, sir,&rdquo; she said, letting her shoulders
-fall into a graceful stoop, and turning her large eyes to
-Pelleas&rsquo;s face; &ldquo;courtesy fails me when I would most praise
-you for your knightly deed in yonder meadows. I am so
-frightened that I cannot speak as I would. My heart is
-quite tired with its fear and flutter. Think you&mdash;you can
-save us from these wolves?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas had neither the desire nor the leisure to stand
-juggling courtesies with the woman.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;we shall fight. Leave the rest to
-Providence. I can give you no better comfort.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;no&rdquo;&mdash;as in a daze.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas, reading her misery, repented somewhat of his
-abrupt truthfulness.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he said, with a kind strength and a hand on her
-shoulder; &ldquo;go to the house and rest there with Sister Igraine.
-I see you are too much shaken. Go in and pray if you
-can, while we hold the island.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The girl looked at him unreservedly for a moment.
-Then she gave a little laugh that was half a sob, and,
-bending to him, kissed his hand before he could prevent
-her. Giving him yet another glance from her tumbled
-hair, she stepped aside to Igraine, and they turned together
-towards the manor, and the trees and gardens that ringed
-it. The girl had set her hand in Igraine&rsquo;s with a little
-gesture that was intended to be indicative of confidence in
-the supposed nun&rsquo;s greater intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let us go and sit under that yew tree,&rdquo; she suggested.
-&ldquo;I cannot stifle within walls now. You are named
-Igraine. I am called Morgan&mdash;Morgan la Blanche,&mdash;and
-I am a lord&rsquo;s daughter. I almost envy you your frock
-now, for death cannot frighten you as it frightens me.
-Of course you are very good, and the Saints guard and
-watch over you. As for me, I have always been very
-thoughtless.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not more than I,&rdquo; said Igraine, with a smile. &ldquo;I have
-often hummed romances when I should have praised Paul
-or Peter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But doesn&rsquo;t the fear of death blight you like a frost?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never think of death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It seems so near us now that I can hardly breathe.
-Do you think we are tortured in the other world, if there
-be one?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How should I know, simple one?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wish the mere were a league broad. I should feel
-further from the pit.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is your conscience so unkind?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Conscience, sister? It is self-love, not conscience. I
-only want to live. Look!&mdash;the heathen are coming down
-to the mere. How their axes shine. Holy Mother!&mdash;I
-wish I could pray.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, catching the girl&rsquo;s pinched face, with lips drawn
-and twitching, pitied her from her very heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come then, I will pray with you,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no, my prayers would blacken heaven. I cannot,
-I cannot.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The wild company had swept down between the great
-trees in disorderly array. Their weapons shone in the
-sunlight, their round bucklers blickered. They were soon
-at the place where Pelleas had slain his men in fair and
-open field. Dismounting, they gathered about their dead
-fellows, and sent up, after their custom, a vicious, dismal
-ululation, a sound like the howling of wolves, drear enough
-to make the flesh tingle under the stoutest steel. Lining
-the bank among the willows, they shook buckler and axe,
-gesticulating, threatening, their long hair blowing wild,
-their skin-clad bodies giving them a wolfin look not
-pleasant to behold. Round the margin they paddled&mdash;searching&mdash;casting
-about for a boat. They seemed like
-beasts behind the gates of some Roman amphitheatre&mdash;caged
-from the slaughter. The girl Morgan looked
-at them, screamed, and hid her face in her tunic.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-Igraine found the girl&rsquo;s quaking hand, and held it fast in
-hers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courage, courage,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;there is no boat, and, even
-if they swim, Sir Pelleas is a great knight.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What can he do against fifty?&rdquo; whined the girl, with
-her face still covered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fifty? There are but a score. I have numbered them
-myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I would give all the jewels in the world to be in
-Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah! girl, I have no jewels to give; but this, I promise
-you, is better than a convent.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The barbarians had gathered in a group beneath a great
-willow. Plainly they were in debate as to what should be
-done. Some, by their gestures, their tossing weapons, and
-their bombast, were for swimming the mere. Their
-councils were palpably divided. Possibly the sager folk
-among them did not think the venture worth the loss to
-them it might entail, seeing that one of those cooped upon
-the island had already given proof of no mean prowess.
-They could see the three armed men waiting grimly by
-the water&rsquo;s edge, ready to strike down the swimmer who
-should crawl half-naked from the water weeds and mire.
-Gradually, but surely, the elder tongues held the argument,
-and the balance went down solemnly for those upon the island.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas and the two men, watching keenly for any
-movement, saw the circle of figures break and melt towards
-the horses. They saw them pick up the bodies of their
-two dead fellows, and lay them across the saddle. In a
-minute the whole troop turned, and held away southwards
-at a trot, flinging back a last wild cry over the water.
-The meadows rolled away behind them; the gradual trees
-hid them from moment to moment. Pelleas and the two
-servants stood and watched till the black line had gone
-southwards into the thickening woods.</p>
-
-<p>Under the yew tree Morgan la Blanche had uncased her
-white face, and was smiling feebly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad I did not pray,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;it would have
-been so weak. Look! I have torn my tunic, and my belt&rsquo;s
-awry. Bind my hair for me, sister, quickly,&mdash;before Sir
-Pelleas comes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VI</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>With the heathen lost in the distant woods, Pelleas and
-the women essayed the house, leaving the two servants to
-sentinel the island.</p>
-
-<p>The great gates of the porch were ajar. Pushing in, they
-crossed into the atrium, and found it sleepy as solitude.
-The water in the impluvium gleamed with the gold flanks
-of the fish that moved through its shadows. Lilies were
-there, white and wonderful, swooning to their own images
-in the pool. The tiled floor was rich with colour. Venturing
-further, they found the triclinium untouched, rich
-couches and flaming curtains everywhere, gilded chairs, and
-deep-lustred mirrors, urns, and flowers. In the chapel
-candles were guttered on the altar; dim lights came down
-upon a wealth of solemn beauty&mdash;saints, censers, crosses,
-frescoed walls all green and azure, gold and scarlet. The
-viridarium, set betwixt chapel and tablinum, held them
-dazed with a glowing paradise of flowers. Here were
-dreamy palms, orange trees like mounts of gold, roses that
-slept in a deep delight of green. Over all was silence,
-untainted even by the silken purr of a bird&rsquo;s wing.</p>
-
-<p>Gyn&oelig;cium and bower were void of them in turn.
-Everywhere they found the relics of a swift desertion. The
-manor folk had gone, as if to the ferry of death, taking no
-worldly store or sumptuous baggage with them. Not a
-living thing did they discover, save the fish darting in the
-water. The cubicula were empty, their couches tumbled;
-the culina fireless, and its hearth cold.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas and the women marvelled much at the beauty of
-the place; its solitude seemed but a ghostly charm to them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-As for the girl Morgan, she had taken Pelleas into her immediate
-and especial favour, holding at his side everywhere,
-a-bubble with delight. The luxury of the place pleased her
-at every glance; her vanity ran riot like a bee among
-flowers. She eyed herself furtively in mirrors, and put a
-rose daintily in her hair while Pelleas was not looking.
-She had already rifled a cabinet, strung a chain of amethysts
-about her neck, and poked her fingers into numberless rings.
-Then she would try the couches, queen it for a moment in
-some stately chair, or smother her face sensuously in the
-flowers growing from the urns. All these pretty vapourings
-were carried through with a most mischievous grace.
-Igraine, who had seen the girl white and whimpering an
-hour before and in deadly horror of the pit, wondered at
-her, and hated her liberally in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was Pelleas glad of the change her presence had
-wrought; for her childish subtleties had no hold on him, and
-even her thieving seemed insipid. With solemn and shadowy
-thoughts in his heart, her frivolous worldliness came like
-some tinkling discord. Igraine seemed to have dimmed
-her eyes from him beneath the shadow of her hood. Her
-face was set like the face of a statue, and there was no play
-of thought upon it. She walked proudly behind the pair&mdash;not
-with them&mdash;like one elbowed out of companionship by
-a vapouring rival.</p>
-
-<p>In the women&rsquo;s bower Morgan found a lute, and pounced
-upon it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;One&rsquo;s whole desire seems here,&rdquo; she chattered. &ldquo;This
-bower suits my fancy like a dream, and I could lodge here
-a month for love of it. What think you, Knight Pelleas?
-I never set foot in a fairer manor. I warrant you there are
-meat and wine in the cellars. We will feast and have
-music anon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas&rsquo;s face looked more suited to a burial. Igraine
-pitied him, for his eyes looked tired and sad. Morgan
-ran on like a jay. In the chapel she found Igraine a
-share.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Here is your portion, holy Sister,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;mine the
-bower, yours the altar. So you see we are all well suited.
-Come, though, is it not very horrible having to look solemn
-all day, and to wear a grey gown? I should fade in a week
-inside such a hood; besides, it makes you look such a
-colour.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine could certainly boast a colour at that moment
-that might have warned the woman of her rising fume.
-Pelleas broke in and took up the argument.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Men do not consider dress,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;everything is fair
-to the comely. I look into a woman&rsquo;s face and into her
-eyes, and take the measure of her heart. Such is my
-catechism.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you like to see rich silks and a smile, and to hear a
-laugh at times. What is a girl if she is not gay? No
-discourtesy to you, sister; but you seem so far set from Sir
-Pelleas and myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, lacking patience, flared up like a torch. &ldquo;Ha!
-mark you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;my habit makes me no coward, nor do
-I thieve. No discourtesy to you, my dear lady.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Morgan set up a thrill of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How true a woman is a nun,&rdquo; quoth she; &ldquo;but you are
-too severe, too careful. Thieving, too; why, I may as well
-have a trinket or so before the place is rifled, even if I take
-a single ring. And what is more, I have been turned from
-my own house with hardly a bracelet or a bodkin. Come,
-Sir Pelleas, let us be going; the Sister would be at her
-prayers. I see we but hinder her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas had lost both pity and patience in the last minute.
-Partisanship is inevitable even in the most trivial differences,
-and Pelleas&rsquo;s frown was strongly for Morgan la Blanche.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps it would be well, madame,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if we all
-went on our knees for the day&rsquo;s deliverance. I cannot see
-that there is any shame in gratitude.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gratitude!&rdquo; chirped the girl. &ldquo;Gratitude to whom?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To the Lord Saviour, madame, and the Mother Virgin.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She half laughed in his face, but his eyes sobered her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-For a moment she fronted him with an incredulous smirk,
-then her glance wavered, and lowered to his breast. It held
-there with a tense stare, while her whole face hardened.
-Pelleas saw her pupils darken, her cheeks flush and pale in
-a moment. He thought nothing of it, or ascribed her
-distraught and strange look to some sudden shame or shock
-of penitence. In a trice the smile was back again, and she
-seemed pert and pleased as ever.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I see you are too devout for me,&rdquo; she said with a glib
-laugh, &ldquo;and that I am too wicked a thing for the moment.
-I will leave you to Sister Igraine till you both have prayed
-your fill.&rdquo; Here she laughed again, a laugh that made
-Igraine&rsquo;s cheeks burn. &ldquo;Remember me to St. Anthony if
-you may. If I recollect rightly he was a nice old gentleman,
-who cured &lsquo;the fire&rsquo; for a miracle, and nearly fell in love
-with a devil. Till you have done, I will go and gather
-flowers.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas and Igraine looked at one another.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A devout child,&rdquo; said the man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And not bred in a nunnery.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The world&rsquo;s convent, I should say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For the moment Igraine was almost for telling him of
-her own hypocrisy, but the thought found her more troubled
-on that score than she could have guessed. She had acted a
-lie to the man, and feared his true eyes despite her courage.
-&ldquo;Another day I will tell him,&rdquo; she thought; &ldquo;it is not so
-great a sin after all.&rdquo; So they turned and knelt at their
-devotions.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan la Blanche went away like the wind. She ran
-through atrium and porch with hate free in her eyes, and
-her child&rsquo;s face twisted into a scowl of temper. In the
-garden she idled up and down awhile in a restless fume, like
-one whose thoughts bubble bodingly. Sometimes she would
-smite a lily peevishly with her open hand, or pluck a flower
-and trample it under her feet as though it had wronged her.
-Then she would take something from her bosom and stare
-at it while her lips worked, or while she bit her fingers as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-though galled by some inward barb. Presently she found
-her way by a laurel walk to the orchard, and thence by a
-wicket-gate to the island&rsquo;s rim, where one of her men kept
-watch on the further meadows.</p>
-
-<p>She stood under an apple tree, called to him, and
-beckoned. He came to her&mdash;a short, burly fellow with the
-look of a bull, and brute writ large on his visage. Morgan
-drew him under the swooping dome of the tree, plucked
-something that shone from her bosom, and dangled it before
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The cross,&rdquo; she said, almost in a whisper. &ldquo;Galerius,
-the cross.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man stared at her stupidly. Morgan lifted a finger,
-ran this way and that peering into the green glooms and
-listening. Then she came back to the man, soft-footed,
-glib as a cat, with the cross of gold gripped in her fingers.
-She smiled at him, a smile that was almost a leer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Galerius,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the knight in the house yonder
-wears a chain with one cross missing, and the fellow cross
-matches this. Moreover, his poniard sheath is empty. I
-marked all this as I stood by him a moment ago. This is
-the man who slew my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The servant&rsquo;s heavy face showed that he understood her
-well enough now.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To-night,&rdquo; she said, almost skipping under the trees
-with the intensity of her malice, &ldquo;it shall be with his own
-poniard. I have it here. Galerius, you have always been
-a good fellow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man grinned.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Keep silence and leave all to me. I shall need your
-hand and no more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nor shall he,&rdquo; said Galerius curtly.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan grew suddenly bleak and quiet, with the thought
-of murder harboured in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Look for yourself, Galerius,&rdquo; she said; "see that my
-eyes have not deceived me. The man must have come
-upon Lord Madan when he was alone, after our hirelings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-had deserted the house. He slew him in the winter room&mdash;this
-whelp sent by Aurelius the king. You and I,
-Galerius, found the cross in my lord&rsquo;s dead hand, and the
-poniard in his bosom. I warrant you we will level this
-deed before we hold again for Winchester."</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Trust my hand, Madame Morgan,&rdquo; quoth the man;
-&ldquo;if you can have the fellow sleeping, so much the better,
-one need not strike in a hurry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Leave it to me,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I will give you your
-knife and your chance to-night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With that she sent the fellow back to his watching, and
-threaded the orchard to the manor garden. Pelleas and
-Igraine had long ended their prayers in the chapel. Morgan
-found them in the atrium, watching the fish in the water
-and their own reflections in the pool. The girl had quite
-smothered the bleak look that had held her features in the
-orchard. She was the same ingenuous, self-pleased little
-woman whose blue eyes seemed as clear and honest as a
-sleeping sea in summer. Before, she had flown in Pelleas&rsquo;s
-face for vanity&rsquo;s sake; now she seemed no less his woman&mdash;ready
-with smiles and childish flattery, and all the pleasantness
-she could gather. She was at his side again&mdash;quick
-with her eyes and tongue. Probably she guessed that the
-man despised her, but then that was of no moment now,
-seeing that it made the secret in her heart more bitter.</p>
-
-<p>At noon they dined in the triclinium, with man Galerius
-to serve. He had ransacked kitchen and pantry, and from
-the ample store discovered, had spread a sufficient meal.
-His eyes were ever on Pelleas as he waited. There was
-no doubt about cross or poniard sheath; and Galerius found
-pleasure in scanning the knight&rsquo;s armour and looking for
-the place where he might strike.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon proved sultry, and Pelleas took his turn
-in keeping watch by the bank. Cool and placid lay the
-water in the sun, while vapoury heat hung over the
-meadows and the distant woods. There was still fear lest
-the heathen might return, thinking to catch the islanders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-napping. The very abruptness of their retreat had been in
-itself suspicious; and Pelleas was all for caution. Igraine&rsquo;s
-face seemed to make him more careful of peril. He thought
-much of her as he paced the green bank for three hours
-or more, before leaving the duty to Galerius and his
-fellow.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the manor he found Igraine cushioned on
-the tiled floor beside the impluvium, fingering the lute that
-Morgan la Blanche had found. The latter lady was still in
-the tablinum, so Igraine said, pilfering and admiring at her
-leisure, with fruit and a cup of spiced wine ready at her
-hand. Pelleas took post on the opposite side of the pool to
-Igraine, unarmed himself at his leisure, and began to clean
-his harness. No task could have pleased Igraine better.
-She put the lute away, took his helmet on her lap, and
-burnished it with the corner of her gown. Pelleas had
-sword, breast-plate, greaves and shoulder pieces beside him.
-Their eyes often met over the pool as they sat with the
-scent of lilies in the air, and talked little&mdash;but thought the
-more.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine felt queerly happy. There seemed a warm fire
-in her bosom, a stealthy, happy heat that crept through
-every atom of her frame like the sap into the fibres of some
-rich rose. Her heart seemed to unfold itself like a flower
-in the sun. She looked often at Pelleas, and her eyes were
-very soft and bright.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A fair place, this,&rdquo; she said presently, as the man
-furbished his sword.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fair indeed,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;a rich manor.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is strange to me after Avangel.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps more beautiful.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, with a sudden kindling; "I think my
-whole soul was made for beauty, my whole desire born for
-fair and lovely things. You will smile at me for a dreamer,
-but often my thoughts seem to fly through forests&mdash;marvellous
-green glooms all drowned in moonlight. I love
-to hear the wind, to watch the great oaks battling, to see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-the sea one laugh of gold. Every sunset harrows me into
-a moan of woe. I can sing to the stars at night&mdash;songs
-such as the woods weave from the voice of a gentle wind,
-dew-ladened, green and lovely. Sometimes I feel faint for
-sheer love of this fair earth."</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas&rsquo;s eyes were on her with a strange deep look.
-His dark face was aglow with a new wonder, as though his
-soul had flashed to hers. The great sword lay naked and
-idle in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Often have I felt thus,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but my lips could
-never say it. Thoughts are given to some without
-words.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But the joy is there,&rdquo; she answered, with a quiet
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Joy in beauty?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, girl, a beautiful face, or a blaze of gold and scarlet
-over the western hills, are like strange wine to my
-heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, it is grand to live,&rdquo; said Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas&rsquo;s head went down over his sword as though in
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It would seem,&rdquo; he said presently, &ldquo;that beauty is a
-closed book, save to the few. It is good to find a heart
-that understands.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, that know I well,&rdquo; she chimed; &ldquo;in Avangel they
-had souls like clay; they saw nothing, understood nothing.
-I think I would rather die than be soul blind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So many folk,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;seem to live as though
-they were ever scanning the bottom of a pot. They never
-get beyond reflections on appetite.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>As they talked, Morgan la Blanche came in from behind
-the looped curtains, with silks, samites, siclatons, and
-sarcanets in her arms. She had found some rich chest in
-the bower accomplice to her fingers, and had revelled
-gloriously. She sat herself down near Pelleas, and began to
-laugh and chatter like a pleased child. The dainty stuffs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-were tossed this way and that, gathered into scarves or
-frills, spread over her lap and eyed critically as to colour,
-before being bound in a bale for her journey. Vain and
-vapid as her behaviour seemed, there was more in this little
-woman&rsquo;s heart than either Pelleas or Igraine could have
-guessed. Her whole mood was false. Foolish as she
-seemed on the surface, she was more keen, more subtle by
-far than Igraine, whose whole soul spelt fire and courage.</p>
-
-<p>As the day drew towards evening, Morgan became more
-stiff and silent. Her eyes were bright as the jewels round
-her neck; they would flash and waver, or fall at times into
-long, sidelong stares. More than once Igraine caught the
-girl&rsquo;s face in hard thought, the pert lips straight and cruel,
-the eyes hungry and very shallow. It reminded her of
-Morgan&rsquo;s look in the morning, when she was in such stark
-fear of the heathen and of death. Yet while she watched
-her, smiles and glib vivacity would sweep back again as
-though there had been but a transient cloud of thought over
-the girl&rsquo;s face.</p>
-
-<p>With the shadows lengthening, they turned, all three
-of them, into the garden, and found ease on a grass bank
-beneath the black boughs of a great cedar. The arch of
-the dark foliage cut the sky into a semicircle of azure. All
-about them the grass seemed dusted with dim flowers&mdash;blue,
-white, and violet. A rich company of tiger lilies
-bowed to the west. Dense banks of laurels and cypresses
-stood like screens of blackest marble, for the sun was sinking.
-As they lay under the tree, they could look down
-upon the water, sheeny and glorious in the evening peace.
-Further still, the willows slept like a mist of green, with
-the fields Elysian and full of sweet stupors, the woods beyond
-standing solemn and still at the beck of night.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan, who had brought the lute with her, began to
-touch the strings, and to sing softly in a thin, elfin voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">My heart is open at the hour of night</div>
- <div class="verse">When lilies swoon</div>
- <div class="verse">And roses kiss in bed.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
- <div class="verse">When all the dreams of sad-lipped passion rise</div>
- <div class="verse">From sleep&rsquo;s blue bowers</div>
- <div class="verse">To die in lover&rsquo;s eyes.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Come flame,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Come fire,</div>
- <div class="verse">A woman&rsquo;s bosom</div>
- <div class="verse">Is but life&rsquo;s desire.</div>
- <div class="verse">So, all my treasures are but held for love</div>
- <div class="verse">In scarlet silks</div>
- <div class="verse">And tapestries of snow.</div>
- <div class="verse">I long, white-bosomed like the stars that sigh</div>
- <div class="verse">A bed in heaven</div>
- <div class="verse">For love&rsquo;s ecstasy.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Come flame,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Come fire,</div>
- <div class="verse">A woman&rsquo;s bosom</div>
- <div class="verse">Is all man&rsquo;s desire.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The birds were nestling and gossiping in the laurel
-bushes, taking lodging for the night. From the topmost
-pinnacle of the cedar, a thrush, a feathered muezzin, had
-called the world to prayer. From the mere came the
-cries of water-fowl; the eerie wail of the lapwing rose in
-the meadows. Presently, all was still and breathless; a vast
-hush seemed to hold the world. The west was fast dying.</p>
-
-<p>Under the cedar the light lurked dim and magic.
-Morgan&rsquo;s fingers were still hovering on the strings, and she
-was singing to herself in a whisper, as though she had care
-for nothing, save for that which was in her heart. Pelleas
-and Igraine were quite near each other in the shadow.
-They had looked into each other&rsquo;s eyes&mdash;one long, deep
-look. Each had turned away troubled, yet with a sudden
-glory of quick anguish in their hearts. The night seemed
-very subtle to them, and the whole world sweet.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s thoughts were to music when she went to bed
-that night. Pelleas&rsquo;s eyes stayed with her, darkly, sadly;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-his tragic face seemed to look out of the night, like the face
-of one dead. And he more than liked her. She felt sure
-of that, even if she did not dream of kinder things sprung
-from long looks and quiet sighings. She sat on her bed,
-and smiled the whole strange day over to herself again. She
-had the man before her in all his looks and poses; how he
-sat his horse, the habit he had of looking deeply into nothingness,
-his strength and quiet knightliness, and above all his
-devout soul. He seemed to please her at every point in a
-way that set her thrilling within herself with a delicious
-wonder. Last, she thought of the weird twilight under the
-grand old tree&mdash;rare climax to a day of deeds and memories.
-She felt her heart leap as she remembered the great
-wistful look that had shone out on her from Pelleas&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The manor house seemed still as the night itself. Morgan
-la Blanche had taken herself to a couch in the triclinium,
-choosing it rather than one of the cubicles leading from the
-atrium. Galerius was on guard, pacing the mere&rsquo;s bank,
-while his comrade slept in the kitchen. Pelleas, armed,
-with sword and shield beside him, had quartered himself
-on cushions in the great porch, with the doors open.</p>
-
-<p>It was about ten o&rsquo;clock. Igraine, full of sweet broodings,
-crept into bed, and settled herself for sleep. The
-night was wonderfully peaceful. The window of the room
-was overgrown with a tangle of roses, the flowers seeming
-to mellow the air as it came softly in, and there was a faint
-shimmer into the shadows that hinted at moonlight. Igraine
-lay long awake, with her eyes on the few stars that peeped
-through between the jambs. There was too much in her
-heart to let sleep in for the while, and her thoughts were
-a&rsquo;dance within her brain like wild, fleet-footed things. As
-she lay in a happy fever of thought, her face grew hot upon
-the pillow, and her tumbled hair was like a lustrous lava flow
-over the bed. In course, despite her tossing, she fell into
-a shallow, fitful sleep that verged between wakefulness and
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p>It was well past midnight when she started, wide awake,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-with the half-dreamt memory of some eerie sound in her
-ears. She sat up in bed, and listened, shivering. There
-were footfalls, swift and light, on the pavement of the atrium.
-From somewhere came a gruff voice, speaking tersely and
-in bated tones. Next, there was something that sounded
-like a groan, and then silence.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine crept out of bed, hurried on her habit, opened
-the door gently, and looked out. Moonlight streamed in
-through the square aperture in the roof of the hall, but all
-else lay in darkness. The porch gates were ajar, with a
-band of light slanting through upon the tiles. Eager,
-tremulous, she fancied as she stood that she heard the beat
-of oars. Then the low, groaning cough that she had heard
-before thrilled her into action like a trumpet cry.</p>
-
-<p>She was across the court in a second, and into the darkened
-porch. The doors swung back to her hands, and the
-night streamed in. Clear before her, lit with a silver
-emphasis, lay the water, and on it she saw the dark outline
-of the barge, moving with foaming oars towards the further
-bank. For the moment her heart seemed to halt within
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A stifled sound answered her from a dark corner of the
-porch. With a sudden frost in her bosom she saw a black
-rill trickling over the tiles in the moonlight, even touching
-her feet. Great fear came upon her, but left her power to
-think. In the triclinium she had seen a lamp, with tinder,
-steel, and flint in a tray beside it, and in her fear she ran
-thither, tore her fingers in her haste with stone and steel,
-but had the lamp lit with such speed as she had never learnt
-at Avangel. Then she went back trembling into the
-porch.</p>
-
-<p>The knight Pelleas lay in the corner, half propped against
-the wall. His head was bowed down upon his chest, and
-he had both hands clasped upon the neck-band of his tunic.
-Blood was trickling from his mouth, and he seemed to be
-hardly breathing, while under the left arm-pit shone the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-silver hilt of the knife that had been thrust there by Galerius&rsquo;s
-hand. To the thought of the girl it seemed as if the man
-were in his death agony.</p>
-
-<p>The utter realism of the moment drove all fear from her.
-She set the lamp on the tiles, and kneeling by Pelleas, pulled
-the knife slowly from his side. A gush of blood followed.
-She strove to staunch it with a corner of her gown. The
-man was quite unconscious, and never heeded her, though
-he was still breathing jerkily and feebly, with a rattling
-stridor in his throat. She lifted his head and rested it upon
-her shoulder, while she knelt and pressed her hand over the
-wound, dreading to see him die each moment.</p>
-
-<p>For an hour she knelt, cold and almost bare-kneed, on
-the stone floor, holding the man to her, watching his breathing
-with a tense fear, pressing upon the wound as though
-ethereal life would ebb and mock her fingers. Little by
-little she felt the warm flow cease, felt her fingers stiffened
-at their task, while the minutes dragged like æons, and the
-lamp flickered low in the night. At last she knew that the
-issue was stayed, and that Pelleas bled no more. Gradually,
-fearfully, lest life should fall away like a poised wand, she
-laid the man down, and again watched with her hand over
-the stricken side. He was breathing more noticeably now,
-with less of the look of death about him. Encouraged thus,
-she dared to meditate leaving him to find wine, and sheets
-to cover him there. When she essayed to move she found
-her habit clotted to the wound where she had held it. It
-took her minutes to cut the cloth through with the knife
-that had stabbed Pelleas, for she was palsied lest the
-wound should break again and lose her her love&rsquo;s
-labour.</p>
-
-<p>Free at last, she fled into her room, tore the clothes in
-which she had lain from the bed, and carried them trailing
-into the porch. Then, lamp in hand, she spoiled the triclinium
-of rugs and cushions, and found there the chalice of
-wine that Morgan had sipped from. Ladened, she struggled
-back across the hall, fearing all the while to find the man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-parted. No such foul fortune, however. He was breathing
-better and better.</p>
-
-<p>Then she set to to make a bed. She spread cushions and
-rugs; and then, so slowly, so gently, that she seemed hardly
-to move, she had the man laid upon the couch, with two
-cushions under his head. Next she covered him with the
-clothes taken from her own bed. Thus much completed
-without mishap, she washed his lips and face with water
-taken from the pool, trickled some wine down his throat,
-and set the doors wide to watch for dawn.</p>
-
-<p>So pressed had she been by the man&rsquo;s peril, that even
-the right of thought had been denied her. Now, seated
-by the lamp, she began to sift matters as well as her
-meagre knowledge would suffer, keeping constant watch on
-wounded Pelleas the while. She knew that Morgan and
-her men were gone in the barge, but as to who gave Pelleas
-his wound, she could come to no clear understanding in
-her heart. There must have been some deep feud for such
-a stroke, though she could find no reason for the deed.
-Still, she could believe anything of that chit Morgan la
-Blanche, and there the riddle rested for a season.</p>
-
-<p>Before long she saw the summer dawn stealing silently and
-mysteriously into the east. The face of the sky grew grey
-with waking light, and the hold of the moon and night
-relaxed on wood and meadow. Then the birds began in
-the garden, till she thought their shrill piping must wake
-Pelleas from his swoon, so blithe and lusty were they. The
-east was forging day fast in its furnace of gold. The glare
-touched the clouds and rolled them into wreaths of amber
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>A sigh from the couch brought her to her feet like
-magic. She went and knelt by the bed in quite a tumult
-of expectation. Pelleas&rsquo;s hands were groping feebly over
-the coverlet like weak, blind things. Igraine caught them
-in hers, thrilled as they closed upon her fingers, and, bending
-low, she waited with her lips almost on the man&rsquo;s, her hair
-on his forehead, her eyes fixed on his closed lids. All her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-soul seemed to droop above him like a lily over a grave.
-Presently he sighed again, stirred and opened his eyes full
-on Igraine&rsquo;s, as she knelt and mingled her breath with
-his.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her for a moment with a dazed stare that
-dawned into a smile that made her long to sing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is Igraine,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas caught a deep breath, and groaned as his stricken
-side twinged to the quick.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine put two fingers on his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lie still,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;lie still if you love earth. You
-must not speak, no, not one little word. I must have you
-quiet as a child, Pelleas. You have been so near death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She felt the man&rsquo;s hand answer hers. He did not speak
-or move, but lay and looked at her as a little child in a
-cradle looks at its mother, or as a dog eyes his master.
-Igraine put his hands gently down upon the coverlet, and
-smiled at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lie so, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;be very quiet, for I am to
-leave you, for a minute and no more. You must not move
-a finger, or I shall scold.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She beamed at him, started up and ran straight to the
-chapel, her heart a-whimper with a joy that was not mute.
-She went full length on the altar steps with her face turned
-to the cross above&mdash;the cross whose golden arms were aglow
-with the sun through the eastern window. In her mood,
-the white Christ&rsquo;s face seemed to smile on her with equal
-joy. She learnt more in that moment than Avangel had
-taught her in a year.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly five minutes had passed before she was with
-Pelleas again, bearing fruit and olives, bread and oil. She
-made a sweet dish of bread and berries, with some wine in
-it for his heart&rsquo;s sake, and then knelt at his side to feed him.
-She would not let him lift a finger, but served him herself
-with silver spoon and platter, smiling to give him courage
-as he obeyed her like a babe. It seemed very pitiful to her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-that so much strength and manliness should have been
-smitten so low in one brief night. None the less, the
-man&rsquo;s feebleness brought her more joy than ever his courage
-had done, and his peril had discovered clear wells of ruth in
-her that might have been months hidden but for the hand
-of Galerius. When Pelleas had finished the bread and fruit,
-she gave him more wine, and then set to to bathe his hands
-and face with scented water taken from the tablinum.
-Pelleas&rsquo;s eyes, with deep shadows under them now, watched
-her all the while with a kind of wondering calm. The
-sunlight flooded in, and lit her hair like red gold, and made
-her neck to shine like alabaster. Meeting his look, she
-reddened, and turned to hide her face for a moment, that
-he might not see all that was writ there in letters of flame.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now you must sleep, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said, crossing his
-hands upon the quilt.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head feebly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am going to leave you,&rdquo; she persisted, &ldquo;so you must
-not flout me, Pelleas. I shall be here, ready, when you
-wake.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She smiled at him, and closed his lids gently with her
-finger tips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sleep,&rdquo; she said, brushing her hand softly over his forehead,
-&ldquo;for sleep will give you strength again. You may
-need it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She left him there, and taking bread and olives with her,
-she closed the porch gates to shade him, and went herself
-into the garden. After a meal under the old cedar, she
-went down to the water&rsquo;s edge and washed her feet from
-the stains of Pelleas&rsquo;s blood, and bathed her hands and face.
-She saw the barge amid the reeds and rushes on the further
-bank. There was no sign of life in the meadows, and the
-woods were deep with peace.</p>
-
-<p>Then she remembered Pelleas&rsquo;s horse. Going to the
-stable behind the manor, she found the beast stalled there,
-though Morgan&rsquo;s horses had been taken by the men in the
-barge. Igraine took hay from the rack, gave him a measure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-of oats in his manger, and watered him with water from the
-mere. Then she stood and combed his mane with her
-fingers as he fed. Some of the poppies she had plaited there
-were dead and drooping in the black hair. She thought as
-she unbound the withered things how nearly Pelleas&rsquo;s life
-had withered with theirs. She was very happy in her
-heart, and she sang softly the low tender songs women
-love when their thoughts are maying.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine passed the whole morning in the garden, going
-every now and again to the porch to open the doors gently,
-and peep in upon the sleeper. She gathered a basket of
-fruit and a lapful of flowers. About noon she went in,
-and bringing jars from the triclinium, she filled them with
-water and garnished them with flowers. These jars she
-set in array about Pelleas&rsquo;s bed, one of tiger lilies and one
-of white lilies; a bowl of roses at his head, a jar of hollyhocks
-and one of thyme, and fragrant herbs at the foot.
-Moreover, she strewed the coverlet with pansies, and
-scattered rose leaves on his pillow. Then she went to the
-chapel to pray awhile, before sitting down to watch beside
-his bed.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas woke about an hour after noon had turned. At
-his first stirring, Igraine was hanging over him like a
-mother, with her hands on his. Pelleas looked up at her,
-saw the flowers about his bed, and, risking her menaces,
-spoke his first word.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>She put her face down to his.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am much stronger,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I can talk now.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps a very little,&rdquo; she answered, with her eyes on his.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are very wonderful.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo; she said redly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should have died without you, for I was witless, and
-coughing blood.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I thought you would die,&rdquo; she said very softly, with her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-eyes downcast. &ldquo;I held you in my arms and, God helping
-me, staunched the flow from your wound. But tell me,
-Pelleas, who was it stabbed you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man smiled at her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There, I am as ignorant as you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I woke with
-a fiery twinge in my side, and saw a man running out of
-the porch in the dark. I struggled to rise. Blood came
-into my mouth, and betwixt coughing and hard breathing I
-must have fainted. What of the others?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine knelt up from stooping over him, and thought.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Morgan and her men,&rdquo; she said presently, &ldquo;fled across
-the mere in the barge just after you had been stabbed. I
-saw them go in the moonlight. It was your cry that woke
-me in bed. I came and found you senseless in the corner,
-and the woman and her rascals making off in the boat.
-One of the men must have smitten you while you slept.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas kept silence for a while, as though he were thinking
-hard.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Show me the knife,&rdquo; he said anon.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine had washed away the stains, and laid it aside in a
-corner. She held it up now before Pelleas&rsquo;s eyes as he lay in
-bed. He took it from her with trembling hands, and handled
-it, his face darkening.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This is my own poniard,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the poniard I left
-in the heart of the man in Andredswold. Look, girl, look!
-Search and see, mayhap you may find a cross.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine did his bidding, and searched the pavement, but
-found nothing. Then she came back to the bed, and began
-to turn the cushions up here and there, and to scan the tiled
-floor. Sure enough, under the foot of the bed, she found a
-small gold cross lying, smeared lightly with dried blood.
-She took it up and gave it to Pelleas. He caught and held
-it with a terse cry.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VIII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Pelleas lay the afternoon through in a half dream of
-shifting thought. But for the tangible things about him
-there might have been elfin mischief in the air, for the last
-few days had passed with such flash of new feeling and desire
-that the man&rsquo;s mind was still in a daze.</p>
-
-<p>He lay in bed, with jars of lilies round him, and a woman
-tending him with the grace of a Diana. It was all very
-strange, very pleasant, despite the ague in his ribs and his
-inordinate weakness. He was not so sure after all that
-he bore Morgan la Blanche any so fervent a piece of malice;
-fortune seemed to beckon him towards generosity, seeing
-that his condition was so truly picturesque. Uncouth feelings
-were swallowed up for the time being by a benignant
-stupor of contentment.</p>
-
-<p>But the balance of human happiness is often very nice and
-subtle. Leaden reason tumbled into the scale of melancholy
-may even outscale the bowl of dreams. Love and law often
-dangle on either beam of a man&rsquo;s mind, or philosophy
-anchored to a rock may sky poor fancy into the clouds. So
-it was with Pelleas that day, wisdom being often enough a
-miserable nurse. When he thought of Igraine, reason as
-he would with himself, his soul began to shimmer like moon-rippled
-water. When she looked at him the very pillars of
-his manhood seemed to quake. When she passed, light-footed,
-from garden to porch, she seemed to come in like
-the sun, bringing streams of warmth into his wounded flesh.
-Of necessity, he soon met other cogitations less pleasant, and
-no less imperative. From legal quarters came that inevitable
-pedagogue blear-eyed Verity, paunched up with dogma and
-breathing ethical platitudes like garlic. &ldquo;The woman&rsquo;s a
-nun,&rdquo; quoth Dom Verity, with a sneer. &ldquo;Keep your fancy
-in leash, my good Pelleas, and forswear romance. Bar your
-thoughts from a child of the church or you will rue it. No
-man may serve a nun. The world has said.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>What with his wound and his fractious meditations,
-Pelleas soon fell into a most dismal temper. Like most sick
-folk he had lost for the time that level sense of proportion
-that is the sure outcome of health. His thoughts began to
-gape at him, and to pull most melancholy grimaces. Even
-the dead man squatting in the great chair in the manor in
-Andredswold began to haunt him like an ogrish conscience.
-Hot and racked, he could stand his own company at last no
-longer. Calling Igraine to him, he began to unburden
-himself to her with regard to the man he had done to death
-in the forest.</p>
-
-<p>The girl listened, mild as moonlight, and ready to swear
-away her soul to soothe him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am troubled for the deed,&rdquo; he was saying, &ldquo;though the
-man deserved death, twenty deaths, and though I served
-justice to the echo. His blood hangs on my hands, and
-makes me restless at heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me his sin, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They were many, and too gross for ears such as thine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then palpably he was too gross to live.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No doubt, child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then why trouble for his death, Pelleas; you would not
-shrink from treading out an adder&rsquo;s brains?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, but there is the man&rsquo;s soul. I feel for him after my
-own down-bringing. What chance had he of penitence?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;True,&rdquo; she said gravely, &ldquo;but your mother, the Abbess
-Gratia, used to tell us that bad men repented only in legends
-and in the Bible; never in grim life. Besides, you prevented
-the man committing worse offences in the future,
-and getting deeper into the pit. Why, Pelleas, hundreds of
-good knights have lost life for a mere matter of love; why
-trouble for the life of a wretch who perhaps never knew
-what truth meant. You would not grieve for men slain in
-battle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In battle the blood is hot and the brain afire. This was
-a rank and reasonable stroke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>"And therefore the more deserved. Why trouble about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-it, Pelleas? In faith, since your plight makes me tyrant, I
-forbid such brooding. It is but the evil fancy of a distraught
-mind, an incubus I must chase away. See, your hands are
-hot, and your forehead too. Will you sleep again, or shall
-I sing to you?"</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Presently,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I have more to speak of
-yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine knelt by him on her cushion, serene and
-tender.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Say on, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;a woman loves a man&rsquo;s
-confidence. If I can give you comfort I will gladly listen
-here till midnight. You are not yourself, weak from loss of
-blood, and a gnat&rsquo;s sting is like a lance thrust to you. Tell
-me your other troubles.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas groaned, hesitated, looked up into her eyes, and
-recanted inwardly. He furbished up a minor woe to serve
-the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is my sword and shield,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;they were given me
-blessed and consecrated by my mother. It is in my thought
-that I had smirched them by this deed. What think you,
-girl?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I cannot think so,&rdquo; she said stoutly.</p>
-
-<p>Then since his face was so wistful and troubled, she
-racked her fancy for some plan she thought might soothe
-him. A sudden purpose came to her like prophecy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I can do this for you. Give me
-your shield and sword, and let me lay them on the high
-altar under the cross with candles burning, and let me pray
-for them there. Will that comfort you, Pelleas?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, with a sudden sad smile; &ldquo;pray for me,
-go and pray for me, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was the impulse of a moment. She bent down with
-a great thrill of wonder, and kissed the man&rsquo;s lips. It was
-soon done, soon sped. She saw Pelleas&rsquo;s blood stream to his
-face, saw something in his eyes that made her heart canter.
-Then she darted away, took up the great sword and the
-shield with its red face, and went to the chapel singing like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-a seraph. Her prayers were a strange jumble of worship
-and recollection. &ldquo;Lord Jesu, cleanse his spirit,&rdquo; said her
-heart one moment; &ldquo;truth, how he coloured and looked at
-me,&rdquo; it sang with more human refrain the next. &ldquo;May he
-be a knight above knights,&rdquo; quoth devotion; &ldquo;and may I
-be ever fair in his eyes,&rdquo; chimed love. Altogether, it was a
-most quaint prayer.</p>
-
-<p>Now, a certain mundane matter had been troubling
-Igraine&rsquo;s thought that day. The barge, seized and put to
-use by Morgan and her men, lay amid the reeds on the
-nether shore, ready to give passage to any chance wayfarer,
-welcome or otherwise, who should choose to cross the mere.
-The boat, so fixed, floated as a constant peril to Pelleas and
-herself. She felt that peace would flout them so long as the
-barge lay ready to play ferry-boat to any casual intruder.
-Pelleas&rsquo;s wound might keep them cooped many days in the
-place. She vowed to herself that the boat should be regained,
-and blushed when the oath accused her.</p>
-
-<p>At dusk, when the birds were piping, and there was a
-green hush over the world, she went back to Pelleas, a
-beautiful shameface, accompliced by the twilight.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have prayed,&rdquo; she said simply.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas touched her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I feel happier,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That is well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stay near me, Igraine. It grows dark fast.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall be with you till you sleep,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine fed him with her own hands, talking little the
-while, but feeling very enamoured of her lot. She was
-thinking of her new surprise with some mischieful pleasure
-as she tended Pelleas. The man was silent, yet very placid
-and facile to her willing. When she had bathed his face
-and neck, and seen him well couched, she took the lute
-Morgan had handled, and began to sing to him softly&mdash;wistfully,
-as though the song was the song of a quiet wind
-through willows. It was a chant for the dusk, for the quiet
-gazing of the first fires of heaven. Pelleas heard it like the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-distant touching of strings over charmed water, and with
-the breath of lilies over him he fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine held by him still as a mouse in the dark, till she
-knew by his breathing that he was deep in slumber. Then
-she set the lute aside, put the lamp by the porch door, so
-that it should be ready to hand, and stole out into the
-garden.</p>
-
-<p>The moon was just coming up above the distant trees.
-Igraine waited under the black-vaulted cedar till the great
-ring rode bleak above the fringe of the tops before she
-went down between laurels to the water&rsquo;s edge. There was
-a deep cedarn scent on the warm air, and everything seemed
-deathly still. Going to the landing stage, she stood there
-awhile looking at the water, dark and mysterious, with pale
-webs of light upon its agate surface. Then she began to
-bind her hair closely on her head, smiling to herself, and
-staring down at her vague image in the water.</p>
-
-<p>Her hair in shackles, she turned to her task in earnest.
-Soon habit, shift, and sandals were lying in a heap, and she
-was standing clean, rare, gleamingly straight as a statue,
-with her arms folded upon her breast. For a moment she
-stood, making the night to swoon, before taking to the mere.
-Pearly white with an aureole of foam, she swam flankwise
-with an overhand stroke, one arm thrusting out like a silver
-sickle. Here and there, fretted by the willows, long moonbeams
-glinted on her round whiteness, as the maddened foam
-bubbled, and the water sighed and yearned amid the sedges.
-A fine glow had leapt through her body like wine, and the
-mere seemed to sway and sing as she swam for the main
-bank, where the willows stood blackly in a mist of phosphor
-glory. Soon she reached the shallows at a pleasant place
-where stretch of grassland tongued down into the mere. She
-climbed out, and stood like a water nymph, her body agleam
-and asparkle with its dew, her skin like rare silk, smooth as
-a star&rsquo;s glance. Down fell her hair like smoke. She
-stretched her arms to the moon, and laughed, aglow with
-the warmth gotten of her swim. Then she went to where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-the barge lay amid the reeds, and boarding it poled out into
-the deeps.</p>
-
-<p>Standing on the poop she used an oar as a paddle, and so
-brought the cumbrous barge slowly under way. It stole
-out from the fretted shadows of the trees, and glided like a
-great ark over the mere in black silence, save for the dip of
-the blade and the drip of water. The voyage took Igraine
-longer than her swim. At last, with the boat moored at
-the stage, she dried her limbs and body with her hair, and
-took again to shift and habit. Then she stole back to the
-manor, listened a moment to Pelleas&rsquo;s breathing, and having
-lit her lamp she went to bed.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning Igraine, with her deed locked up in her
-heart, was preparing Pelleas a meal. He had just stirred
-and roused himself from sleep with a little cry, and he was
-watching the girl with the mute reflective look of one just
-freed from the visions of the night.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>She turned to him with a soft smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have been dreaming,&rdquo; he confessed gravely.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dreaming, Pelleas?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I thought,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that I saw a great dragon of gold
-come over the meadows with a naked sword in his mouth,
-and a collar of rubies round his throat. And he came to
-the mere&rsquo;s edge, ramping and breathing fire. And lo! he
-entered into the barge there, and the barge went forth bearing
-him, while all the mere&rsquo;s water boiled and shone about
-the boat like flame. So he came to the island, and all
-greenness seemed to wither before him, and with the fear
-of him I awoke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine shook her head at the man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your dreams are distraught,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;it is your
-wound, Pelleas. In faith we should need the great Merlin
-for such a vision.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I can read you the riddle, Igraine. Our
-barge lies by the land bank ready for any foe. That is
-where the dream touches us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Igraine brought him a bowl of crushed bread and fruit,
-and made as though to feed him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never worry,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;the barge is moored safe at
-the stage.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas put the bowl aside with one hand, and stared at
-her from his pillows.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Did the barge swim the mere of herself,&rdquo; quoth he,
-&ldquo;and anchor for us so fairly?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine went red of a sudden, and looked at her knees.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sooth, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I must have been the dragon
-of your dream; God pardon me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never knew I seemed so fearful a creature.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Honour and praise&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He half rose on his pillows in his enthusiasm. Igraine
-put him gently back, and took up the bowl of bread and
-fruit.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That will do, my dear Pelleas,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;now just
-lie still and have your breakfast.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>What boots it to chronicle at length their sojourn in the
-island manor. Twelve days Igraine nursed the man there,
-giving all her heart for service, tending him from sunrise to
-the fall of night. She seemed to have no other joy than to
-sit and talk to him, to make music with voice and hand,
-to keep his couch posied round with flowers. On waking
-Pelleas would find her by him, fresh as the dawn and full
-of a golden tenderness; at night his eyes closed upon her
-gracious figure as she sat in the gloaming and sang. She
-was near to hear his voice, quick to see his needs and to
-remedy them with soft hands and softer looks. The very
-atmosphere about the man seemed touched and mellowed
-by her, and the hours seemed to trip to the measure of a
-golden rhyme.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas mended very rapidly under her care. His wound,
-sweet and innocent, gave him no trouble save some slight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-feverishness on the third day. The sixth morning found
-him so stalwart of temper that Igraine consented to his
-leaving bed for a morning provided he obeyed her to the
-letter. His first steps were taken in the atrium with
-Igraine&rsquo;s arm about his waist, and his upon her shoulders.
-So well did he bear himself that the girl led him to the
-chapel, and there side by side on the altar steps they winged
-up their devotion to heaven. Igraine&rsquo;s prayers, be it known,
-were all for love; Pelleas&rsquo;s for the threatening shadows
-over his own soul.</p>
-
-<p>Daily after this innovation Igraine would make him a
-couch under the great cedar tree in the garden, where he
-could rest shaded from the sun, and there, morn, noon, and
-eve, they had much comradeship and speech together.
-They would talk of God, the saints, and the souls of men,
-of love and honour, and the needs of Britain. Pelleas
-would tell her of his own service with Aurelius, of all the
-fair pomp of Lesser Britain, where Conan had begun a
-goodly kingdom years ago, and where many British folk
-had taken refuge. He had been to Rome as a boy, and he
-described that vast city to her, or told her of the bloody
-fields he had seen when the steel of Christendom met the
-heathen. Fresh streams from either soul welled out, and
-mingled much during those summer days. Pelleas and
-Igraine looked deep each into the heart of the other, finding
-fine store of nobleness, of truth, and of things beautiful, till
-the heart of each had treasured everything for love and for
-love&rsquo;s desire. They were fair hours and very sweet to the
-two. The day seemed a casket of gold, and the night a
-bowl of ebony ablaze with stars.</p>
-
-<p>About this time the man Pelleas began to go down into
-deep waters. Many days had passed with a flare of torches
-in the west; their sojourn was drawing to a close, and the
-night seemed near. The haler Pelleas grew in body, the
-more halt and hopeless waxed his soul. The whole world
-seemed to grow wounded to his eyes; the west was wistful
-at evening, and the starry sky a sob of pain. When Igraine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-harped and sang, each note flew like winged death into his
-heart. He had no joy that was not smitten through with
-anguish, no thought that was not crowned with thorns.
-It was a very simple matter indeed, but perverse to utter
-bitterness. Pelleas saw no hope for himself in the end.
-He would rock and toss, and think at night till the darkness
-seemed to crush him into a mere mass of misery.
-Above all there seemed to rise a great hand holding a cross
-of gold, and a voice that said, &ldquo;Beware thy soul and death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Not so was it with Igraine. To her life had no shroud,
-and love prophesied of love alone. She knew what she
-knew, and her heart was full of summer and the song of
-birds. Pelleas loved her; she would have staked her soul
-on it, though she did not realise the desperate turmoil
-passing in the man&rsquo;s clean heart. Knowing what she did,
-she was all for sun and moods of radiant thought and
-happiness. Each day she imagined that she would tell
-Pelleas of her secret; each day she gave the golden moment
-to the morrow. She knew how the man&rsquo;s face would
-flame up with the fulness of great wonder, and like a
-woman she hoarded anticipation in her heart and waited.</p>
-
-<p>The day soon came when Pelleas declared himself hale
-enough to bear armour, though the admission was made
-with no great amount of satisfaction. To test his strength
-he armed himself with Igraine&rsquo;s help, harnessed his black
-horse, and rode round the island, first at a level pace with
-Igraine running beside him. Then he tried a gallop,
-handling spear and shield the while. Lastly, he took
-Igraine up to him, and rode with her as he had ridden
-through the wold. Suffering nothing from these ventures,
-and seeming sure in selle as ever, he declared with heavy
-heart that they should sally for Winchester on the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas and Igraine passed their last evening in the
-island under the great cedar in the garden. The place had
-deep memories for them, and very loth were they to leave
-it, so fair and kind a refuge had it proved to them in peril.
-Neither said much that evening, for their thoughts were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-busy. As for Pelleas, he was glum and heavy-browed as
-thunder, with a look in his deep eyes that spelt misery. It
-was as though he were leaving his very soul in the place to
-ride out like a corpse on a pilgrimage with despair. How
-much she might have eased him, perhaps Igraine never
-knew.</p>
-
-<p>The west was already red and rosy, and there was a
-green hush over the meadows, and a canopy of pale porphyry
-in the east. All the soul of the world seemed to lift white
-hands to the night in a stupor of mutest woe. Yet the
-girl&rsquo;s mood tended towards mere sensitive regret, for the
-future was not dark to her imaginings.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are sad, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am only thinking, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am sorry to leave this place.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas sighed for answer. With a contradictory spirit,
-born of pain, he longed for night and the peace it would
-not bring. Something swore to him that he was more to
-the girl than man had ever been, and yet she seemed happy
-when he compared her humour with his own. The possibility
-that she could dream of broken vows was never in
-his thought. He could only believe that her heart was less
-deep than his, and the thought only added bitterness to his
-mead of sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; he said anon.</p>
-
-<p>She turned to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You love life?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Truth, Pelleas, I do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then love it not, girl.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a broken bowl.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How so?&rdquo; she said, thrilling.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas turned his face from her to hide the strife thereon.
-He felt as though death was in his heart, yet he spoke as
-quietly as though he were telling some mundane tale, and
-not words conjured up by a desperate wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; he said, "I have lived and learnt something in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-my time, and my words are honest. On earth what do we
-find&mdash;a lie on truth&rsquo;s lips, and anguish on the face of joy.
-The roses bloom and die, white hands shrivel, and harness
-rusts under the green grass. As for fame, it breeds hate
-and jealousy, and the curse of the proud. Music is broken
-by the laugh of the fool, nor can youth forget the crabbed
-noisomeness of age. Women sing and pass. A man
-marries one night and is tombed the next. And love, what
-of love? I tell you love lives only in the eyes of woe. It
-is all mockery, cold damned mockery. I have said."</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IX</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Pelleas and Igraine were stirring soon after dawn on the
-morning of their sally for Winchester. It was a summer
-dawn, still and stealthy; the meadows were full of a
-shimmering mist, the mere spirit-wrapped, and dappled here
-and there with gold.</p>
-
-<p>Silent and distraught they made their last meal in the
-quiet manor. Everything seemed sad and solemn, as though
-the stones could grieve; the lilies by the impluvium seemed
-adroop, and the flowers about Pelleas&rsquo;s bed were withered.
-After the meal Pelleas armed himself, and went to harness
-his horse, while Igraine put up bread and foodstuff into a
-linen cloth for their journey. Before sallying they went all
-round the manor, into the chapel, where they prayed before
-the altar, into bower, parlour, and viridarium. The porch
-with its empty bed and withered flowers they took leave of
-last. There was such wistfulness there that even the dumb
-things seemed to cry out in pain.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas closed the gates with bowed head, and made the
-sign of the cross upon them with the pommel of his dagger.
-His throat seemed full of one great muffled sob. Together
-they wandered for the last time through the garden, while
-Igraine plucked some flowers for a keepsake. Pelleas felt
-that he loved every leaf in the place like his own soul.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-Then they went down to the water&rsquo;s edge, and, getting the
-horse on board, they loosed the barge from the bank, and
-came slowly to the nether shore. It might have been the
-fury of death, so stark and solemn was Pelleas&rsquo;s face.</p>
-
-<p>Before turning their backs and riding away, they stood
-and looked long at the place girdled with its quiet waters.
-The great cedar slept there with a hood of mist over his
-green poll. Like a dream island it seemed, plucked by
-magic from some southern sea, fair with all fairness. Anon,
-despite their grieving, the last strand cracked, and the wrench
-was done. They were holding over vapoury meadows with
-their faces to the west.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas was very stoical that morning. As a matter of
-fact he had been awake all night, couched with misery and
-with thoughts that wounded him. All night through the
-lagging hours he had tossed and turned, cursing his destiny
-in his heart&mdash;too bitter for any prayer. What mockery
-that he who had passed so long unscathed should fall into
-hopeless homage to a nun. Desperate, he left his bed in
-the dark, and made the garden a dim cloister until dawn.
-Yet in the rack of struggle a clear voice had come to
-touch and dominate his being, and day had found him steadfast.
-He would hold to the truth, he vowed, do his duty,
-and let God judge of the measure of his gratitude. He
-could obey, but not with humility; he could suffer, but
-not with resignation.</p>
-
-<p>It was after such a night in the furnace of struggle that
-he forged his temper for the days to come. He had thought
-to meet love with a stark hardihood, to talk lightly, to go
-with unruffled brow while his heart hungered. Nothing
-should move him to any emotion. He would meet destiny
-like a rock, let surges beat and melt back to the sea. It
-was better thus, he thought, than to go moaning for the
-moon.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the determination that met Igraine&rsquo;s lighter
-humour that morning. She could make nothing of the
-man as she rode before him. He was bleak, dismal, yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-striving to seem contented with their lot, now conjuring
-up a withered smile, now lapsing into interminable silence.
-His eyes were stern in measure, but there was the old light
-in them when she looked deeply, and the staunch flame was
-there still. After all, Pelleas&rsquo;s quiet humour did not trouble
-her very vastly. She had her own reading of the riddle, and
-a word in her heart that could unlock his trouble. Moreover,
-she was more than inclined to put him to such a test
-as should bring his manhood to a splendid trial. Perhaps
-there was some imp of vanity deep down in her woman&rsquo;s
-heart. At all events, she suited herself to the occasion, and
-passed much of the time in thought.</p>
-
-<p>A ride of some seventy miles lay before them before they
-should come to the gates of Winchester. Much of that
-region was wild forestland and moor, bleak wastes of scrub
-let into woods and gloom. Occasional meadows, and rare
-acres of glebe ringing some rude hamlet, broke the shadowy
-desolation of the land. Great oaks, gnarled, vast, and
-terrible, held giant sway amid the huddled masses of the
-lesser folk. Here the boar lurked, and the wolf hunted.
-But, for the most, it was dark and calamitous&mdash;a ghostly
-wilderness almost forsaken by man, and given over to the
-savagery of beasts.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas and Igraine came upon the occasional trail of the
-heathen as they went. A smoking villa, a burnt village
-with a dun mist hanging over it like a shroud, and once a
-naked man, bruised and bloody, bound to a tree, and shot
-through with arrows&mdash;such were the few sights that remembered
-to them their own need of caution. The wild
-country had been raided, and its sparse civilisation scattered
-to the woods. The crosses at the cross-roads had been
-thrown down and broken. A hermitage they came on in
-the woods had been sacked, and in it, to their pity, they
-found the body of a dead girl. They halted there to pray
-for her, and to give her burial. Pelleas dug a shallow grave
-under an oak, and they left her there, and went on their
-way with greater caution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Not a soul did they meet, yet Pelleas kept under cover
-as much as possible for prudence&rsquo; sake. He scanned well
-every valley or piece of open land before crossing it, and
-kept under the wooelshawe whenever the track ran near
-trees. Fear of the unknown, and the dear burden that he
-bore, kept him alert as a goshawk for possible peril. By
-noon, despite sundry halts and reconnoitrings, they had
-covered nearly twenty miles, and by the evening of the
-same day they had added another score, for Pelleas&rsquo;s horse
-was a powerful beast, and Igraine&rsquo;s weight cumbered him
-little.</p>
-
-<p>Towards evening it began to rain, a heavy, summer,
-windless shower, that made moist rattle in the leaves, and
-flooded fragrant freshness into the air. Pelleas gave Igraine
-his cloak, and made her wear it, despite her excuses. As
-luck would have it, they came upon a little inn built in the
-grey shelter of a forsaken quarry. The inn folk were still
-there&mdash;an old woman, and a brat of a boy, her grandson.
-Seeing so great a knight, the beldam was ready enough to
-give them lodgings, and what welcome she could muster.
-She spread a supper of goat&rsquo;s milk, brown bread, and venison&mdash;not
-a bad table for such a hovel. The meal over,
-she pointed Pelleas with a leer to a little inner room that
-boasted a rough bed, a water-pot, and ewer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We will not disturb ye,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;my lad has foddered
-the horse. You would be stirring early?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas gave the woman her orders, and sent Igraine into
-the inner room. He made himself a bed of dried bracken
-before her door, and laid himself there so that none could
-enter save over his body. The woman and the boy slept
-on straw in a corner. In this wise they passed the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>On the morrow, after more goat&rsquo;s milk and brown bread,
-with some wild strawberries to smooth it, they sallied early,
-and held on their way to Winchester. The shower of the
-night had given place to fair weather, and a fresh breeze
-blowing from the west. Soon the sun was up in such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-strength that the green woods lost their dankness, and
-the leaves their dew. It was the very morning for a
-ride.</p>
-
-<p>If possible, Pelleas was even more gloomy than on the
-day before. There was such a level air of dejection over
-his whole being that Igraine began to have grave qualms of
-conscience, and to suffer the reproaches of a pity that grew
-more clamorous hour by hour. None the less, maugre the
-man&rsquo;s sorry humour, there was a certain stealthy joy in it
-all, for Pelleas, by his very moodiness, flattered her tenderness
-for him not a little. She began to see, in very truth,
-how staunch the man was; how he meant to honour to the
-letter her imagined vows, though his love grieved like a
-winged merlion. His great strength became more and more
-apparent. A lighter spirit would have gone with the wind,
-or made great moan over the whole business. Pelleas, she
-saw, was striving to buckle his sorrow deep in his bosom,
-to save her the pain of knowing his distress. There was
-nothing little about the man. Palpably he had not succeeded
-eminently in his attempt to spur a wounded spirit
-into light courtliness and easy hypocrisy. Still, that was
-not his fault; it only said the more for his love.</p>
-
-<p>It was not till noon had passed that Pelleas, with a heavy
-courage, constrained himself to speak calmly of their parting.
-Even then he was so eager to shape his speech into
-mere courtesies, that he overdid the thing, more than betraying
-himself to the girl&rsquo;s quick wit.</p>
-
-<p>He had questioned her as to her friends in Winchester,
-and her purposes for the future. His rambling took somewhat
-of a didactic turn as he laboured at his mentorship.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is a fair abbey within the walls,&rdquo; he said; "I
-have heard it nobly spoken of both as to devoutness and
-comfort. Their rules are not of such iron caste as at some
-other holy houses; the library is good, and there is a well-planted
-garden. The abbess is a gracious and kindly woman,
-and of high family. I have often had speech with her
-myself, and can vouch for her courtliness and benevolence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-Assuredly you may find very safe and peaceful harbour
-there."</p>
-
-<p>Igraine smiled to herself at the callous benignity of his
-counsel. He might have been her grandfather by his
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; she said naively, &ldquo;I do not like being caged;
-it spoils one&rsquo;s temper so. I have an uncle in the place&mdash;an
-uncle by marriage&mdash;a man not loved vastly by the proud
-folk of my own family. He is a goldsmith by trade, and is
-named Radamanth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas&rsquo;s quick answer was not prophetic of great favour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Radamanth,&rdquo; he said&mdash;&ldquo;a gentleman who weighs his
-religion by the pound, and is seen much at church. Pardon
-my frankness, I had this gold chain of him. He is rich as
-Rome, and has high rank among the merchants.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So I had heard,&rdquo; she answered.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas looked into space with a most judicial air.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You do not think of going to a secular house,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine smiled to herself, and halted a moment in her
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&mdash;a nun?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, I do not see why it is necessary for holiness to
-be bricked up like a frog in a wall in order to escape corruption.
-Why, you are eating your own words.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you have vows,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have; and doubts also.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Doubts?&rdquo; quoth the man, with a quick look, thrilling
-inwardly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Doubts, Pelleas, doubts.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She caught his eyes with hers, and gave him one long,
-deep stare that made him quake as though all that had been
-flame within him&mdash;that which he had sought to tread to
-ashes&mdash;had but spread redly into her bosom. There was
-no parrying such a message. It smote him blind in a
-moment. The spiritual bastions of his soul seemed to reel
-and rock as though some chaos had broken on their stones.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-There was great outcry in his heart, as of a leaguer when
-guards and stormers are at grapple on the walls. &ldquo;Cross!
-Holy Cross!&rdquo; cried Conscience, in the moil. &ldquo;Yield ye,
-yield ye, Pelleas,&rdquo; sang a voice more subtle, &ldquo;yield ye, and
-let Love in!&rdquo; He sat stiff in the saddle, and shut his eyes
-to the day, while the fight boiled on within him. Now
-Love had him heart and hand; now Honour, blind and
-bleeding, struggled in and stemmed the rout. He was won
-and lost, lost and won, a dozen times in a minute.</p>
-
-<p>Recovered somewhat, he made bold to question Igraine
-yet further.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me your doubts, girl,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They are deep, Pelleas, deep as the sea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Whence came they, then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Some great power put them in my heart, and they are
-steadfast as death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Again the wild flush of liberty swept Pelleas like wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me, Igraine,&rdquo; he said, in a gasp.</p>
-
-<p>She put her fingers gently on his lips. &ldquo;Patience&mdash;patience,&rdquo;
-she said, &ldquo;and perhaps I will tell them to you,
-Pelleas, ere long.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Thus much she suffered him to go, and no further.
-Her quick instinct had read him nearly to the &ldquo;Explicit,&rdquo;
-and there she halted, content for an hour or a day. Her
-love was singing like a lark in the blue. She beamed on
-the man in spirit streams of pride and tumultuous tenderness.
-How she would comfort him in the end! He should
-carry her into Winchester on his horse, and she would lodge
-there, but not at the great inn that harboured souls for
-heaven. She would have the bow and the torch for her
-signs, and possibly the Church might serve her in other
-fashion. Like a lotus eater, she dallied with all these
-dreams in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>With the sun low in the west, Pelleas and Igraine were
-still three leagues or so from Winchester. The day was
-passing gloriously, with the radiant acolytes of evening
-swinging their jasper censers in the sky. The two were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-riding on a pine-crowned ridge, and the stretch of wilderness
-beyond seemed wrapped in one mysterious blaze of
-smoking gold. Hills and woods were glittering shadows,
-like spirit things in a spirit atmosphere. The west was a
-great curtain of transcendent gold. Pelleas and Igraine
-could not look at it without great wonder.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they came to a little glade, green and quiet,
-with a clear pool in it ringed round with rushes. A lush
-cushion of grass and moss swept from the water to the bases
-of the trees. It was as quaint and sweet a nook as they had
-passed that day. The place, with its solitude and stillness,
-pleased Igraine very greatly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What say you, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;let us off-saddle, and
-harbour here the night. This little refuge will serve us
-more kindly than a ride in the dark to Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas looked round about him, knelt for once without
-struggle to his own inmost wishes, and agreed with Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I can build you a bower to
-sleep in. There are hazels yonder&mdash;just the stuff for a
-booth. The water in the pool there looks sweet enough to
-drink, and we have ample in the cloth for a supper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine gave him no more leisure to moralise on such
-trifles. She sprang down to the cushiony turf, and took his
-horse by the bridle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will be master again for once, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said,
-&ldquo;since, well of your wound, you have played the tyrant.
-At least you shall obey me to-night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas, half in a stupor, gave up fighting his own heart
-for a while, and fell in with Igraine&rsquo;s humour. She was
-strangely full of smiles and quiet glances; her eyes would
-meet his, flash, thrill him, and then evade his soul with sudden
-mischief. She tethered his horse for him, and then,
-making him sit down under a tree, she began to unarm him,
-kneeling confidently by his side. Her fingers lingered over-long
-on the buckles. When she lifted off his helmet, her hands
-touched his face and forehead, and set him blushing like a
-boy. The very nearness of her&mdash;her breath, her dress, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-lips and eyes so near to his&mdash;made him like so much wax&mdash;passive,
-obedient, yet red as fire.</p>
-
-<p>When she had ended her task, she gave him his naked
-sword and her orders.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now you may cut me hazels for a bower, Pelleas,&rdquo; she
-said. &ldquo;I will have it here under this tree where the moss
-is soft and dry. This summer night one could sleep under
-the stars and never feel the dew.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas rose up and did her bidding. The green boughs
-were ready to his great sword, as it gleamed and glimmered
-in the wizard light. He cut two forked stakes, and set
-them upright in the ground, with a pole between them.
-Then he built up branches about this centrepiece till the
-whole was roofed and walled with shelving green; he spread
-his red cloak therein for a carpet. Igraine sat and watched
-his labour. Life seemed to have rushed nearly to its zenith,
-and her thoughts were soaring in regions of gold.</p>
-
-<p>The black moth night had come into the sky with his
-golden-spotted wings all spread. It was time for idyllic
-love, pure looks, and the touch of hands. The billowy
-bosoms of the trees rolled sombrously above, and the little
-pool was like a wizard&rsquo;s glass, black and deep with sheeny
-mysteries.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine beckoned Pelleas to a seat on the grass bank at
-her feet when he had finished. There was a light on her
-face that the man had not seen before, a kind of quiet rapture,
-a veil of exultation, as though her maidenhood were
-flowering gold under a net of pinkest satin. She had
-loosened her hair in straight streams upon her shoulders,
-and her habit lay open to the very base of her shapely
-throat. She sat there and looked at him, with hands clasped
-in her lap, and her grey gown rising and falling markedly
-as she breathed. It seemed to Pelleas that there was nothing
-in the whole universe save twilight, two eyes, a stirring
-bosom, and two wistful lips.</p>
-
-<p>They had been speaking of their ride, and of the many
-strange things that had befallen them during their adven<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>tures
-together. Igraine had waxed strangely tender in her
-talk, and had spoken subtle bodeful words that meant much
-at such a season. She was flinging bonds about Pelleas
-that made him exult and suffer. His heart seemed great
-within him and ready to break, for the blood that bubbled
-and yearned in it in glorious anguish.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; said the girl, &ldquo;we enter Winchester, and
-I have known you, Pelleas, two weeks and some few hours
-more. You seem to have been in my life many years.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Words flooded into Pelleas&rsquo;s heart, and stifled all struggle
-for a moment. He was breathing like a hunted thing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never lived till our lives were joined.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine gave a little gasp, and bent over him suddenly,
-her eyes aglow, her hair falling down into his face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Kiss me, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;in the name of God,
-kiss me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas gave a great groan.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Girl, I dare not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You dare.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She bent herself till her lips were over his, and both their
-heads were clouded in her hair. Her eyes glimmered, her
-breath beat on his, he saw the whiteness of her teeth between
-her half-closed lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; he said again, half in a groan.</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer him, but simply took his face between
-her hands and looked into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Coward, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Power seemed to go from the man in a moment. He
-put his hands upon her shoulders and looked at her as in a
-splendid dream. Her face was beautifully peevish, and
-there lurked an infinite hunger on her lips. Then with a
-great woe in his heart he drew her face down to his and
-kissed her. There was such sweet pain in the grand despair
-of it all that he felt faint for strength of loving. Before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-he had gathered breath, Igraine had slipped away from him
-and was in the bower.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Till dawn, Pelleas, till dawn,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go and sleep, Pelleas; I will talk to you on the morrow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>X</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>With the girl&rsquo;s face lost behind the green eaves of the
-bower, Pelleas fell of a sudden into great darkness of soul.
-It was as though the moon had passed behind a cloud, and
-left him agrope in the woods without light and without
-guide. Igraine had bidden him to go and sleep. She might
-as well have told the sea to be still in the lap of the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Going aside towards the mouth of the glade so that he
-might not disturb the girl, he began to tread the grass
-between brake and brake, while he held parley with his
-turbulent and seething thoughts. What was Igraine to be
-to him on the morrow? She had broken the back of his
-determination, and beaten down his strength in those grand
-moments of sudden passion. The rich June of her beauty
-was still on his sight. Her grace, her infinite tenderness,
-the purity of her, were all set about his soul like angels round
-a dreamer&rsquo;s bed. She was light and darkness, sound and
-silence; she had the round world in her red heart, and the
-stars seemed to go about her in companies of gold. Never
-had Pelleas thought idolatry so smooth and swift a sin. He
-had never believed that love in so brief a space could make
-such wrack of madness in a hale and healthy body.</p>
-
-<p>As he walked under the giant limbs of the great trees he
-tried to grapple the thing with reason, to untangle this knot
-by natural logic. These were the bleak facts, and they
-stood up like white headstones in the night. He loved
-Igraine, and Igraine he knew loved him in turn; but Igraine
-was a nun despite her womanliness, and there lay the core
-of the whole matter. If he obeyed love he must disgrace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-the girl with broken vows, for like a staunchly taught Christian
-of somewhat stern and primitive mould he stood in
-honest awe of things spiritual and ecclesiastic. His very
-love for the girl made him fearful of in any way dishonouring
-her. If he held to the trite observations of a prompted
-conscience, then he must forswear love, and leave Igraine to
-the miserable celibacy of the Church, that chrysalid state that
-never burgeons into the fuller, fairer life of perfect womanhood.
-These were the two forces that held him shaken in
-the balance.</p>
-
-<p>Long while he went east and west under the trees with
-the old gloom flooding back like thunder. His whole thought
-seemed warped into bitterness; the blatant mockery of it
-all grinned and screamed like a harpy. Again with clarion
-cry and rosy flush of banners love stormed in and held law
-at death&rsquo;s door for a season. Again came the inevitable
-repulse, the moaning lapse of desire, while the black banner
-of the Church flapped once more over him in dismal sanctity.
-Pelleas found no shred of peace wheresoever he looked.
-Who has not learnt that when anarchy is in the heart, the
-whole world seems out of gear?</p>
-
-<p>As the night passed, love seemed to faint and wax pale
-before an ever-darkening visage that declared despair. A
-sense of inevitable gloom seemed to weigh down desire, and
-to drown hope in misery. Pelleas grew calmer at heart,
-though his thoughts were no less woeful. Love&rsquo;s voice,
-stifled and wistful, came like an elfin voice through woods,
-while the cry of conscience was like the thundering surge
-of the wind through trees. He grew less restless, more
-apathetic. Coming to a halt he leant against an oak&rsquo;s bossy
-trunk, and stood motionless as in a stupor for an hour or
-more. The blight of soul-sickness was on him, and he was
-like one dazed by a great fever.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he went back slowly to Igraine&rsquo;s shelter of
-boughs, and stood near it&mdash;thinking. Then he dropped on
-his hands and knees, crept up close, and parting the leaves
-looked in on her as she slept, wrapped in his red cloak. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-could see her face indistinctly white in a wealth of shadows;
-he could hear her breathing. Then he crept away again
-like a wounded thing, and lay for a time with his face in
-his arms, grieving without a sound.</p>
-
-<p>Again, a second time, he crept to the bower, and listened
-there on his knees. Turning his face to the night he tried
-to pray, vainly indeed, for his heart seemed dumb. A corner
-of Igraine&rsquo;s gown lay near his hands at the entry; he went
-down on hands and knees and kissed it. Then he took
-the little gold cross from his bosom, the cross Morgan had
-held, and laid it on the grass at Igraine&rsquo;s feet. He also put
-a purse with a few gold coins in it beside the cross. When
-he had done this he crept away mutely, and began to arm in
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>Once, as he was buckling on his casque, he thought
-he heard Igraine stirring. He kept very still, with a
-sudden, wild wish in his heart that she would wake and
-save him, but the sound proved nothing. He finished
-buckling on his harness, girded his sword, and hung his
-shield about his neck. Then he went to the little pool,
-and, kneeling down, dashed water in his face, and drank
-from his palms. He felt faint and bruised after the night&rsquo;s
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>Once more he went and stood by the hazel shelter as
-though for a last leave-taking before the strong wrench
-came. The little pavilion of leaves seemed to hold all hope
-and human joy in its narrow compass. Pelleas stood and
-took long leave of the girl in his heart. He wished her all
-the fair fortune he could think of, prayed for her as well as
-he could in a broken, wounded way, and then with a great
-sob he turned and left her sleeping. His black horse was
-tethered not far away. As he went he staggered, and
-seemed blind for a moment. He soon had the girths
-tightened, and was in the saddle, riding away dry-eyed and
-broken-souled into the night.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the dawn came, redly, gloriously, like a marriage
-pageant. Igraine, reft from dreams, woke with a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-shiver of joy in her pavilion of green boughs. She lay still
-awhile, and let her thoughts dance like the motes in the
-shimmer of sunlight that stole in between the branches.
-The day seemed warm and glorious, for that morning was
-she not to tell Pelleas of the secret she had kept from him
-so many days, the words she had hoarded in her heart like
-love? It would be a fitting end, she thought, to the rare
-novitiate each had passed in the heart of the other.</p>
-
-<p>Hearing no stir about her shelter, she thought Pelleas
-asleep, and peeped out presently between the boughs to bid
-him wake. Glade and pool lay peacefully in green and
-silver, but she saw no knight sleeping, no war-horse standing
-under the trees. Starting up, the gold cross glinting on
-the grass, with the purse beside it, appealed her with mute
-tragedy. She caught them up, trembling, and with sudden
-fear in her heart she went out into the glade and searched
-from brake to brake. It was barren as her joy. Pelleas
-had gone.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>BOOK II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3">GORLOIS</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a><br /><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>I</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Radamanth the goldsmith was held in no little honour
-and esteem by the townsfolk of Winchester. Even the
-market women and the tavern loungers stood aside for him
-in the street as he made his stately march in black robe and
-chain of gold. He was a man possessed of those outward
-virtues so well suited to commend a character to the favour
-of the world. He was venerable, rich, and much given to
-charity. His coffers were often open to infirmary and
-church; his house near the market square was as richly
-furnished as any noble&rsquo;s, and he gave good dinners. No
-man in Winchester had a finer aptitude for pleasing all
-classes. He was smooth and intelligent to the rich, bland
-and neighbourly to his equals, quite a father to the poor, and
-moreover he had no wife. Every Sabbath he went at the
-head of his household to the great basilica church in the
-chief square, worshipped and did alms as a rich merchant
-should.</p>
-
-<p>Disinterestedness is a somewhat unique virtue, and it
-must not be supposed that Radamanth lived with his eye on
-eternity alone. It must be confessed that self-interest was
-often the dial of his philanthropy, and expediency to him
-the touchstone of action. Nothing furthers commerce better
-than a pious and merciful reputation, and Radamanth
-knew the inestimable value of a solid and goodly exterior.
-Wise in his generation, he nailed the Cross to his door, and
-plied his balances prosperously behind the counter.</p>
-
-<p>Thus when the girl Igraine trudged sad-eyed into
-Winchester in her gown of grey, and appeared before him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-as a homeless child of the Church, he took her in like the
-good uncle of the fairy tale, and proffered her his house for
-home. Possibly he pitied her for her plight after the burning
-of Avangel, for she seemed much cast down in mind
-and very deserving of a kinsman&rsquo;s proper comfort. Then
-she was of noble family, a coincidence that no doubt
-weighed heavily in Radamanth&rsquo;s opinion. It was good to
-have so much breeding in the house, to be able to say with a
-smirk to his friends and neighbours, &ldquo;My niece, the daughter
-of Malgo, Lord of the Redlands, slain and plundered of
-the heathen in Kent.&rdquo; Igraine brought quite a lustre into
-Radamanth&rsquo;s home. He beamed on her with sleek pride
-and satisfaction, gave her rich stuffs for dress, a goodly
-chamber, and a little Silurian maid to wait. Moreover, he
-gave his one child and daughter Lilith a grave lecture on
-sisterly companionship, advised her to study Igraine&rsquo;s gentle
-manners, and to profit by her aristocratic and educated influence.
-Luckily Lilith was a quiet girl, not given to
-jealousy or much self-trust, and Igraine found as warm a
-welcome as her unhappy heart could wish.</p>
-
-<p>No few days had passed since that dawn on the hill above
-Winchester when Igraine had started up from under the
-green boughs to find Pelleas gone. They had been days of
-keen trouble to the girl. Often and often had she hated
-herself for her vain delay, her over-tender procrastination,
-that had brought misery in place of joy. The past was now
-a wounded dream to her, ripe and beautiful, yet fruited with
-such mute pain as only a woman&rsquo;s heart can feel. Igraine
-had conjured up love like some Eastern house of magic, only
-to see its domes faint goldly into a gloom of night. She
-felt as much for Pelleas as for herself, and there was a blight
-upon her that seemed as though it could never pass. She
-was not a woman given to tears. Her trouble seemed to
-live in her eyes with pride, and to stiffen her stately throat
-into a pillar of rebellious strength.</p>
-
-<p>Not a word, not a sign had come to her of Pelleas.
-Taken into Radamanth&rsquo;s house, served, petted, flattered, she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-went drearily through its daily round, sat at its board, talked
-with the guestfolk, while hope waited wide-eyed in her
-heart and kept her brave. Pelleas had told her that he was
-for Winchester, and assuredly, she thought, she might find
-him and confess all. She often kept watch hour by hour at
-her window overlooking the street. In her walks she had
-a glance for almost every man who passed on foot or horseback,
-till she grew almost ashamed of herself, and feared for
-her modesty. Her eyes always hungered for a red shield
-and harness, a black horse, a face grieving in dark reserve
-and silence. At night she was often quite a child in herself.
-She would take the little gold cross from her bosom and
-brood over it. She even found herself whispering to the
-man as she lay in bed, and stretching out her arms to him
-in the dark as in pain. For all her pride and courage she
-was often bowed down and broken when no one was near
-to see.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before she found a confidant to befriend
-her in her distress of heart. Lilith, the goldsmith&rsquo;s daughter,
-had great brown eyes, soft and very gentle; her face was
-wistful and white under her straightly combed hair; she was
-a quiet girl, timid, but very thoughtful for others. The
-two appealed each other by contrast. Lilith had soon read
-trouble in Igraine&rsquo;s eyes, and had nestled to her in soul,
-ready with many little kindnesses that were like dew in a
-dry season. Igraine unbent to her, and suffered herself to
-be enfolded by the other&rsquo;s sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>One day she told her the whole distressful tale. It was
-in the garden behind the house, a green and pleasant place
-opening on the river, and flanked with stone. The two
-were in an arbour framed of laurels, its floor mosaicked with
-quaint tiles. Igraine sat on the bench with Lilith on a stool
-at her feet. They were both sad, for Lilith was a girl
-whose heart answered strongly to any tale of unhappy mood.
-Igraine had made mere truth of the matter, neither justifying
-nor embellishing. Her clear bleak words were the more
-pathetic for their very simpleness. Lilith had been crying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-softly to herself. Her brown eyes were very misty when she
-turned her white face to Igraine&rsquo;s with a grievous little sigh.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What can I say to you?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said Igraine, taking her hands and smiling
-through misery.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have never the words I wish for, and when I feel most
-I can say little.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You understand; that is enough for me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Lilith, with a fine blush and a shy look, &ldquo;I
-think I can feel for you, Igraine, almost to the full, though
-I seem such an Agnes. I am woman enough to have
-learnt something that means all to a girl. I am very sad
-for your sake.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will try to comfort you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s eyes burned. She kissed Lilith on the lips and
-was mute. For a while they sat with their arms about each
-other, not daring to look into each other&rsquo;s eyes. Then the
-girl kissed Igraine&rsquo;s cheek, and touched her hair with her
-slim fingers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I can help you,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Help me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith flushed, and spoke very quickly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;to find Pelleas. I tell you what I will do. I will
-send a friend of mine to question all the guards at the gates
-whether they have seen such a one as you have described
-ride in.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine hugged the girl.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And then you say this Pelleas was in the King&rsquo;s service.
-I have never heard of a knight so named; but there are so
-many, and I hear only gossip. I know a girl in the King&rsquo;s
-household. I will go and ask her whether she knows of a
-tall, dark knight whose colour is red, who rides a black horse,
-and is named Pelleas. You do not know how much I may
-not learn from her. I feel wise already.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine plucked up heart and spirit. She felt sorry that
-she had not spoken of her trouble to Lilith before, for she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-had lost many days trusting to her own eyes and her little
-knowledge of the town. She kissed the girl again, and
-almost laughed. Then in a flash she remembered a speech
-of Pelleas&rsquo;s which she had forgotten till that moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fool that I am,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;the very chain he wore he
-had it from your father, and here in my bosom I have the
-little cross that nigh lost him his life. Surely this may help
-us in some measure.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith looked at the cross that Igraine had taken from
-under her tunic, where it hung by a little chain about her
-neck.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We will show it to my father,&rdquo; said the girl, &ldquo;and ask
-him thereof. He may have record of such a chain, and to
-whom it was sold. Who knows? Come, Igraine, we will
-show it him after supper if you wish.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>And again Igraine kissed her.</p>
-
-<p>It was Radamanth&rsquo;s custom, after the business of the day
-had been capped by an honest supper, to sit in his parlour
-and drink wine with certain of his friends. He had a particular
-gossip, an old fellow named Eudol, who had been a
-merchant in his time, and had retired with some wealth.
-These two would spend many an evening together over their
-wine, taking enough to make their tongues wag, but never
-exceeding the decent warmth of moderation. Eudol was a
-lean old gentleman with a white beard and a most patriarchal
-manner. He was much of a woman&rsquo;s creature, and loved a
-pretty face and a plump figure, and he would father any
-wench who came in his way with a benignity that often
-made him odious. He had a soft voice, and a sleek, silken
-way with him that made folk think him the most tender-souled
-creature imaginable.</p>
-
-<p>These two were at their wine together when Lilith and
-Igraine went in to them that evening. Radamanth since
-his spouse&rsquo;s death had grown as much a father as trade and
-the getting of gold permitted. In his selfish, matter-of-fact
-way he was fond of this timid, brown-eyed creature he called
-daughter. His affections boasted more of science than of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-sentiment. Lilith, unusually bold, went and sat on the
-arm of his chair, and patted his face in a half-shy, half-mischievous
-fashion. Eudol laughed, and shook his head with
-a critical look at Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;More begging,&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;So, cousin Igraine, you
-look fresh as a yellow rose in the sun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine laughed, and sat down to talk to him, while
-Lilith questioned her father. The goldsmith bore his
-daughter&rsquo;s caresses with a sublime and patient resignation.
-She began to tell him about the chain, keeping Igraine and
-her tale wholly in the background. When she had said
-enough for the sake of explanation, she showed her father
-the cross, and waited his words.</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth fingered it, turned it this way and that, and
-found his own mark thereon.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wrought and sold three such chains as you describe,&rdquo;
-he said; &ldquo;but what is such a chain to you, child, and whence
-came this cross?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith flushed, hesitated, and glanced at Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The cross is mine,&rdquo; quoth the latter.</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth eyed her as though he were not a little
-desirous of questioning her further, but there was a very
-palpable coldness on his niece&rsquo;s face that forbade any such
-curiosity. He had a most hearty respect for the girl&rsquo;s pride,
-and never dreamt of any degree of tyranny that might seem
-vulgarly plebeian to her more noble notions. The remembrance
-of her parentage and estate had always a most
-emollient effect upon his mind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll meddle discreetly, and go no
-further than I am asked.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Eudol winked at the company at large.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never ask a lady an uncomfortable question,&rdquo; quoth he.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith beamed at him shyly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are very wise,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth rose from his chair, and going to a great
-press took a book from it. He set the book on the table,
-and after much turning of pages, discovered the record that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-he sought. Following the scrawling lines with his finger,
-he read aloud from the ledger:</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gold chain of special weight, large links, two gold
-crosses pendant over either breast. Of such three were
-wrought and sold.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The first to Bedivere, knight of the King&rsquo;s guard.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Nota bene</i>&mdash;unpaid for.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Eudol set up a sudden brisk cackle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The man, the very man, I&rsquo;ll swear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine gave him a look that made his mouth close like a
-trap and his body stiffen in his chair. Radamanth continued
-his reading.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The second chain was sold to John of Glastonbury.
-The third to the most noble Uther, Prince of Britain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth closed the book, and returned it to the
-press&mdash;orderly even in trifles. Lilith and Igraine had
-exchanged a mute look that meant everything. Slipping
-away without a word to either man, they went to Igraine&rsquo;s
-bedroom, a great chamber hung with heavy red hangings
-and richly garnished. A carved bed stood in the centre.
-The two girls sat on it and stared into each other&rsquo;s eyes.
-Igraine was breathing fast, and her face was pale.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Know you Bedivere?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Or John of Glastonbury?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Or Uther?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith&rsquo;s brown eyes brightened.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Noble Uther I have often seen,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;riding
-through Winchester on a black horse. A dark man, and
-sad-looking. He would be much like your Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was very white. There seemed a race of
-thoughts in her as she played the statue with her eyes at
-gaze, and her lips drawn into a line of red. Her hands
-hung limply over the edge of the bed, and she seemed
-stiffened into musings. Lilith sidled close to her, and put
-her warm arms round her neck, her soft cheek to Igraine&rsquo;s.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We may learn yet,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther,&rdquo; said Igraine as in a dream.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Can it be?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine drew a long breath and sighed like one waking.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must see him,&rdquo; was all she said.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith kissed her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will go to the King&rsquo;s house to-morrow,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;the
-girl may tell us something of use. I have heard it said
-that Uther has not been in Winchester for many a week.
-Ah, Igraine, if it should be he.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They looked deep in each other&rsquo;s eyes, and smiled as
-only women can smile when their hearts are fast in
-sympathy. Then they went to bed in Igraine&rsquo;s bed, and
-slept the night through in each other&rsquo;s arms.</p>
-
-<p>Early next day they went together to the King&rsquo;s house
-that stood by the gardens and the river. At the kitchen
-quarters Lilith inquired for the girl who served as a maid in
-the household. Being constrained by a most polite lackey,
-she went in to see the woman, while Igraine kept her
-pride and herself in the porch, and watched the people go
-by in the street. Presently Lilith came out again with a
-frown on her mild face, and her brown eyes troubled. She
-took Igraine aside into the gardens that lined the great
-highway skirting the palace, and led her to where a
-fountain played in the sun, and stone seats ringed a quiet
-pool. White pigeons were there, coquetting and sweeping
-the ground with their spread tails, their low cooing mingling
-with the musical plashing of the water. An old beggar
-woman sat hunched in a corner, and three or four children
-were feeding the fish in the pool. All about them the
-gardens were thickly shadowed with great trees and
-glistening lusty laurels.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine looked into Lilith&rsquo;s face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I see no news in your eyes,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith brooded at the pool and the children, and seemed
-disquieted, even angry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have learnt little, Igraine,&rdquo; she said, "and am dis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>appointed.
-I will tell you how it was. The old wretch
-who oversees the women found me talking with the girl
-Gwenith, read me a sermon on interfering with household
-work, scolded me for a young gossip, and had me packed off
-like a beggar."</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What a harridan!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have learnt a little.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Quick!&mdash;I thirst.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith hurried on for sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The girl has never heard of a knight named Pelleas,&rdquo;
-she said, &ldquo;and there are so many dark men about Court that
-your description was little guide. As for Uther, no one
-knows where he is at present. Folk are not disquieted, for
-he seems to be ever riding away into the woods on adventure.
-So much gossip could read me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s face clouded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Did you ask of Bedivere?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes; a silly, vain fellow, with a red beard and sandy
-hair.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And John of Glastonbury?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gwenith could tell me nothing of that man. Dame
-Martha caught us talking, and it was then she scolded&mdash;the
-ugly, red-faced old hen. She said&rdquo;&mdash;and Lilith blushed&mdash;&ldquo;that
-I was an idle, silly hussy to gad and gossip after
-Court gentlemen. Now that wasn&rsquo;t fair, was it, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, dear. I should like to have a talk with Dame
-Martha.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith rose to the notion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She would never scold you, Igraine. You look far too
-stately.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Simpleton! a scold would spatter Gabriel.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, if I were Gabriel I know what I should do to
-Dame Martha.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You quiet-faced thing&mdash;why, you are quite a vixen
-after all!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine, was there ever a woman without a
-temper?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, dear, and I wouldn&rsquo;t give a button for her
-either.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, as they sat and talked, the beggar woman
-lifted up her head to listen, and the children turned from
-feeding the fish in querulous, childish wonder. There
-was something strange on the wind. Igraine and Lilith
-heard a gradual sound rising afar off over the city&mdash;a noise
-as of men shouting, a noise that waxed and waned like the
-roar of surges on a beach. It grew&mdash;rushed nearer like a
-storm through trees,&mdash;deep, sonorous, triumphant. The
-girls sat mute a moment, and looked at each other in
-conjecture.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What can it be?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God knows!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The heathen?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not that shout.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;Uther.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine caught a deep breath.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen! it comes nearer. Come away, I must see.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Passing through the gardens they came again to the
-highway skirting the palace. Men, women, brats, monks,
-all Christendom, seemed swarming up from the city, and
-there was already a great throng in the street. The breeze
-of shouting came nearer each moment. Igraine climbed
-the pediment of a statue that rose above the balustrading
-of the gardens; the ledge gave room to both Lilith and
-herself. Together they stood and looked down on the
-crowd that began to swarm at their feet&mdash;soldiers, nobles,
-dirty craftsmen, courtezans, fat housewives, churchmen&mdash;their
-small prides lost in one common curiousness. The
-street seemed mosaicked with colour. The broken words
-and cries of the crowd were flung up to Igraine like so
-much foam.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois, say you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Noble Gorlois.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A thousand heathen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What&mdash;all slain!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Under the walls of Anderida.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come to my house and I will give you red wine, and
-play to you on the cithern.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank the Virgin.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Great Gorlois.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If it is true I&rsquo;ll burn twenty candles.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Give over trampling me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A thousand heathen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ho! there&mdash;some rogue&rsquo;s thieved my purse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They are coming.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s shout for him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Great Gorlois.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Up between the stone fronts of the palace and the
-dwindling houses and the rolling green of the gardens
-came a blaze of gold and purple, of white, green, blue, and
-scarlet, a gross glare of steel thundered on with the tramp
-of men and the cry of many voices. A river of armour
-seemed to flow with a brazen magnificence between the
-innumerable heads of the crowd. Clarions were braying,
-banneroles adance. The sun flashed on helmet and shield,
-and made a brave blaze on the flanks of the great serpent
-of war as it swayed through the thundering street, arrogant,
-triumphant, glorious.</p>
-
-<p>Well in the van rode a knight on a great white horse.
-His armour was all of gold, his trappings white with gold
-borders, and stars of gold scattered thereon. His baldric
-was set with jasper, his sword and scabbard marvellous with
-beryl and sardonyx. A coronet gemmed with one great
-ruby circled his casque, and shot red gleams at the archer
-sun.</p>
-
-<p>Behind him came a veritable grove of spears,&mdash;lusty
-knights, their saddles weighed down with the spoil of
-battle, with torque, bracelet, sword, and axe. Further yet
-came pikemen, mass on mass, bearing each on his spear-point
-a heathen head,&mdash;pageant of leers, frowns, scowls of red
-wrath, wild eyes, blood, and blood-tangled hair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The great knight on the white horse rode with a certain
-splendid arrogance, and his eyes were full of fire under the
-arch of his casque. It was easy to see that the noise and
-pomp were like wine to him, and that his pride blazed like
-a beacon in a wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois, great Gorlois!&rdquo; thundered the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>By the palace there was such a press that the white
-horse came to a halt, hemmed in by a sea of vociferous
-faces. Igraine, in a gown of violet, was leaning from her
-statue, and looking at Gorlois. Her glance seemed to
-magnetise him, for he turned and stared full at the girl as
-she stood slightly above him in the glory of her beauty and
-her pride.</p>
-
-<p>Long looked Gorlois, like a man smitten with a sudden
-charm. Then he wrenched the coronet from his casque,
-and spurring his horse through the crowd, rode close to the
-statue whose knees were clasped by Igraine&rsquo;s arm. It was
-the statue of Fame crowned by Love with a wreath of
-laurels. So, Gorlois, with head bowed, held up the coronet
-on the cross of his sword, and gave Igraine his glory.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>II</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Splendid in arms, magnificent in fortune, Gorlois of
-Cornwall held high place in the war lore and romances of
-the green isle of Britain. Ask any pikeman or gallowglass
-whose crest he would have advance in the van in the tough
-tussle of a charge home, and he would tell you of Gorlois
-or of Uther. Question any merchant as to the most
-prolific purse in the kingdom, and he would beam seraphically
-and talk to you of Gorlois. So much for the man&rsquo;s
-reputation.</p>
-
-<p>Physically he was tall, big-chested, lean-limbed, with
-a square jaw and eyes that shone ever alert, as though
-watching a knife in an enemy&rsquo;s hand. You could read the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-swift, soaring, masterful spirit of him in the bleak lines of
-his handsome face, and the soldierly carriage of his head.
-He was quick as a hawk, supple and springy as a willow,
-keen and eager in his action as a born fighter should be.
-When you saw him move, the lean hard fibre of him seemed
-as tense and tough as the string of a five-foot bow. Though
-he might seem to the eye all impulse, there was a leopard
-reason in him that made him the more formidable. He was
-no mere fighting machine&mdash;rather a man of brain and sinew
-whose cunning went far to back his strength.</p>
-
-<p>Meliograunt ruled in Cornwall in those days, Meliograunt
-who was to rear young Tristram for the plaguing of
-Mark, and the love of the fair Isoult. Gorlois was Meliograunt&rsquo;s
-nephew, holding many castles, woods, and wild
-coastlands towards Lyonesse, lording it also over other lands
-in Britain, houses in London and Winchester, and some
-mountainous regions in Gore, where Urience held sway.
-Mordaunt had been his father, a great knight who had done
-many brave deeds in his day. His grandsire, Gravaine,
-famed for his wisdom, had fought abroad and died in battle.
-Gorlois had ancestry enough to breed worship in him, and
-after Ambrosius and black Uther he held undoubted precedence
-of all knights in Britain.</p>
-
-<p>Unblemished fortune is not always the nurse best suited
-to the dandling of a man&rsquo;s mind. It had been so with
-Gorlois. He was one of those beings whose life seemed to
-promise nothing but triumphal processions and perpetual
-bays of victory. Selfishness is such a glittering garment
-that it needs a great light to reveal its true texture to the
-wearer. Flattered, praised, obeyed, bent to, it became as
-natural for Gorlois to expect the homage of circumstance
-as to look for the obedience of his cook. There was much
-that was Greek about him in the worst sense, a certain
-sensuous brilliancy that aimed at making life a surfeit of
-rare sensations, with an infinite indifference for the hearts of
-others. Gorlois liked to see life swinging round him like a
-dance while he stood pedestalled in the centre, an earthly Jove.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The man had given Igraine his coronet on the cross of
-his great sword. That meant much for Gorlois. He was
-not a gentleman who had need to trouble his wits about
-women, for there were many enough ready to ogle their
-eyes out in his service. Yet in his keen way he had conceived
-a strong liking for the girl&rsquo;s face. A species of
-sudden admiration had leapt out on him, and brought him
-in some wonder to a realisation of the power of a pair of
-eyes. Igraine was such a one as would attract the man.
-In the first place she was very fair to look upon, a point of
-some importance. She was tall, big of body, and built for
-grace and strength, things pleasant to Gorlois&rsquo;s humour.
-Above all she was proud and implacable, no giggling franion
-hardly worth the kissing, and Gorlois had grown past the first
-blush of experiences of heart. He was sage enough to know
-that a woman lightly won is often soon lost, or not worth
-the winning. Let a man&rsquo;s soul sweat in the taming of her,
-and there is some chance of his making an honest bargain.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, like many a man of restless, soaring spirit,
-Gorlois ever hungered for romance, and the mysterious
-discomforts and satisfactions that hedge the way into a
-woman&rsquo;s bosom. Certain men are never happy unless they
-have the firebrand of love making red stir for them in heart
-and body. Of some such stuff was Gorlois. He had a
-soul that doted on nights spent at a window under the moon.
-All the thousand distractions, the infinite yet atomic cares,
-the logical sweats of reasoning were particularly pleasant to
-his fancy. He loved the colour, the exultation, the heroism,
-the desperate tenderness of it all. Battle, effort, ambition,
-lost half their sting for Gorlois when there was no woman
-in the coil.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s home was soon known to him, thanks to the apt
-vigilance of a certain page much in favour with Gorlois
-for mischief and cunning. The boy had Igraine&rsquo;s habits to
-perfection in a week or two. By making love to the girl
-who served her, he put himself into the way of getting almost
-any tidings he required. Every morning he would slip out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-early, meet Igraine&rsquo;s girl, Isolde, under the shadow of the
-garden-wall, and, under cover of a kiss, he would inquire
-what her mistress might be doing that day, pretending, of
-course, that his interest on such a subject merely arose from
-his desire to have Igraine out of the way, and her girl free.
-The lad quite enjoyed the game, Isolde being a giggling,
-black-eyed wench, who loved mischief. Of course he
-ended by falling in love with the reckless earnestness of a
-boy, but that kept him well to business. Betimes he would
-run home and tell his master where Igraine would probably
-be seen that day.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s proud face began to come into the girl&rsquo;s life
-at every turn. Igraine would see him often from her
-window as he rode by on his white horse, looking up, and
-very eager to greet her. He would pass her in the aisles of
-the great basilica in the market, walking in gold and scarlet,
-amid silks and cloths from the East, vases, armour, skins of
-the tiger and camelopard, flowers, fruit, wine, and all
-manner of merchandise. On the river which ran by the
-end of Radamanth&rsquo;s garden his barge often swept past with
-the noise of oars and music, and a gleam of gold over the
-hurrying water. In the orchards without the walls his face
-would come suddenly upon her through a mist of green,
-and she would be conscious of his eyes and the nearness of
-his stride.</p>
-
-<p>One Sunday morning she found him laving his hands in
-the labrum beside her before entering the long narthex
-porch of the church, and he was near her all through the
-service, watching her furtively, noting the graceful curves
-of her figure as she knelt, the profusion of her hair, a
-thousand little things that are much to a man. When the
-sacrament was given, he knelt close beside her, and touched
-the cup where her lips had been. Apparently Gorlois was
-content for a while with the rich delight of gazing. His
-bearing was courteous enough, and he never exposed her
-to any public rudeness that could warrant her in resenting
-his persistent, though distant, homage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The great baths of Winchester stood in a little hollow
-near the southern gate of the city, a white pile of stone set
-about with quiet gardens. They had fallen into some decay
-and disrepute, but still in the summer-time girls and men
-of the richer classes went thither to bathe. On sunny
-mornings, in the great marble bath of the women, girls
-would flash their white limbs, and sport like Naiads in the
-laughing water. Afterwards they would have their hair
-dressed and perfumed, and then go to sun themselves in
-the rose-walks like eastern odalisques. The music of flute
-and cithern might often be heard in the grass-grown peristyles.
-The library attached to the place had once boasted
-many scrolls and tomes, but it had long ago been pillaged
-by the monks of the great abbey.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith had taken Igraine there more than once. One
-morning Igraine had bathed, tied her hair, and had passed
-out into the garden alone. The place was of some size,
-boasting twenty acres or more, full of winding paths, grass
-glades, and knolls of bushy shrubs, where one might lose
-one&rsquo;s self as soon as think. Children often played hide-and-seek
-there, and idling up some green walk you might catch
-a giggling girl, with hair flying, bursting out of some thicket
-with a lad in full chase. Or in some shady lawn you might
-come upon a company of children dancing as solemnly as
-little elves to the sound of a pipe.</p>
-
-<p>Nooks and grass walks were almost deserted at this hour,
-the gardens being most favoured towards evening, when
-the day was marked by a deepening discretion. Igraine
-had no purpose in the place. She knew that Lilith was
-somewhere within its bounds. She also knew that Lilith
-had no particular need of her that morning, and as the day
-was hot and slothful, Igraine&rsquo;s only ambition was to waste
-her time as pleasantly as possible till noon.</p>
-
-<p>Turning round a holly hedge that hid a statue of Cupid,
-she came full upon a woman seated on the stone bench that
-ringed the statue&rsquo;s pedestal. The woman wore a light
-blue tunic, and a purple gown that ran all along the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-seat in curling masses. She was combing her fair hair as
-though she had only lately come from the bath. Her white
-glimmering arms were bare to the elbow, and she was humming
-a song to the sway of her hair, while many rings
-laughed on her slim white fingers. She had not heard
-Igraine&rsquo;s step upon the grass, but saw suddenly her shadow
-stealing along in the sun. Lifting her face, she stared,
-knew on the instant, and went red and grey by turns.
-Her comb halted, tangled in a strand of hair, and she was
-very quiet, and big about the eyes. Igraine remembered
-well enough where she had seen that would-be innocent
-stare, and that loose little mouth that seemed to bud for
-lawless kisses.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan, with her face as white as her bosom, drew the
-comb from her hair, and flourished it uneasily betwixt her
-fingers. She was frightened as a mouse at the tall girl
-standing big and imperious so near, and her eyes were
-furtive for chance of flight. Igraine in her heart was in no
-less quandary than was dead Madan&rsquo;s wife. She could
-prove nothing against the woman, for Pelleas was lost and
-away, and even the man&rsquo;s name might be a myth likely to
-involve further mystery. She had as much to fear too
-from Morgan&rsquo;s tongue, as Morgan had from her knowledge
-of that night in the island manor.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan, too flurried for sudden measures, sat biting her
-lips, while her blue eyes were fixed on Igraine with a restless
-caution. Neither woman said a word for fully a
-minute, but eyed each other like a couple of cats, each
-waiting for the other to move. The shrubs around were
-so still that you might imagine they were listening, while
-Cupid, poised on one foot, drew his bow very much at a
-venture.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good-morning, holy sister.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine said never a word.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am glad to see you so improved in dress, that olive-green
-gown looks so well on you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Still no retort.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By the saints, sister, you are very silent. I hope you
-were not kept long on that island?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine arched her eyebrows and gave the girl a stare.
-She knew what a coward Morgan was, and guessed she was
-in a holy panic, despite her cool impudence and seeming
-ease of mind. Woman-like, she conceived a sudden strong
-desire to have Morgan whimpering and grovelling at her
-feet, for there is some satisfaction in terrorising an enemy,
-even if one can do no more.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I presume, madame,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you thought me safely
-packed away in that island, and likely to die of hunger, or
-be taken by heathen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Morgan forced a smile, and began to bind her hair for
-the sake of having something to do in the full glare of
-Igraine&rsquo;s great eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You did not think I could swim.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, I could think anything of you. Nuns are so
-clever.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;After all, I am not a nun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course not. You could not be bothered with vows
-in summer-time. I turned nun myself once for a month,
-it being convenient.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine began to fret and to lose patience.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are over venturesome, madame,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;in
-coming to Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I believe they hang folk here at times; they might
-even break your slim white neck.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Morgan&rsquo;s lips twitched, but she did not blench from the
-argument.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You speak of hanging,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and the inference is
-rather peculiar. Listen a moment, my good convent saint:
-your knight on the black horse would most certainly have
-needed the rope, if my man had not mended vengeance
-with that poniard.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas and the gallows! You&rsquo;re a fool!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Morgan smiled back at her very prettily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;After all, your man did first murder,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On a traitor cur in Andredswold!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, my husband.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The woman&rsquo;s contention was not so illogical when
-Igraine came to consider it in a less personal light. Morgan
-may have loved the man Madan for all she knew, and she
-could feel for her in such a matter. She looked at her with
-less scorn for the moment, and less injustice of thought.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you have grieved much,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan gave a blank stare.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Grieved?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You loved your husband?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I did, while he lived.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And no longer?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What is the use of wasting one&rsquo;s youth on a corpse?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine retracted her late sympathy, and returned to
-enmity. Morgan had risen, and was ruffling herself like a
-swan in her part of the great lady, and gathering her purple
-gown round her slim figure with infinite affectation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I cannot see that we have cause to quarrel further,&rdquo;
-she suggested.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Seemingly we are quits, good Sister Morality. I have
-lost my man, you yours.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are very logical,&rdquo; said Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why should we women grieve?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why indeed?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There are many more men in the world.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, I do not understand you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Morgan gave a malicious little laugh that ended in a
-sneer. She touched her hair with her jewelled fingers, blew
-a kiss to Cupid, and again laughed in her sly mischief-making
-way. In a moment words were out of her lips
-that set Igraine&rsquo;s face ablaze, her heart at a canter, and
-mulled all further parley. Morgan saw trouble, dodged,
-and ran round the statue. Igraine was too quick for her,
-and winding her fingers into the woman&rsquo;s hair, gave her a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-cuff that would have set a helmet ringing. Morgan tripped
-and fell, dragging Igraine with her, and for a moment there
-was a struggle, green and purple mixed. Igraine, the
-heavier and stronger, came aloft on the other soon. Then
-a knife flashed out. Morgan got two quick strokes in, one
-on the girl&rsquo;s shoulder, a second in her left forearm. Igraine
-lost her grip, and fell aside in a stagger of surprise and pain,
-while Morgan, taking her chance, squirmed away, slipped
-up, and ran like a rabbit. She was out of sight and sound
-before Igraine had got back her reason.</p>
-
-<p>Here was a pretty business. The girl&rsquo;s sleeve was already
-red and soaked, and the slit cloth showed a long red streak
-in the plump white of her flesh. Blood was welling up,
-and dripping fast to the grass at her feet. Despite the
-smart of her wounds and her temper, she saw it would be
-mere folly to chase Morgan. Following instinct, she ran
-for home, holding her right hand pressed over the gash in
-her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>In the main avenue who should she meet but Gorlois,
-carried in a litter, and looking out lazily from behind half-drawn
-curtains. His quick eyes caught sight of Igraine as
-she passed. He saw the blood and the girl&rsquo;s white face,
-and he was out of the litter like a stag from cover, and at
-her side, with spirited concern. Igraine was white and half
-dazed, her green gown soaked and stained. Her eyes trembled
-up at Gorlois as she showed him her gashed arm, with a smile
-and a little whimper that made him storm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who did this?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He had stripped his cloak off, and was tearing it into
-strips, while his jaw stiffened.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;An old foe of mine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Describe him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A woman, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The damned vixen. Her dress?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Blue tunic, and gown of purple.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois turned to certain servants who stood round
-gaping at the girl in her blood-stained dress, and their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-lord tearing his cloak into bandages with characteristic
-furor.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Search the gardens&mdash;a woman in blue and purple;
-have her caught. By my sword, I&rsquo;ll hang her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He rent Igraine&rsquo;s sleeve to the shoulder, and wound the
-strips of his cloak about her arm with a strength that made
-her wince.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pardon,&rdquo; he said in his quick, fierce way; &ldquo;this will
-serve a season; stern heart, good surgeon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine smiled, and made light of it, while he knotted the
-bandage. Some of his men had scattered among the shrubs
-and into the dark alleys of the place, for Igraine could hear
-them trampling and calling to each other. While she
-listened, and before she could hinder him, Gorlois had lifted
-her as though she had been but a sheaf of corn, and laid her
-in the litter. He drew the curtains. The bearers were at
-the poles, and setting off at a good stride they were soon in
-the town.</p>
-
-<p>By the time they reached Radamanth&rsquo;s doorway Igraine,
-despite her spirit, was faint from loss of blood, and all
-atremble. Gorlois, tersely imperious, lifted her up as she
-lay half dazed and stupid, carried her in his arms into the
-house, and taking guidance from a white-faced maid, bore
-Igraine above to her chamber, and laid her on her bed.
-Then he kissed her hand, and leaving her to the women,
-hurried off to send skilled succour.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>III</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was not long before Gildas, the court physician, a dear
-old scoundrel with a white beard and a portentous face, came
-down in state to attend on Igraine. He was an old gentleman
-of most solemn soul. His dignity was so tremendous
-a thing, that you might have imagined him a solitary Atlas
-holding the whole world&rsquo;s health upon his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He soon dabbled his fingers in Igraine&rsquo;s wounds that
-morning, dropped in oil, and balmed them with myrrh and
-unguents under a dressing of clean cloth. He frowned all
-the time, as was his custom in the sick chamber, as though
-wisdom lay heavy on his soul, or at least as though he
-wished folk to think so. The only time you saw Gildas
-smile was when you payed him a fee or complimented him
-upon his knowledge. Tickle his pocket or his vanity, and
-he beamed on you. That morning he told Radamanth that
-his niece&rsquo;s wounds were serious, but that he trusted that they
-would heal innocently, treated as they had been by credited
-skill. Gildas always pulled a long face over a patient&rsquo;s possibilities;
-such discretion kept him from pitfalls, and enabled
-him to claim all the credit when matters turned out happily.</p>
-
-<p>The streaks of scarlet in the white waste of skin soon
-died cleanly into mere bands of pink, and Igraine had little
-trouble from her wounds, thanks to the great Gildas. In
-fact, she was in bed but three days, while Lilith played
-nurse, chatted and sang to her, or leant at the open window
-to tell her of those who passed in the street. Master Gildas
-came and went morning and evening with the prodigious
-regularity of the sun. The girls aped him behind his back,
-and Igraine, with some ingratitude to science, made Lilith
-empty the ruby-coloured physic out of the window. It
-happened to spatter a lean booby of a man as he passed, who,
-looking up, flattered himself that Lilith must have sprinkled
-him with scented water by way of showing her affection.
-So much for Gildas&rsquo;s rose-water and flowers of dill.</p>
-
-<p>The man of physic marched each day like a god into
-Gorlois&rsquo;s house to tell how the Lady Igraine fared at his
-hands. Such patronage was worth much to Gildas, and
-knowing how the wind blew, he puffed religiously upon the
-new-kindled fire. The girl&rsquo;s glamour had caught up Gorlois
-in a golden net. He had loved to look upon her and to
-dream, but now the perfume of her hair, the warm softness
-of her body, the very odour of her shed and scarlet blood
-were memories in him that would not fade.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One evening a posy of flowers came tumbling in at
-Igraine&rsquo;s window.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith looked out, and saw Gorlois.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For the Lady Igraine,&rdquo; were his words.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith smiled down, and ventured to tell him that Igraine
-was much beholden to his courtesy and succour, and would
-thank him with her own lips when well of her wounds.
-She took the flowers to Igraine, who was listening in bed in
-the twilight.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Shall I throw a flower back?&rdquo; asked the girl.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It would be courteous.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith did so. The bloom struck Gorlois on the mouth
-like a blown kiss. The man put the thing in his bosom
-with a great smile, and went home to spend some hours like
-a star-gazer in his garden, while his musicians tuned their
-strings behind the bushes. At such a season Gorlois loved
-sound and colour. The voices, sweetly melancholic,
-thrilled up into the night&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">&ldquo;Her head is of brighter gold than the broom-flower,</div>
- <div class="verse">Her breast like foam under her green tunic;</div>
- <div class="verse">Like a summer sky at night are her glances;</div>
- <div class="verse">Her fingers are as wood anemones in a daze of dew;</div>
- <div class="verse">Of her lips,&mdash;who shall tell!</div>
- <div class="verse">The gates of a sunset</div>
- <div class="verse">Where love dies.</div>
- <div class="verse">Her limbs are like May-blossoms</div>
- <div class="verse">Bedded on a green couch:</div>
- <div class="verse">The night sighs for her,</div>
- <div class="verse">And for the touch of her hand.&rdquo;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of course Morgan had escaped capture. Gorlois&rsquo;s men
-had hunted an hour or more, and had caught nothing, not
-even a glimpse of the purple gown for which they searched.
-Radamanth, who had had the affair from Gorlois&rsquo;s own lips,
-came and told Igraine, and began to ask her who this woman
-foe of hers was. Igraine put him off with a fable. She had
-no thought of letting him have knowledge of her love for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-Pelleas, and she was glad in measure that Morgan had
-escaped capture, and so left her secret in oblivion. The
-woman might have proved troublesome if brought to bay,
-for she had as much right to claim the truth as had
-Igraine. Better let a snake go than take it by the tail.</p>
-
-<p>In a week or so there was nothing left to mark the
-incident save the red lines in Igraine&rsquo;s white skin. Flowers
-and fruit came daily in from Gorlois, and every evening
-there was music under the window, till she began to consider
-these perpetual courtesies. She was woman enough to
-know whither they all tended. As for Radamanth, he was
-more kind to her than ever, seeing how the wind might
-blow favours into his ready lap. Gorlois was a great and
-noble gentleman, and the goldsmith had an intense respect
-for the nobility.</p>
-
-<p>The very first day that Igraine walked abroad again
-after her seclusion, she fell in straight with Gorlois. By
-Gildas&rsquo;s advice, she had gone, presumably for her health&rsquo;s
-sake, to the baths with Lilith; and Gorlois, warned by the
-leech himself, followed alone, and overtook them near the
-porch. He was very gracious, very sympathetic, very
-splendid. He begged a meeting with Igraine after she had
-bathed, and since the girl had something in her heart that
-made her wish to speak with him, she consented, and left
-him in the laconicum, proposing to meet him in the rose-walk
-an hour later. Truth to tell, she intended questioning
-him as to Pelleas, whether Gorlois had heard of a
-knight so named; and also as to Uther, whether he had
-yet been heard of in any region of Britain. She knew
-Gorlois would take her consent as favour. Still, she imagined
-she could venture a little for her heart&rsquo;s sake without
-much prick of conscience.</p>
-
-<p>An hour later, true to her word, she went alone into the
-rose-walk, a grassy pathway banked with yews, and hemmed
-with a rich tangle of red blooms. Gorlois was there
-waiting as for a tryst. He was full of smiles and staunch
-glances as he led her to a seat that was set back in an alcove,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-carved from the dense green of the yews, where they
-might talk at leisure, and out of sight. Igraine&rsquo;s hair lay
-loosened over her shoulders to dry in the sun. It had been
-perfumed, and the scent of it swept over Gorlois like a violet
-mist. He sat watching her for a while in silence, as she
-plied her comb with the sun-shaken masses pouring over
-her face like ruddy smoke.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lady Igraine,&rdquo; he said at length.</p>
-
-<p>The girl&rsquo;s eyes glimmered at him slantwise from behind
-her hair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I knew your father, Malgo, before his death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine merely nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am claiming to be the friend of his daughter, seeing
-that I have learnt the very colour of her several girdles,
-the number and pattern of her gowns since I rode into
-Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The venture in flattery was perhaps more suggestive
-than Igraine could have wished.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You must waste much time, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But little.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am sorry I have so poor a wardrobe, that you have
-fathomed the whole of it in less than a month. To tell the
-truth, when I came into Winchester, I had only one gown,
-and that rather ragged.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They did not give you green and gold at Avangel?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, the good women wore grey to typify the colour of
-their souls.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois laughed in his keen quiet fashion. The girl&rsquo;s
-eyes were wonderfully bright and subtle, and he had never
-seen such a splendour of hair. He longed to finger it, to
-let it run through his fingers like amber wine. Leaning
-one elbow on the stone back of the seat, and his head on his
-palm, he watched the silver comb rippling at its work, with
-a kind of dreamy complacency.</p>
-
-<p>The girl&rsquo;s voice broke out suddenly upon him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois attended.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You know many of the knights and gentlemen famed
-for arms in Britain?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I may so boast myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was once befriended, a piece of passing courtesy, yet
-I have always been curious to learn the character and estate
-of the man who did me this service. Have you heard of a
-knight named Pelleas?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois fingered his sharp-peaked black beard, and looked
-blankly irresponsive.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have never known such a knight,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Strange.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never so. We men of the woods and moors often ride
-under false colours, sometimes to try our friends on the sly,
-sometimes to escape cognisance. The man who befriended
-you may have been Pelleas in your company.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine cut in with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Ambrosius at home,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;even Princes
-love masquerading in strange arms. Meadow-flower that
-I am, I have never seen the stately folk of the court&mdash;Ambrosius
-or Uther. I have heard Uther is an ugly man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If strength makes a man ugly, Uther may claim
-ugliness.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Picture a dark man with black hair, eyes packed away
-under heavy brows, a straight mouth, and a great clean-shaven
-jaw that looks sullen as death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not beautiful in words.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois stretched his shoulders, and half yawned behind
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther is a man with a conscience like a north wind,&rdquo;
-he said; &ldquo;always lashing him into tremendous effort for the
-sake of duty. He has the head and neck of a lion, the grip
-of a bear. You have never known Uther till you have seen
-him in battle. Then he is like a mountain thundering
-down against a sea, a black flood plunging through a pine
-forest. A quaint, gentle, devilish, God-ridden madman; I
-can paint him no other way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Igraine laughed softly to herself.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A man worth seeing,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should judge so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me, is it true that Uther has gone into the wilds,
-and been seen of no man many days?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther left Winchester more than two months ago, and
-no word of him has come to Ambrosius.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Curious.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, nothing is curious in Uther. If I were to
-hear some day that he had ridden down to Hades to fight
-a pitched battle with Satan, I should say, &lsquo;Poor Satan, I
-warrant he has a sore head.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; quoth Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her hair, tilted her chin, and looked at Gorlois
-out of the corners of her eyes. She guessed her power, was
-young, and a woman. It tempted her to read this creature
-called &ldquo;man&rdquo; in his various forms and phases, and hold his
-heart in the hollow of her hand. Her interest in Gorlois
-was no discourtesy to her love for Pelleas. She had seen few
-men in her time; they seemed strange beings, strong yet
-weak, wise yet very foolish, sometimes heroic, yet utter
-children.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois, who had the sun in his eyes, beheld her as in an
-unusual mist. He was warming to life, for his brain seemed
-full of the sound of harping, and his blood blithe with
-summer. Stretching out a hand he touched Igraine&rsquo;s hair
-as it poured over her shoulders, for the red gold threads
-seemed magnetic to his fingers, and the glimmer of her eyes
-made his tough flesh creep.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have wonderful hair,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I learnt that long ago,&rdquo; drawing the strand away.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The dawn of knowledge.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It reaches not so very far from my feet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine hung out a flag, as it were, to try the man. She
-knew the look of Pelleas&rsquo;s eyes, and she wanted Gorlois for
-comparison. Standing up, she shook the glistening shroud
-about her while it seemed to drop perfumes and to spark out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-passion. The man&rsquo;s malady showed plainly enough on his
-face, but his eyes did not please Igraine. There was too
-much selfishness, not enough abasement. She knew Pelleas
-would have looked at her as though she was a saint in a
-church, and he but a lad from the brown ploughland.
-Igraine thought that she loved mute devotion far better than
-the bold impatient hunger on Gorlois&rsquo;s face.</p>
-
-<p>The man leant back and tilted his beard at her, while his
-eyes were half shut for the sun.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have heard it told that women are ambitious. Is it
-truth?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, all gravity again, with her tentative mischief
-banished, looked at her knees, and said she could not tell.
-Gorlois waxed subtle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you ambitious, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ambitious, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have you never wished to stand out like a bright peak
-above the world?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Or to have the glory of your beauty filling the gate of
-fame like a scarlet sky?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine forced a titter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose you are a poet, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only a fool, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All poets are fools.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How do you contrive that?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because they are for ever praising women.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And yet you are a poet, my lord!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How could I be else, madame, since I am a man?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois took a deep breath, and smiled at the dark yews,
-sombre and mysterious behind their belt of glowing roses.
-Igraine was watching his face in some uneasiness. It gave
-the profile of a strong, stark man, whose every feature spelt
-alert daring and great hardihood of mind. There was a
-keen, half-cruel look about the tight lips and impatient eyes.
-She was contrasting him with Pelleas in her heart, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-dark, brooding face of lion-like mould that so haunted her
-left little glory for Gorlois&rsquo;s lighter, leaner countenance.</p>
-
-<p>They were both strong men, but she guessed instinctively
-which was the stronger.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois turned suavely again, with his courage strung like
-a steel bow.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am a queer fellow,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine began to bind her hair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I ever loved a woman&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She could be ambitious to her heart&rsquo;s content. The
-more her pride flamed, the better I should like her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine frowned.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She would be intolerable.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois arched his eyebrows, and covered his convictions
-with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Shall I tell how I should win her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It would be a quaint tale.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In the beginning, I should half-kill any man who
-braved it out that she was not the comeliest woman in
-Britain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Somewhat harsh, my lord, but emphatic.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should make her the envy of every lady, dame, and
-damoselle in the land.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not wise.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like a golden Helen should she rise in the east; blood
-should flow about her feet like water; I would tear down
-kingdoms to pile her up a throne. Such should be my
-wooing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine looked at her lap, and said never a word for a
-minute or more. All these heroics were rather hollow to
-her ear, though she did not doubt the man&rsquo;s sincerity
-towards himself, and his earnest mind to please her. Then
-she asked Gorlois a very simple question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Imagine, my lord, that the woman loved some other
-man?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s answer came swift off his tongue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should meet him in open field, sword to sword, and
-shield to shield, and kill him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine started suddenly, grave and grey as any beadswoman.
-She did not think Pelleas would have taught any
-such doctrine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To you, that is love?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What else!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine thrust her silver bodkin into her hair with some
-vigour; there was no mirth or patience in her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I name it murder.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stark, selfish murder.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois spread his hands and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What is love?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Should I know!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Stark selfishness,&mdash;nothing more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine thought of Pelleas, and the way he had left her
-for knowledge of her imagined vows. Something in her
-heart told her that that was love indeed that had clasped
-thorns in the struggle to embrace truth. Therewith she
-wished Gorlois a very formal good-morning, refused his
-escort, and went straight home with the clear conviction
-that she had learnt something to her credit. Her talk with
-Gorlois had set a brighter halo about Pelleas&rsquo;s head.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois of Cornwall was nothing if not subtle. A selfish
-man of diplomatic mind may reach the very zenith of unselfishness
-to work his ends. Gorlois had so studied the
-expediencies and discretions of his purpose that even his love,
-headstrong though it may have been, was for the time being
-harnessed to the chariot of circumspection, whence intellect
-drove with steady hand. He had discovered for himself
-that Igraine was of sterner, prouder stuff than the general
-mob of women, and that he could not count much upon
-her vanity. She was to be won by honour, stark, unflinching
-honour, and by such alone, and Gorlois, thanks to the
-no mean wit that was in him, had judged that to his credit.
-He set about winning her at first with a consistency that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-was admirable, and a wisdom that would have honoured
-Nestor.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally enough, Radamanth was amazed. Gorlois,
-one of the first men in Britain, sitting in a goldsmith&rsquo;s
-parlour and soliciting his patronage and countenance with
-a modest manliness! Radamanth stroked his beard, strove
-to appear at ease under so intense an obligation, struggled
-to wed servility with a new-found sense of importance.
-The whole business was most astonishing; not that Gorlois
-should love the daughter of Malgo of the Redlands, but that
-he should come frankly to a Winchester merchant and
-make such a Minos of him. Radamanth beamed, stuttered,
-excused himself, crept, condescended, in one breath. When
-Gorlois had gone, the good man sat down to think in a
-sweat of wonder. Probably he would find himself feasting
-with the king before long, and certainly it might prove
-excellent for trade.</p>
-
-<p>After a cup of wine and a biscuit to restore his faculties,
-he sent for Igraine, who was in the garden, and prepared to
-parade his news with a most benevolent pleasure. He took
-a most solemn and serious mood, bowed her to a chair in
-magnificent fashion, and began in style.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear niece, I have great honour to lay before you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, who had heard nothing of Gorlois&rsquo;s visit, merely
-waited for Radamanth to unfold, with a mild and silent
-curiosity. The old man was big and benignant with the
-news he had, and when he began to speak he rolled his
-words with the sonorous satisfaction of a poet reading his
-verses to patrons in some Roman peristyle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lady Igraine,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;honour is pleasant to an old
-man, and reverence welcome as savoury pottage. Yet,
-honour to those he loves is even sweeter to him than honour
-to himself. In honouring a kinswoman of mine, a certain
-noble gentleman has poured oil of delicious flattery on my
-grey head, and treated me to such an exhibition of grace,
-frankness, and courtesy, that my heart still warms to him.
-Perhaps, my dear niece, you can guess to whom I refer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Igraine thrilled to a sudden thought&mdash;a thought of Pelleas.
-&ldquo;I cannot tell,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth could have winked, only in his present exalted
-frame of mind he remembered that such an expression was
-neither dignified nor courtly. If he were to become the
-associate of noble folk, it behoved him to raise up new ideals,
-and so he contented himself with a most ingenuous smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hear, then,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that my noble visitor was the
-Count Gorlois.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Exactly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth believed Igraine wholly overwhelmed. He
-waxed more and more patriarchal, till his very beard seemed
-to grow in dignity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Believe me, a most honourable man. Gentlemen of
-his position might well fancy other methods&mdash;well, never
-mind that. Count Gorlois came to me, like a man, to
-frankly crave my sanction for a betrothal.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stared, admired Gorlois&rsquo;s excellent plan for netting
-Faith, Hope, and Charity at one swoop, but said nothing.
-Radamanth prosed on.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Count Gorlois besought me in most courtly and flattering
-fashion to countenance him in his claims. He would
-have everything done in the light, he said, in honourable,
-manly, and open fashion&mdash;no secret loitering after dark,
-or sly kisses under hedges. Mark the gentleman, dear
-niece.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The goldsmith idled over the words as though they were
-fat morsels of flattery, and Igraine had never seen him look
-so eminently happy before. She understood quite well that
-Gorlois&rsquo;s move had inspired him into complete and glowing
-partisanship, and that she was to have those sage words of
-advice that young folk love so much. Radamanth climbed
-down, meanwhile, to material things, and began to knock
-off Gorlois&rsquo;s possessions in practical fashion on his fingers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A grand match,&rdquo; he said. "There are the castles in
-Cornwall&mdash;Terabil and Tintagel; the lands in Gore and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-elsewhere; the palace in London; and the great house here
-by the river. In Logria he has lands, I have heard,&mdash;miles
-of fat pastures, woods, and many manors, lying towards the
-great oaks of Brederwode. The man is as rich as any in
-Britain, and if death took Ambrosius or Uther&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>Igraine cut in upon his verbosity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What did you tell him, uncle?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth stared at her, with his fingers still figuring.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell him, child?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What a thing to ask. Of course I promised to further
-his cause with you in every way possible. I said we should
-soon need the priest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine groaned in spirit.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is all useless,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have no scrap of love for this man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Now Radamanth had never heard a word of Pelleas, for
-Igraine had cautioned Lilith never to speak to her father on
-the matter. Like many old people who have spent their
-lives in getting and possessing, he had lost that subtle something
-that men call &ldquo;soul.&rdquo; Sentiment to him was a foolish
-and troublesome thing when it interfered with material
-advantage or profit, or barred out Mammon, with its rod
-twined with red roses. Consequently he was taken aback
-by Igraine&rsquo;s cool reception of so momentous a blessing.
-He sat bolt upright in his chair and stared at her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear niece.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was such chagrin in his voice that Igraine, remembering
-his many kindnesses, hung her head and felt
-unhappy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do not be angry,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I do not wish you to
-speak of this more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But, my dear child, the honour, the fame, the noise
-of it!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine almost smiled at his palpable dismay, for she
-knew that her words must have flustered him not a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-little. Radamanth mopped his bald head, for the season
-was sultry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am astounded,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uncle!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let me reason with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Love is not reason.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, niece, it is prejudice. Yet I assure you Gorlois is
-a most noble soul.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If he were a seraph, uncle, I could not love him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You women are all fancy. Why, you have hardly seen
-the colour of him. Come, now!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I do not need to see more of Gorlois.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why, bless my soul, my wife never loved me till we
-had been married a month, and she had learnt my fibre.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine thought a moment. Then she asked Radamanth
-a question.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do you love Lilith?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why, girl, what a question.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would you marry her to a man she did not love or trust,
-simply because it brought gold?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth saw himself rounded in the argument like a
-rat in a corner. He sat stroking his beard, and striving to
-look pleased.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Think over it, my dear,&rdquo; he said presently.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is no need.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois will woo you like a hero.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let him. He will accomplish nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It would be a grand match.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine jumped up, kissed him to show she bore no ill
-will, and ran away much troubled to find Lilith in the garden.
-She flung herself down beside the girl in the bower of laurels,
-and told her all that passed that morning in Radamanth&rsquo;s
-parlour. Lilith listened with her brown eyes deep with
-thought, and a quiet wonder. When Igraine had finished,
-Lilith took both her hands in hers, and, kneeling before her,
-looked up into her face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What will you do, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Need you ask, dear?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Forgive me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You love Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine put her arms round Lilith&rsquo;s neck, and kissed her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IV</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Radamanth&rsquo;s words to the girl proved very true before many
-days had gone; his prophetic belief in Gorlois&rsquo;s mood found
-abundant justification in the event. Gorlois had the warm
-imagination of his race, an imagination that found extravagance
-and rich taste ready ministers to work his purpose.
-Igraine, met by all manner of devices on all possible occasions,
-began to realise the cares of those whom a purblind
-world insists on smothering with limitless favours.</p>
-
-<p>Flowers were poured in upon her, worked into posies,
-garlands, shields, harps, crosses,&mdash;all bearing with them some
-mute plea for mercy. It might have been perpetual May-day
-in Radamanth&rsquo;s house, so flowered and scented was it.
-Flowers were followed by things more tangible, a pearl-set
-cithern, a great white hound, a gold girdle, a pair of doves
-in a cage of silver wire, a necklet of rich stones gotten from
-some Byzant mart. Gorlois seemed ready to send her all
-the finery in Winchester despite her messages and her words
-to him,&mdash;&ldquo;My lord, I can suffer none of these things from
-you.&rdquo; Servants and slaves came down to Radamanth&rsquo;s house
-as though they had been sent from Sheba, while one of
-Radamanth&rsquo;s men went back from Igraine like an echo,
-bearing back the unaccepted baubles. It was a patient
-game, and rather foolish.</p>
-
-<p>These were but small flutters in Gorlois&rsquo;s sweep for the
-sun. Had not Igraine been stabbed in the public gardens!
-Gorlois put the incident to use. He formed a bodyguard of
-certain of the noble youths who were under his patronage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-and warned Igraine with all reverence that he had acted for
-her sanctity, and that a dozen gentlemen would follow near
-her when she walked abroad, or went to bath or church.
-Even her humblest stroll in the street began to partake of
-the nature of a triumphal progress. Children would gather
-to her in the gardens and throw flowers and laurel branches
-at her feet, or she would be followed by music and some
-sweet love ditty to the harp. A hundred quaint flatterers
-seemed to dog her from door to door, till she hardly dared
-to stir out of Radamanth&rsquo;s garden.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally enough, her name was soon the one name in
-Winchester. The good folk with their Celtic beauty-loving
-souls spoke of her with quaint extravagance; her skin was
-like the apple-bloom in spring, and her lips like rich red
-May; her feet moved soft and swift as sunlight through
-swaying branches; her hair was a cloud of gold plucked
-from the sky at dawn. She was gaped at and pointed at in
-the street like a prodigy. When she went into church on
-Sunday half the folk turned to stare at her, and a clear circle
-was left about her where she sat in the nave. She was for
-the season the city&rsquo;s cynosure, its poem, its gossip. Aphrodite
-might have stepped out of mythology and taken lodging
-at Radamanth&rsquo;s, to judge by the curiosity displayed by the
-people, and doubtless many a comfortable piece of business
-came to Radamanth thereby.</p>
-
-<p>Many women would have gloried for self&rsquo;s sake in such a
-pageant of flattery. It was not so with Igraine. She was
-a woman who mingled much warmth of heart with strength
-of will, and fair measure of innate wisdom; her feelings were
-too staunch and vivid to be swayed or weakened by any
-fresh circumstance, however strange and magnificent it
-might appear. Her love, once forged, could bend to no new
-craft. Her thoughts were all for Pelleas, and any glory her
-beauty received she kept it in her heart for him. Igraine
-was so eternally in love that even worldly prides seemed
-dead in her, and she had not vanity enough to be tempted
-by Gorlois&rsquo;s great homage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The whole business troubled her not a little. There was
-a certain mockery in it that hurt her heart. It was as if
-she had panted in thirst for water, and some rude hand from
-heaven had thrown down gold. Gorlois had her in measure
-at his mercy. He seemed to take all her rebuffs with a
-sublime stoicism, and she had no one to whom she could
-appeal. She wished to bide in Winchester, for the city
-seemed to promise her the best chance of seeing Pelleas or
-Uther, and of learning if these twain were one.</p>
-
-<p>One night there was music under her window. Flute,
-harp, and cithern with deep voices were pleading for Gorlois
-under the stars. Igraine listened, lying quiet, and thinking
-only of Pelleas.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">Take then my heart,</div>
- <div class="verse">My soul, my shield, my sword,&mdash;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>sang the voices under the window. Igraine kissed the gold
-cross that hung at her bosom, and longed till her heart
-seemed fit to break for yearning. If only the song had come
-from Pelleas, how fair it would have sounded in the night. As
-it was, the whole business made her feel desperately weary.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois had begun by holding somewhat aloof. It was
-part of his purpose to work behind a glowing and fantastic
-screen, serving Igraine more at a distance, in a spirit of
-melancholy that should web him round with a mystery that
-was more splendid than truth. He bore Igraine&rsquo;s passive
-antagonism for a while with a spirit of enforced fortitude,
-going cheerfully by the old and somewhat foolish saying that
-a woman&rsquo;s looks lie against her heart, and that persistence
-wins entry in the end. To do credit to Gorlois&rsquo;s self-favour,
-he never considered the ultimate shipwreck of his enterprise
-as possible. He had fame, gold, bodily favour on his side,
-and what woman, he thought, could gainsay such a chorus.
-There are some men who never fail in anticipating success,
-and Gorlois possessed that quality of mind.</p>
-
-<p>As the days went by, and the girl was still stone to him,
-he began to chafe and to look for stauncher measures. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-gay gentlemen who served him suggested various expedients;
-one, a more passionate appeal; another, sly bribery of
-servants; a third, who was young in years, hinted at humble
-despair that might evoke pity. Gorlois laughed at them
-all, and swore he would win the girl, hook or by crook, in
-a month or less, or lose all the honour his sword had won.
-He was tired of mere courtesies that ran contrary to his
-more stormy spirit. He had a liking for insolent daring, for
-a snatch at love as at an enemy&rsquo;s banner in the full swing of
-a gallop on some bloody field. Mere mild homage was all
-very well for a season. Gorlois loved mastery, and believed
-there was no wine like success.</p>
-
-<p>About this time a horde of heathen ships came from the
-east, sailed past Vectis, and began to pour their wild men
-into the country &rsquo;twixt Winchester and the sea. Hamlets
-and manors were burnt, peasant folk driven to the woods,
-the crops fired, the cattle slain. The noise of it came into
-Winchester with a rabble of frightened fugitives who had
-fled to the city for refuge. Ambrosius the king was in
-Caerleon, and Uther errant, so that the chance fell to Gorlois
-of driving the heathen into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>No man could have been more heartily glad of this
-innovation. Igraine should see him swoop like a hawk in
-his strength; she should hear how he led men, and how his
-sword drank blood. In making war on the heathen he
-would boast himself before her eyes, and show her the merit
-of manhood, and the glory of a strong arm. Winchester
-bustled like a camp. Troops poured in from Sarum, and the
-sound of war went merrily through the streets. Folk boasted
-how Gorlois would harry the heathen. He rode out one
-night with picked men at his back, and held straight for the
-coast, while Eldol of Gloucester, a veteran knight, marched
-southward before dawn with five thousand footmen. It was
-Gorlois&rsquo;s plan to cut the heathen off from their ships, and
-crush them between his knights and the spearmen led by
-Eldol.</p>
-
-<p>It was such a venture as Gorlois loved,&mdash;keen, shrill, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-full of hazards. Riding straight over hill and dale they saw
-the glimmer of waves as the sun rose, and knew they had
-touched the sea. Gorlois&rsquo;s scouts had located the main mass
-of the Jutes camped in a valley about a nunnery they had
-taken, and the British knights coming up through the woods
-saw smoke in the valley and men moving like ants about the
-reeking ruin of the holy house. Looking north they saw a
-beacon burning on a hill,&mdash;Eldol&rsquo;s signal that he had closed
-the woods, north, east, and west, with his footmen, and that
-he waited only for Gorlois to sweep up and drive the heathen
-on to the hidden spears.</p>
-
-<p>Never was there a finer light in Gorlois&rsquo;s eyes than at
-such a season. He loved the dance and noise of steel, the
-plunging hustle of horses at the gallop, the grand rage of the
-shout that curled like the foam on an ocean billow. His
-courage sang with the wind as his knights rode down over the
-green slopes in a great half-moon of steel, a moving barrier
-that rolled the savage folk northwards, and rent them like a
-harrow of iron. By the blackened walls of the nunnery
-Gorlois caught sight of a line of mutilated bodies tied to
-posts,&mdash;dead nuns, stripped, and still bleeding. The sight
-roused the wolf in him. &ldquo;Kill! kill!&rdquo; were his words as
-they rode in upon the skin-clad horde. It was savage work,
-bloody and merciless. Eldol&rsquo;s men closed in on every
-quarter, and the heathen were cut down like corn in
-summer.</p>
-
-<p>Very few went back to their ships that day. Scores lay
-dead with their fair hair drabbled in the blood about the
-ruins, and on the quiet slopes of the dale. As they had
-measured out violence to the peasant folk and women, so it
-was meted to them in turn,&mdash;vengeance, piled up, great
-measure, running over with blood. Some sixty maimed
-men were taken alive, but mere death was too mild for
-Gorlois when he remembered the slain nuns. He had
-certain of the captured burnt alive, others hacked limb from
-limb, the rest crucified near the river for the birds to feed
-upon. Then he buried the nuns, and made a great entry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-into Winchester, taking care to ride past Igraine&rsquo;s window
-with his white horse bloody to the saddle, and his armour
-splashed as he had come from the field. She should see his
-manhood, if she would not have his presents.</p>
-
-<p>This single slaughter, however, did not end matters on
-the southern shores. Bands of Saxons were forraying from
-Kent, where they had established themselves, and Gorlois
-rode out again and again to crush and kill. There would
-be battles in the woods, bloody tussles in the deep shadows
-of Andredswold, wild flights over moor and waste, triumph
-cries at sunset. Three times Gorlois rode out at the head
-of his knights from Winchester; three times he came back
-victorious, hacked and war-stained, thundered in by the
-people, past Radamanth&rsquo;s house to the church in the market-square.
-Igraine sat at her window and watched him go by,
-lowering his spear to her with all his proud love ablaze on
-his face. Had he not driven the barbarians into the very
-heel of Kent, and left many a tall man from over the seas
-rotting in sun and rain?</p>
-
-<p>It was customary year by year in Winchester to hold a
-water pageant on the river, depicting legendary and historic
-things that had passed within the shores of Britain. August
-was the pageant month, and in this particular year the display
-was made more elaborate in order to celebrate the rout
-of the heathen by Gorlois, and to please the common folk
-who had made him their idol. The pageant was of no
-little splendour. Great galleys, fittingly decorated, were
-rowed down the narrow stream amid a horde of smaller craft,
-each great barge bearing figures famed in British legend
-lore. The first barge portrayed Brute the Trojan voyaging
-for Britain; others, Locrine&rsquo;s death by the river Severn,
-Rudhudibras, mythical founder of Winchester, the reunion
-of Leyr and Cordelia, Porrex the fratricide done to death by
-damsels. One barge, draped in white and purple, moralised
-the reconciliation of Brennius and Belenus at the intercession
-of their mother. A great galley in red and white
-bore Joseph of Aramathy and the Holy Grail, and a choir of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-angels who sang of Christ&rsquo;s blood. Last of all came Alban
-the protomartyr, pictured as he knelt to meet his death by
-the sword.</p>
-
-<p>The day was blue and quiet, with hardly the shimmer of
-a cloud over the intense gaze of the sky, while banners
-of rich cloth were hung over the balustrades of the river
-terraces, and the gardens themselves were full of gay folk
-who kept carnival, and watched the boats go by. The
-great pageant galleys had hardly passed, and the small craft
-that had kept the bank were swarming out into mid-stream,
-where a great barge with gilded bulwarks and a carved
-prow came sweeping down like a swan before the wind. It
-was driven by the broad backs of twenty rowers clad in
-scarlet and gold. In the stern sat Gorlois, holding the
-tiller, with a smile on his keen lips as a quavering clamour
-went up from the gardens and the boats that lined the
-shallows.</p>
-
-<p>By Radamanth&rsquo;s house Gorlois held up a hand, and the
-blades foamed as the men backed water. The great barge
-lost weigh and lay motionless on the dappled silver of the
-stream. Slowly it was poled in to the steps that ran from
-the water&rsquo;s edge to the terrace of Radamanth&rsquo;s garden. A
-light gangway was thrown ashore, and a purple carpet
-spread upon the steps, while the men lined the stairway with
-their oars held spearwise as Gorlois went up to greet
-Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>Clad in white and gold, with a rose over her ear, she was
-sitting between Radamanth and Lilith on a bench at the
-head of the stairway. There was an implacable irresponsive
-look on her face as Gorlois came up the steps and stood in
-front of her like a courtier before a queen&rsquo;s chair. Radamanth
-and the merchant folk present were on their feet,
-and uncovered; only Igraine kept her seat in the man&rsquo;s
-presence, and looked him over as though he had been a
-beggar.</p>
-
-<p>They were left alone together on the terrace, Radamanth
-shepherding his merchant friends aside for the moment with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-the discreet desire to please the count. Gorlois stood by
-the stairhead and told Igraine the reason of his coming, as
-though she had not guessed it from the moment his barge
-had foamed up beside the steps. He told her frankly that
-he wished to speak to her alone, and that his barge gave
-her an opportunity of hearing him without his having the
-advantage of her in solitude, while the noise of oars would
-drown their words. Igraine listened to him with a solemn
-face. She began to feel that she must face her destiny and
-give the man the truth for good. Procrastination would
-avail nothing against such a man as Gorlois. Being so
-minded, she gave Gorlois her hand and hardened herself to
-satisfy him that day.</p>
-
-<p>Away went the great barge before the strong sweep of
-the long oars. Igraine watched the water slide by&mdash;foaming
-like a mill race as the blades cut white furrows in the
-tide. The river gleamed with colour as innumerable galleys,
-skiffs, and coracles drifted in the shallows or darted aside to
-give passage to Gorlois&rsquo;s barge. Fair stone houses, gardened
-round with green, slid back on either side. They passed
-the spectacular galleys one by one, and the wooden wharfs
-packed with the mean folk of the city, and foaming on
-under the great water-gate, drew southward into the open
-country and the fields.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine looked at Gorlois, and found his face impenetrable
-with thought. A fillet of gold bound his hair, and he
-was wearing his great sword, and an enamelled belt over his
-rich tunic. The cushions of the barge had been sprinkled
-with perfumes, and the floor covered ankle deep with
-flowers. Igraine groaned in spirit, and read the old extravagance
-that had persecuted her so long, and made a
-mockery of her love for Pelleas.</p>
-
-<p>Gentle meads lapped greenly to the willows, giving
-place anon to woods that seemed to stride down and snatch
-the river for a silver girdle. The festival folk and their
-skiffs were out of sight and hearing, yet Gorlois&rsquo;s barge ran
-on, to plunge into emerald shadows, tunnels whose floors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-seemed of the blackest crystal webbed with nets of green
-and blue, whose vaultings were the dense groinings of the
-trees. Not a wind stirred. The great curving galleries
-in the woods were dark and mysterious, the water like
-glistening basalt, the trees dreaming over their own images
-in an ecstasy of silence. The foam from the oars was very
-white, and the moist swish of the blades made the silence
-more solemn by contrast, while the water seemed to catch
-a golden flicker from the flanks of the barge.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine knew well enough what was in the man&rsquo;s heart
-as he sat handling the tiller, and watching her with his
-restless eyes. She was quite cold and undisturbed in spite
-of her being at his mercy, and the consciousness that in her
-heart she did not trust him vastly. Gorlois had spoken
-only of the town, and they were running on under dense
-foliage into the forest solitudes that edged the river. Yet
-Igraine had faith in her own wit, and believed herself a
-match for Gorlois, or any man, for that matter, save Pelleas.
-Gorlois passed the time by telling her of his battles in
-Andredswold, how he had driven the heathen into Thanet,
-and freed Andred&rsquo;s town from leaguer. Igraine began to
-wonder how long it would be before he would turn to
-matters nearer to his heart. She had marshalled up her
-courage for the argument, and this waiting under arms for
-the bugle-call did not please her.</p>
-
-<p>The day had already slipped into evening, for the water
-pageant was ordered late, so that it might merge into a
-lantern frolic on the river after dusk. Igraine, seeing how
-the light lapsed, told Gorlois to have the barge turned for
-Winchester. She had hardly spoken when the boat ran
-out from the trees into open water. In the west the sky
-was already aflame, ridged tier above tier with burning
-clouds, while the blaze fainted zenithwards into gold and
-azure. A queer cry as from a man weary of torture came
-down from the west. On a low hill near the river, bleak
-against the sky, stood a black concourse of beams set upright
-in the ground, looking like the charred pillars of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-burnt house. They were crosses, and the bodies of men
-crucified.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois pointed to them with the evening glow on his
-face, and taking a horn that hung at his belt, blew a loud
-call thereon. At the sound a vulture rose from a crossbeam,
-and went flapping heavenwards&mdash;a black blot against
-the scarlet frieze of the west. Others followed, like evil
-things driven from their food. Again the cry, the wail
-from one who had hung torn and wracked in the parching
-sun, came down from the darkening hill.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine shuddered and felt cold at the sound, and watched
-the figures against the sky with a kind of awe.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who are these?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dogs from over the sea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Some are still alive.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;These pirates are hard; they die slowly, despite beak
-and claw. Such be the death of all who burn holy houses
-and homes, and put women and children to the sword.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Take them down, or let them be killed outright.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;At my prayer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What I have done, I have done.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Cruelly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Cruelly, madame! You should have seen twenty dead
-nuns tied to stakes as I have seen, and you would gloat and
-be glad as I am. By God, little mercy had this offal at my
-hands in the glades of Andredswold. I burnt, and crucified,
-and tore with horses. Mere steel is too good for such as these.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What is hate unless it is hate? I can never brook an
-enemy to Britain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine had sudden insight into the core of Gorlois&rsquo;s nature.
-She understood, in a vague, swift way, what primæval instincts
-were hid in him ready at the beck of baser feelings
-such as jealousy or smitten pride. Woman-like, she recoiled
-from a man whose strength was so inflexible that it owned
-no pity or leavening kindness where malice or anger was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-concerned. She loved strength, and the natural wrath of a
-man, but she had no touch of the Semiramis about her, and
-her heart could not echo Gorlois&rsquo;s wolf-like cry.</p>
-
-<p>The rowers had turned the barge, and they were soon
-back again under the shadows of the trees. It was dim and
-ghostly with the onrush of night, while a faint fire flickered
-through the trees from the west and touched the sullen
-water with a reddish flame. Gorlois&rsquo;s face was in the shadow.
-He was leaning over the tiller towards Igraine, and his eyes
-seemed to burn out upon her face and to make her heart
-beat faster. She sat as much away from him as the gunwale
-suffered, and looked ahead over the misty river, or up into
-the dense, black bosoms of the trees.</p>
-
-<p>The foamy rush of the oars and the grind of the looms
-in the rowlocks half drowned Gorlois&rsquo;s words as he spoke to
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have read me to the heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine turned and looked him full in the face. Now
-that the brunt had come, she was strong and ready to tell
-the man the truth, though it might be bleak and bitter to
-his pride. Gorlois was very near her, and she could see his
-white teeth between his lips, and the glint of his eyes as he
-leant towards her in the shadows.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you ambitious, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not even a little?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, I have no more ambition in me than one of
-those dead men hanging athwart the sunset.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are a queer woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pardon, I have a conscience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois bit his lip, stared in her face, and set a hand upon
-her wrist.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can never shirk me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never shirk the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come now, give me the word.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, may I save you pain in the telling of it! You
-can never come near my heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Woman, never be so sure.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois drew back, and said never another word. Igraine
-watched him furtively as his keen profile hung near her in
-the dusk clear as marble. Now and again his eyes gleamed
-out upon her and made her fear the moment, while the oars
-swung out over the smiling stream, and the black woods
-started by like night.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the lights of Winchester showed up against the
-northern sky, and far ahead over a straight stretch of water
-they could see the lanterns and torches of the folk who kept
-festival. A golden mist and the noise of music came down
-to them, as they surged under the great water-gate and ran
-on through the city amid a glimmering web of lights and
-laughter. Soon the barge found the shallows under white
-walls, and Igraine was standing on the steps leading to
-Radamanth&rsquo;s garden, with a starry sky sweeping like a
-wheel above the world.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois went slowly from her down the steps, with a
-face that was dark and brooding. Torchlight glimmered
-on the fillet of gold about his hair, on the splendid setting
-of his baldric, and the scabbard of his sword. At the
-water&rsquo;s edge he lifted up his face to her out of the night.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It shall be life or death,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Then he was swept away with a red flare of torches over
-the river, and Igraine went solemn-eyed to bed.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>V</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Not a word of Uther yet, no sound of his name in
-Winchester, though Igraine lived on in Radamanth&rsquo;s house,
-and hoped for light in the dark.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois had had the truth, and she wondered what would
-come of it. Lulled by an ingenuous reasoning into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-belief that she would be free of the man, she began to breathe
-again and to take liberty in her hand. She did not think
-Gorlois could plague her longer after the blunt answer she
-had given him. His pride would drag him aside, make
-further homage impossible, and there the matter would end.</p>
-
-<p>If Igraine believed this, then she was in very gross error.
-Many men never show their true fibre till they are given
-the blunt lie, and Gorlois was never more himself than when
-baffled. There was much of the hawk about him, and
-Igraine had underrated his pride if she expected it to take
-league with her against its kinsman passion. Her measure
-only uncovered the darker side of the man&rsquo;s nature, and
-sounded the doom of a lighter, gayer chivalry. Gorlois&rsquo;s
-pride and self-love never dragged in the wind, but held him
-taut to the storm, as though determined to weather all the
-perversities of which a woman&rsquo;s heart is capable. In truth,
-Igraine had done the very thing least likely to free her from
-the man&rsquo;s thought; she had taunted his passion and thrown
-down a challenge to his pride.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois kept his own counsel, and frowned down the
-mischievous curiousness of his friends when they laughed
-at him and asked how the girl framed for a wife. He struck
-Brastias his squire to the ground for daring to jest sympathetically
-on the subject. Those who went about his house
-and hunted and diced with him soon found that he was in
-no temper for light raillery or the sly privileges of an intimate
-tongue. The fabric of a mere nice romance had
-stiffened into sterner, darker proportions. There was the
-look of a dry desire in the man&rsquo;s eyes, a lean hungry silence
-about him that made his men whisper. Some of them had
-seen Gorlois when he hunted down the heathen. They
-knew his temper, and the cast of his features when there
-was some lust of enterprise in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>About that time a knight came from Wales thrusting a
-woman&rsquo;s beauty upon every man with the point of his spear.
-As had been his custom elsewhere, he set up a green pavilion
-outside the walls, and daily rode out armed to the sound of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-a trumpet to declare a certain Amoret of Caerleon the
-fairest gentlewoman in Christendom. He was a big man,
-red and burly, and had overthrown every like fanatic for
-love&rsquo;s sake on this particular adventure. Gorlois heard of
-the fellow with no little satisfaction. Every finger of him
-itched to spill blood, and he took the deed on him, vowing
-it should be the last peace-offering to Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>Arming one morning, he rode down and fought the
-Green Knight in his meadow outside the walls. It took
-them an hour to settle the matter. At the end thereof the
-errant from Wales was lying impotent and bloody in his
-tent, and the name of Amoret aped the ineffectual moon.
-Afterwards Gorlois rode into the town, war-stained as he
-was, found Igraine at her window, and presented her the
-Green Knight&rsquo;s token on the point of his spear.</p>
-
-<p>It was a woman&rsquo;s sleeve in green silk, and edged with
-pearls. Igraine saw a crowd of upturned faces about the
-man on the white horse. His bright arms seemed to burn
-in upon her, and to light a sudden impatience in her heart.
-She took the green sleeve from the spear, and looking Gorlois
-full in the face, in reckless mood she threw the thing down
-under his horse&rsquo;s hoofs.</p>
-
-<p>There was a great hush all through the street at the deed,
-and Gorlois started red as a man struck across the face with
-a whip. His eyes seemed to grow large, like the eyes of an
-angry dog. Never had folk seen him look so black. He
-stared up a moment at Igraine, shook his spear, and trampling
-the green sleeve under the hoofs of his horse, rode away
-without a word through the glum and gaping crowd.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine had thrown down the glove with a vengeance.
-It was a mad enough method of beating off the pride of
-a man such as Gorlois, whose temper grew with the blows
-given, and who knew no moderation in love or in hate.
-Gorlois had ridden home through the town that day to have
-his wounds dressed, and to spend half the night in a fury of
-cursing. Yet for all his bitterness he had the power of
-level thought, and of taking ground for the future. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-would read this woman a lesson; that much he swore on
-the cross of his sword; and the early morning saw him
-again at Radamanth&rsquo;s, strenuous to speak his mind.</p>
-
-<p>The goldsmith happened to know that Igraine was alone
-in the garden. Without noise or ceremony he sent Gorlois
-in to her, locked the door on them both, and went to watch
-from a narrow window on the stairs. He swore that Gorlois
-should have his own way, and not go balked for a woman&rsquo;s
-whim.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was sitting sewing in the arbour of laurels with
-the little gold cross hanging down over the bosom of her
-dress. A grass walk led to the arbour between beds of
-flowers. As she sat stitching she heard the sound of feet
-in the grass, and saw a shadow slanting across the entry.
-She expected Lilith, but looking up, found Gorlois.</p>
-
-<p>He was white from his wounds of yesterday and the
-blood he had lost by the Green Knight&rsquo;s sword. His left
-arm lay in a sling of red silk. Igraine noted in her sudden
-half-fear how his eyes were very bright, and that his beard
-looked coal-black below his bloodless cheeks. There was
-something in his face too that made Igraine cautious.</p>
-
-<p>She rose and folded her embroidery in the most unperturbed
-and quiet fashion, though she was thinking hard all
-the same. Gorlois watched her, and held back for her to
-speak, with a hollow fire creeping into his eyes, for the
-girl&rsquo;s passionless mood chafed him. He had no gentleness
-towards her for the moment; such love as he knew had
-been blown into a red beacon by starved and covetous desire.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A word with you,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>The speech was rough and pertinent, showing the trend
-of the man&rsquo;s purpose. He had abandoned superficialities.
-Igraine, gathering up her silks, turned and faced him with
-the frankness of a full moon. Gorlois saw her lips tighten,
-and there was a temper swimming in her eyes that promised
-abundant spirit and no shirking. If he had launched out
-to rouse her from passive antagonism, he could not have
-chosen a better method.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Igraine made a step towards the house, but two strides
-put Gorlois in her path.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Make way&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a foot till you have the truth out of me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have a care,&mdash;I will be stormed at by no man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Woman, look at me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was looking at him with all the temper she
-could summon. If Gorlois thought to ride straight over
-her courage, he was enormously mistaken. She would
-match him for all his hectoring.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you are not a fool,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you will end this
-nonsense, and go.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Am I a scullion?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You should know, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have not bled for nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As you will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What have you to say to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine lost all patience, tossed her embroidery aside, and
-simply flashed out at him with all her soul.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Say!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I have somewhat to say, and that
-bitter; listen if you will. You, Gorlois of Cornwall, who
-bade you make my name a byword in Winchester? Listen
-to me,&mdash;hear the truth, and profit&mdash;you who pestered me
-with mad tricks till I hated it all and held it insolence.
-Who asked you to make me gossip for a city, did I? Who
-took your presents? Who told you the truth? Who
-threw your token under the hoofs of your horse to shame
-you? I have mocked you enough, now leave me in peace,
-or rue it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By God, madame&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t echo me. Go, get out of my sight; I hate
-you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois flushed to the temples in this wind of passion.
-The girl looked splendid to him in her great anger, her
-head thrown back and her eyes steady on him as stars.
-The scorn of her beauty leapt over him like crimson light,
-and he was more a sensation than a man. He had a great
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>thirst in him to grip her with his hands, to bend her straight
-body as he would bend a bow, to strangle up the scorn in
-her throat with his own breath. He went near her, stooping
-and staring in her face.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_155.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>&ldquo;A SUDDEN MADNESS WHIRLED GORLOIS AWAY&rdquo;</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mark my words.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You golden shrew, you temptation of tempers&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hold off&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By God! I&rsquo;ll tame you, don&rsquo;t doubt me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, very watchful, slipped past him suddenly like
-light, and walked for the house with a sweeping air that bade
-him keep his distance. Coming to the door of the house,
-she tried it but found the lock shot. The red badge of a
-new anger showed upon either cheek. She turned on
-Gorlois; her eyes blazed out at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A pretty trick!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What now, madame?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You had this door locked.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You lie in your throat.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Radamanth&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Open it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have no key.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s figure seemed to dilate and grow taller, and
-her eyes shone well-nigh as bright in colour as her hair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Obey me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not if I had the key.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Obey me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will be master before the sun is at noon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You dog!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A sudden madness whirled Gorlois away. He went red
-from the neck, clutched at Igraine&rsquo;s wrist and held it. For
-a moment they stood rigid. The girl could not shake him
-off although he had but one hand to hold her. His breath was
-hot upon her face as he pressed her back against the wall,
-and held her there till his lips touched her neck. Igraine,
-breathing fast and straining from him with all her strength,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-set a hand on his face and thrust him away. She twisted
-her wrist free, and slipped from between him and the wall.
-Then the door opened, and Radamanth stood by them.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine slipped away with a white face, and running
-above to her chamber threw herself down on the bed, and
-cried for Pelleas. She heard Gorlois stride through the
-house, heard the gate crash as he went out into the street.
-Shame and loneliness were on her like despair, and she was
-weak and shaken after her anger, and very hungry for love
-and comfort. The world seemed a dull blank about her,
-cold, irresponsive, and grey as a November evening. Every
-hand seemed against her. Even Radamanth, the man of
-serious years, had turned the key upon her, more kind to
-Gorlois than herself. Her thoughts were very bitter as she
-lay and brooded over it all.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she heard some one coming up the stairs.
-Darting to the door, she bolted it, and went back to the bed,
-while a hand rapped out a somewhat diffident summons,
-and Radamanth&rsquo;s voice came in to her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear niece,&rdquo; it said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine made no answer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear niece, let me have a word with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Still no answer. Radamanth tried the door and found it
-fastened.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois is gone,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine remained obdurate, with face drawn and sullen-eyed.
-She heard him shuffle down the stairs again, go into
-his parlour, and shut the door very gently, like a man who
-is ashamed. Then all was quiet save for casual footsteps
-in the street, and the garrulous chatter of a starling on the
-tiles.</p>
-
-<p>Noon had come and gone a long while, and still Igraine
-lay in her room and moped. She felt sore and grieved to
-the heart, all her sanguine courage was at low ebb. Winchester
-seemed a prison-house where she was shut up with
-Gorlois. The man&rsquo;s greed and power of soul seemed to
-stare upon her till white honour folded its hands over its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-breast and turned to flee. Oh for Pelleas and the brave look
-of those honest eyes, the staunch touch of those great
-hands. He seemed to stand up above the world, above the
-selfishness, the lust, the violence, like a pine on some lonely
-hill. She could trust, she could believe. To find him
-would give her peace.</p>
-
-<p>As she lay there that noontide a new purpose came to
-her, and lighted up hope. It was frail and flickering
-enough, but still, it burned. She would leave Radamanth&rsquo;s
-house and go afoot into the world to find a shadow. Anything
-was better than lying cooped in the place for dread of
-Gorlois. She had long contemplated such a measure, and
-that morning in Radamanth&rsquo;s garden gave her decision and
-made her strong.</p>
-
-<p>She rose up from the bed and hunted out her old
-Avangel habit from a cupboard in the wall. Then she set
-to to doff the rich stuffs Radamanth had given her, the
-embroidered tunic, the coloured leather shoes, the goodly
-enamelled girdle. In their stead she stood again in the old
-grey gown, hood, and sandals, with a little thrill of delicious
-recollection. It was like stepping back into the dream of an
-enchanted past.</p>
-
-<p>She had hardly ended the transformation when there
-came a shy tap at her door, and a mild voice calling to her
-from the landing. It was the girl Lilith. Igraine felt a
-sudden warmth at her heart as she let her in and barred the
-door again. Lilith stood and stared at her, her great brown
-eyes wide with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why this old dress, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will tell you, dear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you have been crying, for your eyes are red.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine took the soft-voiced little woman to the window-seat
-and told her sadly enough all the doings of the morning.
-Even Lilith looked ashamed and showed her anger openly.
-Radamanth had confessed nothing of what had passed in
-the garden.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never loved my father less before,&rdquo; she said. "I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-should never have thought this mean trick of him. I am
-ashamed, Igraine."</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never trouble, dear, you are my joy in Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And why this old nun&rsquo;s habit?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am going to leave you, child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith clutched at her with both hands, her face suddenly
-white and almost piteous.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, no, Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must, dear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Forgive&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is not that alone. I cannot rest here longer. Gorlois
-and the city have crushed the heart out of me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith lifted up her child&rsquo;s face to her, and then began to
-sob unrestrained on Igraine&rsquo;s bosom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It seems cruel,&rdquo; she whimpered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no, it is best for me after all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But where will you go, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Heaven knows, dear. I cannot rest here longer after
-this morning. I feel as if I should stifle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hush, dear, don&rsquo;t weaken me. I am hard put as it is.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They were both weeping now. Lilith&rsquo;s slim body
-shook as she lifted up her face to Igraine&rsquo;s, and looked at
-her through her tears. She had learnt to love Igraine, and
-jealousy of her tall and splendid kinswoman had had no
-place in her heart. Lilith possessed to perfection the power
-of sympathy, and being a simple little soul who lived wholly
-for the present, she perhaps felt the more for that very
-reason. She could not say evil enough of Gorlois, nor put
-too much kindness into her kisses as she sat with her head
-on Igraine&rsquo;s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You cannot go out alone in the world,&rdquo; she said
-presently.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was silent.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know father would never forgive himself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There are convents, child. They would guard and give
-me harbour for a time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A convent&mdash;but you hate the life.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I could only hear of Uther, I would&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, I know. But will you go, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My mind is made up; nothing can change it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then let me come with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine kissed her, but shook her head at the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I love you for the wish, dear, but I could never drag
-you into my own troubles, and it would be very wrong to
-Radamanth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon they had many words together in
-Igraine&rsquo;s room, and dusk caught them still talking. Igraine
-had made Lilith promise that Radamanth should know
-nothing of her flight till the following morning. Lilith
-proved a little obstinate at first, but yielded in the end for
-fear of grieving Igraine. With the dusk she crept downstairs
-and brought up food. Igraine made a meal, while
-Lilith, with her tears still falling, put up food and a few
-trifles into a bundle, slipping in all the little store of money
-she had. Then she ran softly downstairs to see if the way
-were clear. Radamanth had gone to supper with a merchant
-friend, and the house seemed quiet and very lonely. In the
-passage-way the two girls took leave of each other, Lilith
-clinging to Igraine for a moment with all her heart. With
-sad eyes Igraine left her, and went out into the night.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VI</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Igraine found lodging that night in the great abbey of St.
-Helena that Pelleas had spoken of on their ride from the
-island manor. Posing to the portress as one who had
-wandered long after her escape from Avangel, she was taken
-to the refectory, where supper was being spread by the
-juniors. The women of the place gathered round her, and
-Igraine inquired with some qualms for any chance news of
-Malt, Claudia, and the rest, but getting nothing she felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-more confident. She told them her name was Melib&oelig;a, and
-she recounted at length the burning of Avangel and her
-subsequent wanderings, carefully purging the tale of all that
-might seem strange to their virgin ears, or set their tongues
-a-clacking. The women were very kind to her, partly for
-her own sake, and partly for the interesting gossip she had
-brought them.</p>
-
-<p>At supper she sat next a young and merry nun who
-shared her misericords with her. The good women of the
-place were suffered to talk between vespers and complines,
-and Igraine, sly at heart, edged the talk to a tone for which
-she thirsted, and began to speak to her neighbours of Gratia,
-Abbess of Avangel.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Did any of you know her?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only by fame,&rdquo; said a fat nun opposite Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have heard she was near of kin to the King,&rdquo; said
-another, who drooped her lids in very modest fashion.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine started in thought.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Aurelius?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>The nun nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How were they related?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have heard Gratia was his aunt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And aunt to Uther also?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course, seeing they are brothers.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine looked at her wooden platter, and pressed the
-little gold cross to her bosom with her hand. And now a
-strange thing happened. The old nun opposite Igraine,
-who was the Mistress of the Novices, brought out news
-that she had heard in the Abbess&rsquo;s parlour that very
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther has been seen again,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The word snapped out like a bolt from a bow, and
-brought the nuns&rsquo; eyes on Igraine across the table.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The man comes and goes like a shadow. He is ever
-riding alone to do some great deed against the beasts, or
-against the heathen. A great soul is Uther.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here were tidings dropped like dew out of heaven at the
-very hour she stood in need of them. Igraine felt the mist
-lighten appreciably in her brain. She popped an olive into
-her mouth and spoke almost carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where is Uther?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;At Sarum town. He rode, they say, to the great camp
-there looking like a ghost, or as though he had been playing
-Simeon on a pillar.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine merely nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther always looks a serious soul. Have you ever seen
-him, sister?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never. A dark man?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;With a face like a sun and a thunder-cloud rolled into
-one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A good man!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So they say; he has a clean look.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A little bell began to sound to call them away to
-complines. Igraine went with the rest into the solemn
-chapel, and let the chant sweep into her soul, and the prayers
-take her heart to heaven. Incense floated down, colours
-shone and glimmered on the walls, the dim lamps shivered
-like stars under the roof. Igraine felt her hollow heart
-warm as a rose in the full blaze of a golden noon. She said
-her prayers very fervently that night, for love was awake in
-her and glad of her new-blossomed hope. She would go to
-the great camp at Sarum and see this Uther for herself.</p>
-
-<p>She had little comradeship with sleep in the great dormitory
-that night. When the matins bell rang she was up
-and ready for her flight like a young lark in the day. After
-chapel she begged a pittance from the cellaress and stowed
-it with her bundle in the little wallet Lilith had given her,
-excusing her early going on the plea that she had far to
-walk that day. She set out briskly from the grey shadows
-of the abbey. The place lay quite close by the western
-gate, so that she was soon beyond the walls and in the fields
-and orchards where all was goldly quiet at that early hour.</p>
-
-<p>Winchester stood like a prison-house, void and fooled, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-the east. Igraine turned and looked down at it awhile
-huddled in its great girdle of stone, a medley of towers,
-roofs, and mist-wrapped trees. She shook her fist at it with
-a noiseless little laugh when she thought of Gorlois. Further
-yet to the east she could see the blue pine-smirched ridge
-where Pelleas had built her that little bower on the night
-he had left her sleeping. Her eyes grew deep with desire
-as she thought of it all, even as she had thought of it a
-thousand times since then. Pelleas&rsquo;s dark face was garlanded
-with green in her memory, and trouble, as it ever does, had
-made love take deeper root in her bosom.</p>
-
-<p>Cheeriness comes with action. Igraine, fettered no
-longer, footed it along the road with snatches of song on
-her lips, and her eyes full of summer. A quiet wind came
-up from the west, and the clear morning air suited her
-courage. All the wide world seemed singing; the trees
-had an epithalamium on their whispering tongues, and the
-sky seemed strewn with white garlands. The tall corn in
-its occasional cohorts bowed down to her with murmuring
-acclaim as though it guessed her secret.</p>
-
-<p>When she had gone a league or so she sat down under a
-tree and made a meal from the stuff in her wallet. Country
-folk went by on the road, for it was market-day in Winchester.
-One apple-cheeked lad seeing a nun sitting there
-came devoutly with his palms full of fruit taken from his
-ass&rsquo;s pannier, and made his offering with a shy smile and a
-bend of the knee. Igraine, touched, blessed him most
-piously, and gave him a kiss to cap it. The lad blushed
-and went away thinking he had never seen such a pretty
-nun before, and wondering if there were many like her in
-the great abbey. Igraine watched him towards Winchester,
-and wished some country girl joy of a good husband.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she held on again in great spirits, nor had she
-gone very far when a tinkling of bells came up behind her
-with a merry clatter of hoofs. Turning aside to give passage,
-she looked back and saw an old gentleman riding comfortably
-on a white mule with two servants jogging along behind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-him on cobs. The old man&rsquo;s bridle was fringed with little
-silver bells that made a thin jingle as he rode; he was
-solidly gowned in plum-coloured cloth turned over with
-sable, and seemed of comfortable degree, judging by his trappings.
-Igraine looked up in his face as he passed by, while
-the old gentleman stared down to see what sort of womanhood
-lurked under a nun&rsquo;s hood. The man on the mule
-was Eudol, Radamanth&rsquo;s bosom gossip.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hey now, on my soul,&rdquo; said the little merchant, reining
-in with a will; &ldquo;what have we here, my dear, gadding
-about nunwise on a high-road? My faith, I must hold a
-catechism.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, knowing the old man&rsquo;s vulnerability, answered
-with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Master Eudol, you are a very lady&rsquo;s man, a gem of
-discretion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So, and truth,&rdquo; said the merchant, with a chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine went close to him and patted the white mule&rsquo;s
-neck, while the serving men held at a wise distance.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am running away from Winchester,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Strange sport, my dear.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now you must not tell a soul, on your honour.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a living soul, on my honour.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine let her eyes flit a laughing look up at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why then, Master Eudol,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;if you will order
-one of your men to walk, I will get up and ride along with
-you for a league or two. There is trust for you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Eudol appeared entranced with the suggestion. He
-ordered one of his fellows to dismount, to spread a cloak
-over the saddle, to shorten a stirrup leather and give Igraine
-his knee. The girl was soon mounted, seated side fashion
-with one sandalled foot in the stirrup and one hand on the
-pommel to steady her. She flanked Eudol&rsquo;s white mule,
-and they rode on side by side at a level tramp, with the
-henchmen some twenty paces in the rear.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol soon waxed fatherly, as was his custom. He
-twitted Igraine on the temerity of her venture with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-senile and pedantic jocosity of an old man. He said things
-that would have been impertinent on the tongue of a
-youngster, and exerted to the full that eccentric fad of age,
-the supposition that youth needs pleasant patronage and
-nothing more. Old men, holding young folk to be fools,
-reserve to their rusty brains the privilege of seeming wise.
-They are content to straddle the crawling, leather-jointed
-circumspection that they call knowledge. The bird flutters
-to his mate, sings, soars, and is taken before night by the
-fowler. The snail creeps his rheumy round covered with the
-slime and slobber of prudence, to rot in the end under a tree-stump,
-unless some good throstle cracks him prematurely on
-a stone. Eudol had something of the snail about him, but
-he assayed none the less to ape the soaring of youth with a
-very ragged pair of wings. That morning he flew with a
-senile eagerness for Igraine&rsquo;s favour, and thought himself
-a match for any young man in the matter of light chivalry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come now, my dear,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;let us have a good look
-at you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, sir?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My word, you make a gorgeous nun. Who ever saw
-such eyes under a hood before! My dear, you are quite
-foolhardy to go pilgrimaging alone; men are such rogues,
-and you have such a pretty face.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a cringing tone about the old sinner that
-made Igraine thoroughly despise him. He seemed to combine
-elderly bravado with smooth servility, qualities peculiarly
-obnoxious to the girl&rsquo;s spirit. She had never liked or trusted
-Eudol overmuch in the past, but she was at pains to be civil
-to him now, seeing that he might serve her in sundry ways.
-She took his speeches with outward graciousness, and laughed
-at him hugely in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>He began to lecture her in rather egotistical fashion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You must remember, my dear,&rdquo; he said, "that I am a
-man of the world, and one whose experience may be relied
-upon. I may tell you that my judgment is much valued by
-your good uncle Radamanth, a man of much sagacity, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-yet one who lacks just that subtle insight into events that I
-may say has always been my special characteristic. I am so
-experienced that I may deserve the infinite honour of advising
-you if you care to tell me where you are going. I have had
-so much to do with the world, that I can tell you the best
-tavern in any town this side of the Thames where clean and
-honest lodging may be had. I can inform you as to tolls,
-prices, customs, bye-laws. Are you soon returning to
-Winchester?"</p>
-
-<p>Igraine shook her head at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who have you been quarrelling with, my dear?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Myself most.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To think of it, syrup quarrelling with honey! What
-will your Lord Gorlois do?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stifled the question on the instant.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Master Eudol, leave that name alone if you want more
-of my company.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pardon, my dear, pardon. I did not know it was so
-unpleasant a topic.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hate the very name of him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear, such a splendid fellow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Detestable boaster.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tut, tut,&mdash;a very popular nobleman; just the very man
-for you, and vastly rich. Now when I heard that he&mdash;that
-gentleman&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, Master Eudol, leave your chatter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The old merchant for the moment looked a little taken
-aback. Then he smiled, pulled his goat&rsquo;s beard, and grew
-epigrammatic.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She who wears a gilded shoe,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;will find it
-pinch in the wearing. Stick to your sandals, my dear, and
-let your pretty white feet go brown in the sun. Better
-breathe in the open than freeze in a marble house. Just
-play the savage and let ambition go hang.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine thanked him as though she held his counsel to
-be of the most inestimable value to herself. She was wise
-enough to know that to please an old man you must take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-his words in desperate earnest, and appear much caught by
-his supreme sagacity. Eudol smacked his lips and was comfortably
-warm within himself. He went on to tell the girl
-that he was riding to a little country manor that he owned
-some few leagues from Winchester. He informed her sentimentally
-that he was a very Virgil over his farm and garden.
-Igraine thought &ldquo;Virgil&rdquo; might well be Greek for &ldquo;fool,&rdquo;
-but she hid her ignorance under her hood. Eudol ran on to
-dilate on the subtleties of husbandry, making a fine parade
-of expert phraseology in the doing of it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I see you do not follow me,&rdquo; he said presently. &ldquo;Young
-folk are not fond of turning over the sods; they love grass
-for a scamper, not clay and dull loam. Shall we talk of
-petticoats or sarcenet that runs down a pretty figure like
-water? Eh, my dear? You set the tune, I&rsquo;ll follow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine contented herself with keeping him to his hobby.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My father loved his violet beds,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wise man&mdash;wise man. A garden makes thoughts
-sprout as though they would keep time to the leaves. You
-shall see my garden. Let me see, what road are you for
-following?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The road to fortune, Master Eudol.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Truth, then, it must run near my doorway. The good
-woman who keeps house for me will make you most welcome.
-You must rest on your journey.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are very good.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a bit of it, my dear. I shall call you St. Igraine&mdash;hee,
-hee!&mdash;and you will ripen all the apples in my orchard
-by looking at &rsquo;em. Faith, am I not a wag?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You ought to be at court, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hee, hee!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You would make all the young squires red with envy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear, my dear!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To flatter an old man so&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you are really such a courtier.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Eudol squirmed and chuckled in the grotesquest fashion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Assuredly we make very good friends,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol&rsquo;s manor nearly halved the mileage between Sarum
-and the royal town of Winchester, and Igraine found his
-suggestion quite a happy help to her plans. If needs be, she
-could bide the night there and make Sarum next day with
-but trivial trouble. She was glad in a way that she had
-fallen in with Eudol, for the ride had proved quite a charity
-to her, and his antique vanities had passed the time better
-than more modest characteristics could have done. Her
-only fear was lest he should cheat her, and send word to
-Radamanth. Accordingly she spoke to him again about her
-flight, and made him promise on the Cross that he would
-not betray her whereabouts. Eudol, silly soul, was ready
-enough by now to promise her almost anything.</p>
-
-<p>About noon they halted and made a meal, with a flat
-stone lying under the shade of a tree for table. Eudol drank
-quite enough wine to quicken his failings, and to lull what
-common sense he had to sleep. He became so maudlin, so
-supremely sentimental, that Igraine had much ado to throttle
-her laughter. She quite feared for him when they had to
-get to horse again. His men had to hoist him into the
-saddle between them. Once there he seemed quite arrogantly
-confident of his seat, and being a hardy old gentleman
-at the pot he soon steadied down into comparative docility,
-managing his mule as though there had been no such luxury
-as dinner. He was more garrulous and fatherly than ever;
-now and again he had to quench a hiccough; otherwise he
-was only an exaggerated portrait of himself.</p>
-
-<p>An hour&rsquo;s ride brought them to Eudol&rsquo;s own pastures.
-He pointed out his sheep to Igraine amid the clanking of
-their diverse bells, and told her the profits of the last shearing.
-Soon the house edged into view, a homely place set back an
-arrow&rsquo;s flight from the road, and ringed round with a score
-or so old trees. It was a green and quiet spot, mellow
-with the warm comfort of pastureland and wood. A pool
-twinkled in the meadows, through which ran a small stream.</p>
-
-<p>There was no bridge over the brook; the track crossed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-it by a shallow ford where the water gurgled over pebbles.
-The banks were loose and crumbling, and the trackway
-littered with stones. Eudol&rsquo;s mule went over sure-footed as
-a goat, but Igraine&rsquo;s horse, slipping on the slope, set a fore-hoof
-on a shifting stone, and rolled down with a crash. The
-girl did not avoid in time, and the brute&rsquo;s body pinned her
-ankle. She felt the sinews crack, and the stones bruise her
-flesh. For a moment she was in danger of the animal&rsquo;s
-plunges to rise, but one of the men came up and seized the
-bridle, while his fellow drew Igraine clear.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol climbed down, splashed through the water, and
-came up puffing sympathy. Igraine tried to walk, but
-gave up with a wry face. The men helped her to the grass
-bank, where she sat down, with Eudol fussing round her
-like an old woman. He sent the men on to the manor to
-bring a bed; and seeing that Igraine had grown white from
-the wrench, he ran for the wine-flask at his saddle-bow and
-urged her to drink. The girl had more fear of a spoilt
-journey than a cracked bone, and feeling faint for the
-moment, she suffered Eudol, and took the wine. The old
-man was on his knees by her stroking her hand, his thin
-beard wagging, and his glazed eyes vinously sympathetic.
-When the men came back with the bed they laid Igraine
-thereon, and bore her through the meadows to the house,
-Eudol following like a spaniel at their heels.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>While Igraine slept in the abbey dormitory and dreamt
-of Pelleas, the man Gorlois burnt on the grid of his own
-passions, and found no peace for his soul.</p>
-
-<p>The night sky was not a whit more black than his spirit,
-and his sinister cogitations were chequered ever with palpitating
-points of fire. The restless fever of an unfed leopard
-seemed his, and he was in and out of his tumbled, sleepless
-bed ten times before dawn. Only a boar-hound kept him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-company, a savage red-eyed brute whose temper suited that
-of his master; the dog followed Gorlois as he wandered
-from bed-chamber to atrium, out from the peristyles to the
-garden, down walks of yew and cypress, between the beds
-of helicryse and asphodel, over the smooth lawns clear in the
-eye of the moon. There was an evil thing in Gorlois&rsquo;s
-thought, a thing fit for beggarly disrelish, yet very white
-and lovely to look upon. He stalked like a ghost in the
-night, biting his lips, looking into the dark with red and
-eager eyes. How often he reached out in naked thought
-and clasped only the air. He cursed himself and the woman,
-honoured and abused her in one breath, grew hot and cold
-like a live coal played upon by a fickle wind.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as dawn came he had a plunge and a swim in a
-pool in the garden, and having suffered the ceremony of a
-state toilet, went out unattended into the town. It was
-the very hour when Igraine was shaking her fist at Winchester
-for thought of him, but Gorlois was spared the prick
-of self-knowledge and the frank truth of the girl&rsquo;s distaste.
-He thought her nothing more than a shrew, and the possessor
-of a splendid temper. His long legs and the heat at
-his heart soon took him down through the quiet streets and
-the market square to Radamanth&rsquo;s house.</p>
-
-<p>Early as was the hour, the goldsmith had escaped sloth
-and was busy at his ledgers in his little counting-house
-behind the parlour. Gorlois came in in great state, with the
-serving wench who announced him feasting her curiosity on
-his face with a sheepish giggle. Radamanth, fetched from
-his figures, bowed very low, and made the gentleman a most
-obsequious welcome. He was wondering what Gorlois&rsquo;s
-humour might be after the repulse of yesterday. To tell
-the truth, Radamanth felt somewhat ashamed of the trick
-he had served Igraine, and he was none too eager to meet
-his niece, seeing that she still seemed determined to hide her
-anger in her room. His doubts as to Gorlois&rsquo;s mood
-were set at rest by that gentleman&rsquo;s somewhat saturnine
-opening.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Radamanth!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your honour&rsquo;s servant.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have come to make peace.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your lordship&rsquo;s magnanimity is phenomenal.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Was I over hasty, goldsmith?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A young man&rsquo;s way, my lord; no fault at all. Many&rsquo;s
-the time I had my face smacked as a youngster, and was
-none the worse in favour. Take no serious view, sir, but
-press her the harder. She&rsquo;ll give in&mdash;my faith, yes, being
-young and full of bone. You are troubled, my lord, with
-too much conscience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have you seen the woman since?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth raised his eyebrows and shrugged.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, no,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I am afraid my niece has rather
-a hot spirit&mdash;breeding, my lord&mdash;proud blood in her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know that part of her nobleness well enough.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth refrained a moment from a sense of discretion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord would see her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not budge till I have done so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You understand women?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois smiled a peculiar smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have wit enough,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I have my plan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If it please you, sir, to go into the garden, I will endeavour
-to send her to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No more locking of doors, goldsmith.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sir, I contemn my late indiscretion in your service.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois passed out by a long passage into the gardens,
-with its green leaves shelving to the river, while Radamanth,
-half a coward at heart, went towards the stair that led to
-Igraine&rsquo;s chamber. Halfway up he met the girl Lilith
-coming down, very white and frightened looking, as though
-she dreaded her father&rsquo;s face. Radamanth kissed her, and
-asked for Igraine. Then her distraught look dawned on
-him in the twilight of the stairway, and made him suddenly
-suspicious.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is Igraine awake?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith hid her face in his sleeve.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak, girl, what&rsquo;s amiss?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The room is empty.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine has left us,&rdquo; said the girl with a stifled whimper.</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth, sage and solemn soul, lapsed into the sin of
-blasphemy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When did you learn this, girl?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Father&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Quick now, don&rsquo;t lie.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He shook her by the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Father, be gentle with me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Quick, hussy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t, I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth took her firmly by the wrist and brought her
-with no very considerate care into the parlour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; he said, thrusting her into a chair, &ldquo;you atom
-of ingratitude, tell me what you know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith began to sob. She hid her face behind her fingers
-and dared not look at Radamanth. The goldsmith chafed
-and paced the room, hectoring her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think to fool me,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you know more
-yet; you would have answered before if there had been any
-truth in you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth&rsquo;s harshness seemed certainly to calm the girl,
-and to conjure up some passing antagonism in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The blame is yours, father.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Impertinent child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine was angry with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, have I not treated her like a daughter?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She fled away last night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t, father; &rsquo;tis truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The girl&rsquo;s brown eyes appealed to him tearfully; she
-was honest enough, and Radamanth knew it. He took her
-sincerity for granted and proceeded to question her further.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How was she clothed, child?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Lilith looked at the floor and plucked at her gown with
-her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do you hear me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, father.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then answer at once.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Upon my soul&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine made me promise.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth lost his temper again and began to bluster
-like a March wind. Lilith&rsquo;s cheeks were wet with her
-tears; they ran down and dropped into her lap like little
-crystals. She shook and sobbed in her chair, but answered
-not a word, a martyr to her promises. Then Radamanth,
-man of money-bags and craft, found something wherewith to
-loose her tongue.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;a certain lad never enters this house
-again, and you never again have speech with him, unless
-you answer me this at once.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The mean measure triumphed. Lilith&rsquo;s tears never
-ceased, but she gave way at last, and hating herself, told
-Radamanth what he wanted. Then he left her there to
-whimper by herself, and went into the garden to speak with
-Gorlois.</p>
-
-<p>The Count of Cornwall guessed from the merchant&rsquo;s
-face that matters had fallen out ill for him somewhere.
-He forestalled Radamanth&rsquo;s confession with an impatient
-gust of words.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She is still in a deuce of a temper?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, it is otherwise.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then why so glum&mdash;man, have I not uncovered ingots
-of gold for you if I wed?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Radamanth held his hands up like a priest giving a
-blessing. Any one might have thought him grieved to
-death by the ingratitude of his niece&rsquo;s desertion. The
-goldsmith dealt in coarser sentiment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, the girl has forsaken my house and fled.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Gorlois had half expected some such news. He said
-nothing, but merely stared at Radamanth with dark masterful
-eyes, while his fingers played with the tassels of his belt.
-His heart was already away over moor and dale chasing the
-gleam of a golden head of hair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When did you miss her, goldsmith?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She crept away at dusk yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Whither?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Heaven knows, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How dressed?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a grey nun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Has she gone back to the Church?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She did not love such a life, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By God, no.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois frowned a moment in thought. The scent of
-the girl&rsquo;s dress was still in his nostrils, and her eyes haunted
-him. Then he turned past Radamanth to go, hitching up
-his sword belt, a significant habit he had learnt long ago.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall find her,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have your countenance.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Be kind to the girl, sir.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I could go to hell for her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, why not try heaven?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A good jest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Men always go to hell for things,&rdquo; said the goldsmith.</p>
-
-<p>There was life and stir enough in Gorlois&rsquo;s great house
-when its master came back that morning. Gorlois&rsquo;s orders
-were like a torch to tinder. Men went to every wind,
-some to the gates, some to the market, others to the
-religious houses and the inns, all bent on striking the
-trail of a nun&rsquo;s grey gown. The men knew their master&rsquo;s
-mood, and the measure of his pulse on such occasions.
-Gorlois bided quiet in his garden, more like a leopard than
-a lover. He had made up his mind to catch Igraine, and to
-win mastery of her, hook or by crook, since she chose to
-play the shrew and mar his wooing. It was not likely that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-one of the first men in Britain should be baffled by the
-temper of a goldsmith&rsquo;s niece.</p>
-
-<p>About noon a certain slave who had gone out to net
-news came back with much elation and claimed his lord&rsquo;s
-ear. Brought in before Gorlois, he told how he had talked
-with a boy selling fruit in the market-place, and how the
-boy, when questioned, had told him of a nun he had seen
-sitting under a tree by the road to Sarum that very morning.
-The lad had described her as a very beautiful lady with
-large eyes, and a cloud of red-brown hair, and that she wore
-a grey nun&rsquo;s habit somewhat torn and travel-stained.
-Gorlois thought he recognised Igraine, and gave the slave
-fifty acres and his freedom on the instant. Waiting for
-further news, word was brought him that a grey nun had
-been marked by the guard going out of the western gate
-not very long after dawn. Later still Gorlois heard of such
-a nun, calling herself Melib&oelig;a, having lodged the night at
-the great abbey of St. Helena.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois held himself in leash no longer. He buckled on
-his richly gilt armour, and his great white horse was saddled
-and brought into the court. Not a knight would he have
-at his back, neither groom nor page. Getting to horse
-in the full welt of the afternoon sun, he rode out of
-Winchester alone by the western gate, watched of many
-people. Once clear of the town he pricked incontinently
-for Sarum, lusting much to catch Igraine upon the way.</p>
-
-<p>About that very same hour Eudol was exerting himself
-in Igraine&rsquo;s service in the manor farm in the meadows.</p>
-
-<p>The men had carried her up from the ford and set her
-at her own seeking in a shady place in the garden where
-she might lie at peace. It was a pleasant nook enough
-where they had set her bed, a patch of bright green grass
-with a bank of flowers on one hand and dense laurel hedge
-hiding it from the track to the house on the other. A vine
-trained upon poles raised a pleasant pavilion there. Autumn
-would soon be whispering in the woods, and already some
-few leaves were ribbed with gold and maroon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Eudol played the physician and made a very critical
-examination of her ankle. He prided himself, among his
-other vanities, on having studied Galen, and since the healing
-craft is often a matter of phenomenal words and wise
-nothings, Eudol might have outphysicked Gildas at his own
-game. The art of medicine is the art of hypocrisy, and the
-sage apothecary is often a broken reed trembling in the
-wind of ignorance. Eudol, having no reputation at stake,
-pronounced Igraine&rsquo;s hurt to be a mere strain of the ankle-joint,
-and, as it happened, he was right. He swathed her
-foot in wet linen and set it on a pillow, while the woman
-who kept house for him, a red-cheeked piece of buxomness,
-brought wine and food-stuff on a tray. Seeing a nun&rsquo;s
-habit the good woman was comforted, and indulged Igraine
-with many smiles and much motherly care.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol came and sat beside her with a great book on his
-knee, Virgil&rsquo;s Bucolics, as he told her, and writ most
-learnedly for the edification of the wise. Eudol read very
-little of the book that afternoon. The volume abode with
-him for effect, but he preferred rather to dwell upon the
-more Ovidian interest of the girl beside him, and to talk to
-her in his familiar and fatherly fashion. He made many sly
-attempts to get the purpose of her pilgrimage from her, but
-Igraine had enough wit to keep him discreetly mystified on
-the subject. She was wondering all the while how long
-her strained ankle would keep her to her bed.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol smothered her with offers of hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On my word you shall not be dull,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;though
-there is only an old man to entertain you. One day you
-shall ride out in a litter to my vineyards, another you shall
-be carried out a-hunting. I have a little wench here who
-can harp and sing like a mermaid. By the poets, I can
-make you quite a merry time.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine made the best smile she could, and thanked him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You must not put yourself out for me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are very good.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Eudol shook his finger with most earnest expression.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear lady, it is duty, duty,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>They had not been so very long in the garden when
-Igraine&rsquo;s quick ear caught the sharp and rhythmic smite of
-hoofs on the stony track across the meadows. The sound
-disquieted her, for she was in the mood for dreads and
-suspicions. Listening to make sure that the sound
-approached, she appealed to Eudol and asked him to look
-and see who rode for the manor. There was a little wicket-gate
-some way down the laurel hedge carefully screened by
-shrubs. Eudol went to it, and scanned the meadows under
-his hand. He came back somewhat flustered to Igraine,
-and told her that a knight in gilded armour mounted on a
-white horse was riding up the track to the house.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine started up on her bed with her eyes very big and
-suspicious.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is Gorlois,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Heavens, my dear!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have not been lying to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On my soul&mdash;no.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine touched her forehead with her hand, and looked
-askance at the sun.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Master Eudol, if you would serve me, go and fool the
-man&mdash;send him away.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My dear child&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He must not see the servants or have speech with
-them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I command you, go and speak to him; he is very
-near.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Eudol looked at her with his lower lip a-droop. His
-grey-green eyes met Igraine&rsquo;s, gleamed, and faltered. He
-bent over the bed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will do my best. Give me a kiss, my dear. By
-Augustus, I will get rid of Gorlois if I can.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He went out quickly by the wicket-gate, and closing it
-after him, waited for the knight to approach. There were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-no slaves about, and Eudol remembered with confidence that
-his men were in the corn fields, well away to the north.
-Gorlois came up with the splendid arrogance that so suited
-him, his rich armour glowing above the white flanks of his
-horse, his spear balanced on his thigh. Eudol went forward
-some paces to meet him, as though to learn his business.
-Igraine, listening behind the laurel hedge, heard their words
-as plainly as though the two men were but three paces
-away.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Greeting, sir,&rdquo; said Eudol&rsquo;s thin voice.</p>
-
-<p>Then she heard Gorlois&rsquo;s clear sharp tenor questioning
-him. She heard him ask whether a grey nun had called for
-food, or whether Eudol had seen or heard of such a person.
-She heard the old man&rsquo;s meandering negative, and Gorlois&rsquo;s
-retort that a grey nun had been seen riding beside a merchant
-on a white mule. Igraine&rsquo;s heart seemed to race
-and thunder. Eudol, rising to the event, suggested that the
-merchant might be a certain fabulous person from Aquæ
-Sulis; a man of means, he said, who often came by Sarum
-to Winchester in the fur trade. He hinted that the knight
-might overtake them on the road, or discover them at Sarum
-that evening. Gorlois fell to the suggestion. Igraine
-heard him inquire further of Eudol, speak to his horse, and
-ride away with a ringing clatter. She sat on her couch
-behind her laurel rampart and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol came back to her, pleased as possible.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How was that done,&mdash;sweeting?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nobly,&rdquo; laughed Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Virgin pardon me; what perjury for a pair of
-lips.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VIII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Nothing is more chafing to the patience than to lie abed
-crippled, knowing the while that coveted hours are slipping
-through one&rsquo;s fingers like grains of gold. To Igraine, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-maimed ankle was a very thorn in the flesh. Her thoughts
-were tugging to be at Sarum, and she was in continual fear
-lest Radamanth or Gorlois should track her to her temporary
-refuge, and attempt to mar her freedom. She was not a
-woman who could take hindrance with perfect philosophy,
-comforting herself with the reflection that care never yet
-salved unrest. She chafed at delay, and even blamed Eudol
-with great unreason because he had obliged her with a horse
-not proof against stumbling.</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge that Gorlois rode in search of her did not
-tend to the easing of her mind. She began to understand
-Gorlois to the full. He had betrayed so much of himself
-in Radamanth&rsquo;s garden that her dread grew nearly as great
-as her disrelish.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol had made her comfortable enough in his manor,
-she had no need to find fault with his hospitality. She had
-her own room, a little girl to wait and sing to her, fruit and
-food of the best. She spent the greater part of each day in
-the garden, her bed being set under the vine leaves; two of
-Eudol&rsquo;s slaves would carry her down in the morning and
-bear her back again at night, so that she should not be too
-venturesome in trying her ankle. The old merchant kept
-his folk close on the farm and suffered none to go to
-Winchester or Salisbury, for fear lest the knowledge of
-Igraine&rsquo;s whereabouts should leak into interested channels.</p>
-
-<p>The more the girl saw of Eudol the less she relished him
-in her heart. The lean look of him, his little green eyes,
-his thin goat-like beard, reminded her much of the picture of
-some old Satyr she had seen in the frescoes on the walls of
-the triclinium at Winchester. He grew more fatherly and
-kind to her, would smile like some old saint as he sat and
-read moralities to her from the lives of some of the Fathers.
-He was very fond of holding her hand and stroking it while
-he purred sentiment, and made her colour to hear his
-nonsense. He was quite wickedly delighted when he had
-fetched a blush to her face. He would sit and chuckle and
-hug himself, while his little eyes glistened and his beard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-shook. Igraine, though her cheeks often tingled, did her
-best to suffer him, knowing well enough that she was
-greatly dependent for her peace of mind upon his good-will.
-She would laugh, turn his senile flatteries into jest, and assume
-his humour as the most vapoury and fanciful piece of
-fun possible. She often hinted that Eudol must be neglecting
-his farm for her sake, though her suggestions were
-absolutely to no purpose, seeing that Eudol had forgotten
-all about such mundane matters as harvesting or the pressing
-of cider.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon they had a shrewd fright, and the incident
-led in its final development to Igraine&rsquo;s leaving the manor
-in the meadows. She was in the garden with Eudol when
-two horsemen wearing Gorlois&rsquo;s livery rode up to the gate
-and demanded entertainment with much froth and bombast.
-They were sturdy hot-tongued rogues, quick at liquor,
-quicker still at blasphemy. Eudol, much flustered, had them
-brought into the house and set loose upon a wine flask
-while he smuggled Igraine out of the garden. There was a
-barn standing on the other side of a little meadow near the
-house, and the building was screened by a fringe of pines
-and a thorn hedge. Eudol hurried Igraine to the barn, saw
-her couched on a pile of hay, closed the door on her, and
-scampered back to take great care of Gorlois&rsquo;s gentlemen.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol proved a most obsequious and attentive host. He
-kept the men primed with wine, watched them like a lynx,
-forbade his slaves and servants the room so that there should
-be no chance of gossip. The fellows thought themselves
-well harboured. Eudol, hardy old tipster, kept them going
-with a will, till they swore he was the best old gentleman at
-his cups they had met this side of the Thames. He out-drank,
-out-yarned, out-jested the pair of them. Grown very
-mellow towards evening, they vowed by all the calendar that
-they loved him so much they would make a night of it, and
-not go to bed till they were carried. Eudol could have
-denied himself their great esteem, but there was nothing for
-it but to humour them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He got rid of the fellows next morning, when they went
-away sadly, very glazed about the eyes, swearing they would
-pay him another visit at their very earliest opportunity.
-Eudol, when they were out of sight, went out to the barn
-and found Igraine comfortably couched there on a mass of
-hay. The little maid who served her had brought her
-supper on the sly the night before, and she had fared well
-enough in her new quarters.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact Eudol had had a parting cup with
-the men that morning, and had hardly outbreathed as yet
-the maudlin heritage gotten the previous night. He kissed
-Igraine&rsquo;s hand, mumbled his usual courtesies, excused his
-long absence with a warmth that nearly brought him to
-tears. He was somewhat flushed over the cheek bones; his
-eyes were bright, and his breath pregnant with the heavy
-scent of wine. Igraine wiped the hand he had kissed on
-her gown, looked at him with little love or gratitude, and
-told him that she had been trying to walk, and that her
-ankle bore her passably.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol, edging near, proceeded to narrate at preposterous
-length how he had kept Gorlois&rsquo;s men employed, made
-them drunk as cobblers, and packed them off innocently to
-Winchester that morning. He was hugely sly over it all.
-He came and climbed up beside Igraine on the hay, and
-pinched her arm with his lean fingers as he talked. There
-was a gaunt, red, eager look about his face. It was quite
-twilight in the great barn, and a mingled smell of hay and
-pitch-pine filled the air, while dusty beams of light filtered
-through in steady streams.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol&rsquo;s vinous and fatherly solicitude developed abruptly
-into an absurd revelation of his inner self. He had hold of
-Igraine&rsquo;s arm with one hand. Leaving go suddenly, he
-reached for her waist, poked his grey beard into her face,
-and made a clumsy dab at her cheek. In a moment the
-girl&rsquo;s arm had swept him backwards like an impotent bag
-of bones. She saw him overbalance and roll off the haycock
-on to the edge of a scythe. Without waiting for more, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-with a glimpse of the old fool&rsquo;s slippers still in the air, she
-slipped down from the hay and out of the barn, and shutting
-the door, pegged the catch with a piece of wood. Then
-she went laughing half resentfully towards the house, and
-told Dame Ph&oelig;be that her master had gone to the fields to
-oversee his slaves.</p>
-
-<p>The woman had taken a remarkable dislike to Igraine,
-being sulky-eyed and dumb-saucy in her presence as far as
-she dared. The grey nun told her that she was ending her
-sojourn at the farm that morning, and was going on foot
-for the west. The woman&rsquo;s face changed as suddenly as a
-spring sky. She was suave and smiling instanter, ready
-with queries as to Igraine&rsquo;s ankle, very eager to pack her
-wallet with stuff from Eudol&rsquo;s larder. Igraine, with an
-inward flush, saw how the wind blew. She was keen to be
-gone before Eudol should be loosed from the barn; even
-the woman&rsquo;s changed mood seemed a tacit insult in itself.</p>
-
-<p>She was soon treading the meadows where the backs of
-Eudol&rsquo;s sheep stood out like white boulders on the solitary
-stretch of green. The country began to be as flat as a
-table, though there were still masses of woodland piled on
-either side the great white road. Igraine kept in among
-the trees with just a glimpse of the highway to keep her
-to her mark. Her grey gown passed almost unperceptibly
-among the mould-grown trunks as she went in the chequered
-light like a grey mouse through green corn. Her ankle
-bore her better than she had prophesied, and she made fair
-travelling at a modest pace. Later in the afternoon the
-strain began to tell in measure, and her ankle ached and
-felt hot, as though she had done enough. Sitting down on
-a fallen tree she watched the road, and waited for some one
-to pass.</p>
-
-<p>A charcoal burner went by with a couple of asses
-panniered up with a comfortable load. Then came two
-soldiers and a couple of light wenches who haunted camp
-and castle and lived to the minute. Next, a great wain
-half ladened up with faggots came lumbering along, drawn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-by a pair of sleepy horses, and driven by a peasant in a
-green smock and leather breeches. Igraine took her choice,
-and going down from the trees, stood by the roadside, and
-begged of the man a lift.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing a nun looking up at him the man reined in,
-climbed down cap in hand, and louted low to her. There
-was some clean straw spread over the boards at the bottom
-of the cart. The man helped her up on to the tail-board
-and raked the straw into a heap to make her a seat. Then
-they lumbered on again towards Sarum.</p>
-
-<p>In due course she began to talk to the man as he sat on
-a couple of faggots and held the ropes. He was an honest,
-ignorant fellow, with a much whiskered face that wore a
-perpetual look of kindly stupidity. Igraine sought to know
-whether he was going as far as Sarum. The man shook
-his bushy head like an amiable ogre, and told her that he
-was for his lord&rsquo;s manor some two leagues distant, where
-he served as woodman and ranger, or soldier when there
-was need of steel. He commended his lord&rsquo;s house to her
-for lodging, with a solid faith in the generosity of its board.
-Questioned as to other habitations, he told her of a hermit&rsquo;s
-cell set in a little dale in the woods, a cell where wandering
-folk often found harbour for the night. Igraine made up
-her mind to choose the ascetic&rsquo;s bread and water, having
-had enough of the world&rsquo;s welcome. Possibly in some dim
-and distant way she began to realise the intense and engrained
-selfishness of the human heart.</p>
-
-<p>The man of faggots, believing her a holy woman, soon
-began to relate his domestic troubles to her with a most
-touching reverence. He told her how his wife had been
-abed two months from her last childbirth, and how sad
-and dirty his little cabin was for lack of her hands. He
-asked Igraine to put the woman in her bede-role, a simple
-favour that she granted readily enough. Then the fellow
-with some stolid pathos went on to describe how his eldest
-lad, a boy of eight, had caught a fever through sleeping in
-the woods after rain, and how he had fallen sick.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I went to a good monk,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;and bought
-holy water and a pinch of dust from a saint&rsquo;s coffin. Pardy!
-but it cost me a year&rsquo;s savings. The good father bade me
-pour the water on the boy&rsquo;s head and shake the dust over
-his body. Glad I was, holy sister; I ran five miles home
-to cure the lad.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And he is well?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man gave a doleful whistle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The boy died,&rdquo; said he with pathetic candour, and a
-short catch in his voice. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t sleep two whole nights.
-Then I kissed my woman, mopped her eyes, and went and
-told the priest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine merely nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, the dear father, he told me &rsquo;twas God&rsquo;s will, and
-that the blessed dust had drifted the lad straight to heaven,
-where he would be singing next King David like any lord.
-So he came and buried the boy, and there was an end
-on&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine for the moment felt heavy about the eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should like to see him there in his little white stole,&rdquo;
-she said. &ldquo;Do you know, goodman, why so many children
-die?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Faith, madame, I have no learning,&rdquo; said the fellow
-with a dumb stare.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because the great God loves to have children laughing
-for love of him in heaven.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is&rsquo;t so?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That is why he took your boy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s face brightened with a new dignity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Little Rual was ever a gentle child,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I
-must tell my woman; it will just make her happy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will pray for her health.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God bless you, holy lady, you have a wise, kind heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine blushed, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the man stopped his horses, and pointed her to
-a little path that led, he said, to the hermitage. He helped
-Igraine out of the cart, and knelt on the road for her to give<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-him a blessing. Igraine had a Latin phrase or two from
-Avangel, and the benediction was earnest enough in spirit,
-though it lacked genuine authority. Then she took the
-path through trees, and left the man standing cap in hand
-by his waggon. Her brief ride with him had done her
-heart good.</p>
-
-<p>A mile&rsquo;s walk through unkempt pastures and straggling
-thickets brought her to an open dale set beneath the shoulder
-of a wooded hill. On the grass slope over against her she
-saw the hermitage&mdash;a grey cell of unfaced stone standing
-in a garden in a grove of ancient thorns. By the rivulet
-that ran half hid by undergrowth a figure in a brown cassock
-was drawing water. Passing down over the water,
-Igraine overtook the recluse halfway up the slope to the
-hermitage garden. She remarked his bald head fringed with
-a mournful halo of hair, his stooping shoulders, his ungainly
-weak-kneed gait. Hearing her tread behind him he
-turned a tanned face to her, a face that brought forth
-a smile of brotherly greeting at sight of a nun. Igraine,
-by way of creating good feeling, took his water pot and
-carried it for him, pleading youth in extenuation of the
-service.</p>
-
-<p>There was a keen yet kindly sapience about the old
-man&rsquo;s big-nosed face that caught her fancy. He was a bit
-of a cynic on the surface, but warm as good earth at heart.
-Igraine confessed her need of a lodging for the night, and
-the man retorted bluntly with the remark that the hermitage
-was not his house,&mdash;but only a refuge to bury strangers in.
-Pointing to a great slab of stone that stood near the little
-cell, he told her that the stone had been his bed, summer and
-winter, these fifteen years, and that dew, rain, frost, and
-snow had worked their will upon his body and found it
-leather. The confession, pithily&mdash;almost humorously&mdash;put,
-without a trace of rodomontade, set the girl smiling. She
-looked at the man&rsquo;s brown buckram skin and congratulated
-him, embodying her flattery in a little jest that seemed to
-catch the ascetic fancy. He commended it with a patriarchal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-twinkle, and throwing open the door of his cell surrendered
-her its shelter.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine soon fathomed the shallow compass of the hermitage.
-It held two pallet beds, some rude furniture and
-crockery, and such things as were necessary to the old man&rsquo;s
-craft, namely a scourge, a calthrop set on the end of an iron
-chain, a coat made of furze, a garland of thorn twigs, and
-a pair of spiked sandals. Gardening tools were piled in a
-corner. Over the doorway hung a rusty suit of harness and
-a red crusted sword. Here in this narrow place the war
-tools of world and church were mingled.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine turned back into the hermitage garden. It was
-a quiet spot, webbed with the faery tracery of flowers and
-flowering shrubs, golden with helichryse, full of the mist of
-unshorn grass, bright with the water of its little fish-pool,
-where the ferns grew thick. A low wattle fence, climbed
-about by late-seasoned roses of red, shut the whole within
-its rustic pale. Some of the herb beds were cut into
-symbols of holy things, and a bay tree had been laboriously
-pruned into the rude image of a cross. A number of doves
-peopled the place, flocking about the hermit as he worked,
-often lighting on his hands or shoulders, while an old hound
-dozed in the sun, or followed at his heels. Peace seemed
-over the little refuge like a tranquil sky.</p>
-
-<p>The hermit handed Igraine a hoe, as a matter of custom,
-and set her to work on the weeds in a neglected corner,
-while he busied his hands with pruning some of his rose
-trees, and removing the clay and linen from his grafts. He
-was by no means the solemn, dismal soul or the kindly
-simpleton Igraine might have expected. He had a keen,
-world-wise air about him that made him seem a sort of
-Christian Diogenes, and it was plain that he had lived much
-among men. The mingled austerity and happiness of his
-habits, when set beside his inwardly sympathetic yet somewhat
-cynic humour, gave a strong interest to his personality
-that quite commanded Igraine&rsquo;s liking. Despite the vast
-responsibilities of man, as he himself put it, he was not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-above having a jest at life in general. &ldquo;For,&rdquo; said he, as he
-pruned his rose bushes, &ldquo;he who knows and obeys the truth
-can of all men afford to be merry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, smiling through the boughs, agreed with him
-from her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There are no sour faces in heaven,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Assuredly not,&rdquo; said the hermit almost fiercely.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then why such mortifications of the flesh, father?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Looking up from his pruning, he beamed over the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am a very human rogue.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Human!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you see, sister, <i>mea culpa</i>, I loved the world when
-I was in it like my own life, and even now if I did not
-gnash upon myself I should grow frivolous at times. When
-I have spent a night in the rain, or plied my scourge, it is
-marvellous how swiftly vain the fabrics of a vaunting pride
-become. &lsquo;I am dust, I am dust,&rsquo; I cry, and am sound at
-heart again. I look upon bread and olives and a draught of
-river water as true godsends. Having endured exceeding
-discomfort of the flesh, I am as happy in the sun here among
-my flowers as a mortal could be.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine rested on her hoe, and put her head back, while
-the evening light gave her hair a rare metallic lustre.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You believe in a life of contrasts, father?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The old man became suddenly more serious.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To tell you the truth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have found that by
-making myself fanatically uncomfortable so many hours a
-day, I can attain for the rest of it that simple, contented, and
-heaven-soaring mood that belongs to the honest Christian.
-Man&rsquo;s great peril is apathy, and my customs save me from
-sleepy ease. There is such a thing as living to pander to
-the flesh; it is the creed of the majority. In order to
-enjoy a truly spiritual end, I annihilate the appetites of the
-body, and <i>ecce homo</i>,&mdash;merry, conscience whole, clean.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine resumed her harrowing of reprobate green-stuff.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose your doctrine is right for yourself,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>An answer came back to her leisurely over the rose bush.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To the backbone, sister. Yet I am not one who would
-thrust my habits down other men&rsquo;s throats simply because
-the said habits happen to suit my soul. All religious
-methods are a matter of individual experiment. One man
-may feel more Christian if he drinks wine instead of water;
-if so&mdash;by all the prophets&mdash;let him have his wine. I hold
-doctrinal tyranny to be the greatest curse in Christendom.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine agreed with him like a sister.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the sun went down with a flood of gold over the
-trees, the little pool put off sheeny samite for black velvet,
-and the doves flew up to roost. The hermit in a genial
-mood went to his vesper meditations. Igraine saw him
-kneel down before the great stone with his scourge and
-crucifix beside him. She was still carnal enough to prefer
-the thin comfort of a pallet bed in the hermitage to stone or
-mother earth. When it had grown dark and very still she
-heard the swish of the steel scourge, and the man&rsquo;s mutterings
-mingled with the occasional baying of his dog. This
-phase of mind was, at her age, quite incomprehensible to her.
-She remembered to pray that night for the peasant&rsquo;s wife
-who had been sick in bed so long, and for the little lad who
-lay under the green grass. Then she went to sleep thinking
-of Pelleas.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IX</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Radamanth the goldsmith had not wasted the hours since
-his niece had fled Winchester and his house in the dark.
-He was a man who did not let an enterprise slip into the
-limbo of the past till he had attempted honestly, and dishonestly,
-for that matter, to bring it to a successful issue.
-He had set his heart on getting Igraine married to one of
-the first lords in the island, and he also had skew ideas as
-to brimming up his own coffers. Taking it for granted that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-Lilith and the girl had not been close friends for weeks
-together without sharing secrets, and being also strongly
-of the opinion that Igraine&rsquo;s perversity arose out of some
-previous affair, he laid methodical siege to his daughter&rsquo;s
-confidences, and cast a parental dyke about her that should
-compel her to open every gate and alley to his scrutiny.</p>
-
-<p>Lilith, amiable, but weak as milk, was soon worn into
-surrender by her father&rsquo;s methods. He had an unfailing
-lash wherewith to quicken her apprehension, in that young
-Mark, the armourer&rsquo;s son, should be barred the house unless
-she bent to the parental edicts. Lilith soon brought herself
-to believe that after all there could not be so much disloyalty
-in telling certain of Igraine&rsquo;s adventures to her father.
-Radamanth, bit by bit, had the whole tale of the way from
-Avangel to Winchester. Seeing how often Igraine&mdash;woman-wise&mdash;had
-pictured her man to Lilith, the goldsmith
-won a clear perception of the strange knight&rsquo;s person,
-how he rode a black horse, wore red armour, bore a red
-dragon on a green shield, and was called Pelleas. Radamanth
-made a careful note of all these things, and laid the
-knowledge of them before Gorlois. Various subtleties
-resulted from these facts&mdash;subtleties carefully considered
-to catch Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>To turn to Eudol. That lean old satyr had fallen
-gravely into error in the conviction that he had fooled Gorlois&rsquo;s
-men so cleverly over the wine-pot. The deceit had
-been deeper on the other side, and more effectual, seeing
-that there had been a kirtled traitor in the manor camp.
-If Eudol had been stirring just after daybreak on the morning
-after the carouse, he might have caught one of Gorlois&rsquo;s
-men coming down a little winding stair that led to a
-certain portion of the house. A little earlier still he would
-have found the fellow with his arm round Dame Ph&oelig;be&rsquo;s
-waist in a dark entry on the stairs. The woman did not
-love Igraine, nor did she want her in the house; moreover,
-Gorlois&rsquo;s man was young, and had fine eyes, and a most
-wicked tongue. Eudol, like most diplomats, was far from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-being infallible when there was a woman in the coil, and
-Dame Ph&oelig;be was very much a woman.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s fellows had no sooner cleared the meadows that
-morning than they were away for Winchester at a dusty
-rattle. It was fast going over the clean, straight road, and
-the grey walls were not long in coming into view. The
-pair swung through the western gate, and went straight
-through the streets in a way that set the city folk staring
-and dodging for the pathway. At the gate of Gorlois&rsquo;s
-house the porter had a vexatious damping for the spirits of
-these fiery gentlemen. Gorlois had ridden out. The men
-swore, off-saddled, and made the best of the matter over a
-game of dice in the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>There was great bustle when Gorlois had heard the
-men&rsquo;s tale. They excused their not having taken Igraine
-on the plea that Gorlois had forbidden any to approach
-her save himself. The man was in a smiting mood, and
-he swore Eudol should rue giving him the lie and sending
-him a wild chase miles into the west. Getting to horse at
-once, and taking the two men with some ten more spears,
-he rode out and held for Sarum.</p>
-
-<p>There was a swirl of dust before Eudol&rsquo;s gate, and a
-sharp scattering of shingle as Gorlois and his troop rode up.
-A slave, who had seen them from the garden, and had taken
-them for robbers, was prevented from closing the gate by
-a brisk youth wedging it with his foot. There was a short
-scuffle at the tottering door. Then Gorlois and his men
-burst it in, and cut down those slaves on the threshold who
-had tried to close the door. The women folk were herded
-screeching into the kitchen, and penned there like sheep.
-Out of a cupboard in an upper room they dragged the
-woman Ph&oelig;be, limp with fright, and hurried the truth out
-of her that Igraine had gone that very morning, and that
-Eudol was still in the fields. Gorlois, believing her a liar,
-had the house searched, beds overturned, cupboards torn
-open, every nook and cranny probed. Then they tried the
-garden and the stables, with like fortune. One of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-fellows catching sight of the barn across the meadows, half-hidden
-by pines, they made a circle round it, closed in, and
-forced the door. A blinking, red-eyed face came up out of the
-shadows, its beard and thin thatch of hair whisped with hay.</p>
-
-<p>Eudol, collared with little kindness, began to wonder
-after his drunken sleep who these rough folk could be. A
-word as to Igraine brought him to his senses. He saw
-Gorlois, a dark-bearded, black-eyed man, with a frown that
-he did not like the look of. He began to shake in his
-slippers, to excuse himself, and to deny all knowledge of
-the girl since the morning. Matters were against Eudol.
-Gorlois thought that he had plucked the old man from hiding,
-and that he was a liar to the bone; his shrift was short,
-measured out by the man&rsquo;s hard malice. They struck him
-down at the door of his own barn, covering his grey head with
-his hands, and screaming for mercy. His blood soaked the
-hay, and shot black streaks into the dusty floor. Then they
-cast back to the manor, and half-throttled the woman Ph&oelig;be,
-till Gorlois was satisfied that he had got all the truth from her
-he could. In half an hour they were at gallop again for Sarum.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois reined in cruelly more than once to fling hot
-questions at the folk they passed upon the road. His horse
-was all sweat and foam, and its mouth bloody with the
-heavy hand that played on the bridle. Wayfarer after wayfarer
-looked up half in awe at the iron-faced man towering
-above them in the stirrups. Their blank, irresponsive faces
-chafed Gorlois&rsquo;s patience to the bone. Not a word did
-he win of Igraine and her grey gown. Waxing sullen as
-granite, and very silent, he looked neither to right nor left,
-but plodded on like a baffled sleuth-hound with the rest of
-the pack trailing at his tail. The girl&rsquo;s hair seemed tossing
-over the edge of the world, like a golden hue from the west, and
-there was a passionate wind through the man&rsquo;s moody thought.</p>
-
-<p>It was towards evening when Gorlois with his men&mdash;a
-bunch of spears&mdash;came upon the peasant in the green smock
-driving his wain-load of faggots slowly towards the setting
-sun. Gorlois drew up and hailed him, and began his cate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>chism
-anew. The fellow pulled in his team, and eyeing
-the horseman with some caution, acknowledged curtly that
-he had carried in his cart a league or more such a woman
-as Gorlois had pictured. To further quick queries he proved
-stubborn and boorish. Gorlois had lost his temper long
-ago. &ldquo;Speak up, you devil&rsquo;s dog!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man looked sullen. Gorlois&rsquo;s sword flashed out.
-He spurred close up, and held three feet of menacing steel
-over the peasant&rsquo;s head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you be damned!&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What want you with the woman, lording?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Am I to argue with a clod of clay? The woman is
-marked for great honour, and must be taken. Will you
-spoil her fortune?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man fingered the reins, looking hard at Gorlois with
-his stupidly honest face. He guessed he was some great lord,
-by his harness and his following. It was not for him to
-gainsay such a gentleman, especially when he flourished a
-naked sword.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I would do my best for the good nun, lording,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then speak out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She promised to pray for my woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois gave a laugh, and scoffed at the notion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let prayers be,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;tell me where she
-went.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man told Gorlois of the hermitage in the dale where
-Igraine had gone for a night&rsquo;s lodging. He described how
-the path could be found, a mile or more nearer Winchester.
-Gorlois threw a gold piece into the cart, and let the man
-drive on. Then he sat still on his black horse with his
-sword over his shoulder, and looked into the wood with dark,
-glooming eyes. For a minute he sat like a statue, staring
-on nothing in keen thought. His men watched him, looking
-for some swift swoop from such a pinnacle of pondering;
-they knew his temper. His sword shot back into its scabbard,
-and he was keen as a wolf.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Galleas of Camelford.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A man with a hooked nose and high cheek bones heeled
-his horse forward, and saluted.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ride hard, find the hermitage, be wary, watch at a
-distance for sight of the Lady Igraine. If she is at the
-hermitage, gallop back to Sarum before nightfall. I shall
-be in Sir Accolon&rsquo;s house. Attend me there.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man saluted again, turned his horse instanter, and
-rode hard into the east. Gorlois, with a half smile on his
-lips, rode on with his troop for Sarum.</p>
-
-<p>In Sarum town there was a queer house of stone, very
-dark and very saturnine. It was hid away behind high walls,
-and hedged so blackly with yews and hollies that it seemed
-to stand in the gloom of a perpetual twilight. After dark
-a sullen glow often hung above the trees; casements would
-blaze blood-red light into boughs creaking and clutching in
-the wind; or there would be a moony glimmer on the glass,
-and belated folk passing near might hear voices or elvish
-music about them as though dropped from the stars. It was
-the house of Merlin,&mdash;the man of dreams,&mdash;wrapped in the
-gloom of immemorial yews.</p>
-
-<p>That night Gorlois sat in a room hung with black velvet,
-where a brazier held a dying fire, and a bowl thereon steamed
-up perfumes in a heavy vapour. A man with a face of
-marble and eyes like an eternal night was chaired before him,
-with his long, lean, restless fingers continually touching the
-cloud of hair that fell blackly over his ears. His fingers
-were packed with rings gemmed with all manner of stones&mdash;jasper,
-sardonyx, chrysolite, emerald, ruby, and the like.
-His gown was of black velvet, twined all about with serpent
-scrolls of white cloth. On his breast was brooched a great
-diamond that blazed and wavered back the glow from the
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois sat in his carved chair stiff as any image. His
-strenuous soul seemed mewed up by the psychic influence
-of the man before him. He spoke seldom, and then only
-at the other&rsquo;s motion&mdash;at a curious gesture of one of those
-long, lean hands. The room was as silent as the burial hall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-of a pyramid, and it had the air of being massed above by
-stupendous depths of stone.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the man in the black robe began to speak with
-deliberate intent, holding his voice deep in his throat so that
-it sounded much like the voice of an oracle declaring itself
-in the noise of a wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The woman is beautiful beyond other women.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like a golden May.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And true.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a sapphire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yet will not have you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a shred of me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man with the rings smiled out of his impenetrable
-eyes, and fingered the brooch on his breast.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The woman has great destiny before her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have seen her star in the night. You dare take her
-fate on you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Like ivy holds a tree.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a wife?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How else?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a wife&mdash;by the church.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Or no help of my hand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Again there was silence. A coal fell in the brazier, and
-seemed like a rock down a precipice. The black eyes that
-stared down Gorlois were full of light, and strangely scintillant.
-Gorlois listened, with his limbs asleep and his brain
-in thrall, while the man spoke like a very Michael out of a
-cloud. The clear glittering plot given out of Merlin&rsquo;s lips
-came like a dream vivid to the thought of the dreamer. If
-Gorlois obeyed he should have his desire, and catch Igraine
-to a white marriage-bed by law and her own willing. The
-fire died down in the brazier, and the bowl ceased to smoke
-perfumes. Gorlois saw the man gather his black robe with
-his glittering fingers, and move like a wraith round the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-room, to stand beckoning by the door. In another minute
-Gorlois was under the stars, with the house and its yews a
-black mound against the sky. Like a sleeper half wakened
-he took full breath of the night air, and stretched his arms
-up above his head. But it was not to sleep that he passed
-back through the void streets to the house of the knight
-Accolon.</p>
-
-<p>To return to Igraine housed for the night in the little
-hermitage. At the first creep of dawn, when daffodils were
-thrown up against the eastern sky, she left her pallet bed in
-the cell and went out into the hermit&rsquo;s garden. The recluse
-was down at the brook drawing water, whither the dog and
-the doves had followed him. Igraine passed through the
-garden&mdash;spun over as it was with webs of dew. To her
-comfort she found her ankle scarcely troubling her, for she
-had feared pain or stiffness after the walk of yesterday.
-Going down the dale, she patted the old dog&rsquo;s head, and
-picked up the pitcher as the recluse gave her good-morning.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are an early soul, sister. My dog and I come
-down to the brook each morning as the sun peeps over the
-hill.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are not lonely,&rdquo; said Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>The old man tightened his girdle, looked over the solemn
-piers of the woods, sniffed the air, and hailed an autumn
-savour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not I,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I have my dog and my doves, and
-folk often lodge here, and I have word of the world and how
-the Saxons vex us. The good people near bring me alms
-and pittances, or come to ask prayers for their souls, and&rdquo;&mdash;with
-a twinkle&mdash;&ldquo;for their bodies, too.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine remembered the peasant&rsquo;s little son.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Was it you,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;who gave a peasant fellow near
-here a saint&rsquo;s dust to scatter over a sick child?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The old man shook his head and smiled enigmatically.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have no dealings in such marvels,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The boy died.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of course.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They will sell your dust some day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A keen look, cynical with beaming scorn, spread over
-the man&rsquo;s gaunt face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Much good may it do them,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;death is monstrous
-flatterer of mere clay. I may feed a rose bush with
-my bones; a better fate than the cheating of superstitious
-women.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He made a sign with his hand, and the birds went
-wheeling in circles above him. The dog crept up and
-thrust his snout into the old man&rsquo;s palm. The garden lay
-above them, ripe with an autumn mellowness; yet there was
-no regret though winter would soon be piping, and the
-man&rsquo;s hair was grey.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What think you of life?&rdquo; said Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You should know, sister, as well as I.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you see, father, I am not a nun,&mdash;only a
-novice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He stared at her a moment with a slight smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Remain a novice,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You advise me so!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why subordinate your soul to chains forged of men.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;These seem strange words.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He patted his dog&rsquo;s head, and, half stooping, looked at
-her with keen grey eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have you ever loved a man?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, with a clear laugh and a slight colour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is he worthy?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I believe him a noble soul.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Naturally.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He ran away and left me because he thought I was a
-nun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The hermit applauded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That sounds like honour,&rdquo; he said critically.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am seeking him to tell him the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And I will pray that you may soon meet,&rdquo; said the old
-man, "for there is nothing like the love of a good man for
-a clean maid. If I had married a true woman, I should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-never have taken to the scourge or the stone bed. Marry
-wisely and you are halfway to Heaven."</p>
-
-<p>They broke fast that morning in the garden, it being
-the man&rsquo;s custom to make his meals on the granite slab
-that served him as a bed. The little dale looked very green
-and gracious in the tranquil light, with its curling brook
-and dark barriers of trees. Igraine, as she sat on the great
-stone and ate the hermit&rsquo;s bread, followed the brook with
-her thoughts, wondering whether it became the stream that
-ran through Eudol&rsquo;s meadows. She was for Sarum that
-day, where she would throw off her grey habit and take
-some dress more likely to baffle Gorlois. She had enough
-money in her purse. Worldling again, she could give
-herself to winning sight of this Uther, and to learning
-whether he was the Pelleas she sought or no.</p>
-
-<p>As she sat and fingered her bread, something she saw
-down the dale made her rigid and still as a priestess smitten
-with the vision of a god in some heathen oratory. Her
-eyes were very wide, her lips open and very white, her
-whole air as of one watching in a sudden stupor of awe.
-Another moment and she had broken from the mood like a
-torrent from a cavern. With eyes suddenly amber bright,
-she touched the hermit&rsquo;s hand and pointed down the dale,
-gave him a word or so, then left him and ran down the
-hill.</p>
-
-<p>A man on a black horse had ridden out from the trees,
-and was pushing his horse over the brook at a shallow spot
-not far away. His red armour glowed in the sun with a
-metallic lustre. Even at that distance Igraine had seen the
-red dragon rampant on a shield of green. As she ran down
-the grass slope she called the man by name, thinking to see
-him turn and come to her. Pushing on sullenly as though
-he had not heard the cry that went after him like winged
-love, he drew up the further slope without wavering, and
-sank like a red streak into the dense green of the trees.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>X</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Igraine forded the brook and followed the man by the
-winding path that curled away into the wood.</p>
-
-<p>She was ever a sanguine soul, and the mere sinister
-influences that might have discouraged her in her purpose
-that morning were impotent before the level convictions of
-her heart. She had seen Pelleas ride in amid the trees; she
-was sure as death as to his cognizance and his armour.
-Now Pelleas, she could vow, had not heard her call to him,
-and if he had heard he had not understood; if he had seen
-he had not recognised. Doubts could have no place in the
-argument before such a justification by faith.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before she caught sight of the red glint
-of armour going through the trees. It came and went,
-grew and disappeared, as the path folded it in its curves or
-thrust out a heavy screen of green to hide it like a heavy
-curtain. The man was going as he pleased, now a walk,
-now a casual jog, now a short burst of a canter over an open
-patch. One moment Igraine would see him clearly, then
-not at all. Sometimes she gained, sometimes lost ground,
-yet the knight of the red harness never seemed to come
-within lure of her voice.</p>
-
-<p>In due course she reached the place where the path
-ended bluntly on the Winchester high-road, and where the
-way ran straight as a spear-shaft, so that she could see
-Pelleas riding for Winchester with a lead of a quarter of a
-mile. The distant ringing tramp of hoofs came up to her
-like a mocking chuckle. Putting her hands to her mouth,
-she hallooed with all the breath left her by her run through
-the wood; yet, as far as she might see, the man never so
-much as turned in the saddle, while the smite of hoofs
-died down and down into a well of silence.</p>
-
-<p>Another halloo and no echo.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s asleep, or deaf in his helmet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She forgot the distance and the din of hoofs that might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-well have drowned the thin cry that could have reached the
-rider. Maugre her heat and her flushed face Igraine had
-no more thought of giving in than she had of marrying
-Gorlois. With Pelleas so near she had made her vow to
-follow him, and follow him she would like a comet&rsquo;s tail.
-If needs be she would wear her sandals to the flesh, but
-catch the man she must in the end.</p>
-
-<p>A mile more on the high-road, with her feet and the hem
-of her gown dust-drenched, and she was still little nearer
-the man in the red harness for all her hurrying. She could
-have vowed more than once that he turned in his saddle and
-looked back at her as though to see how near she had come
-to him on the road. A mile from the hermitage path he
-turned his horse southwards from the track into a grass
-valley headed by a ruined tower and hedged densely on
-either hand by pine woods. Igraine, seeing from a slight
-rise in the road this change of course, cut away crosswise
-with the notion of getting near the man or of intercepting
-him before he should win clear law again. After all, the
-effort added only more vexation. She saw the black horse
-pressed to a canter and cross the point where she might
-have cut him off, while a great stretch of furze that rolled
-away to the black palisading of the pines came down and
-threw a promontory in her path. Pelleas was a mile to
-the good when she had skirted the furze and the bend of
-the wood, and taken a straight course southwards down the
-valley between the pines.</p>
-
-<p>All that morning the sport of hunter and hunted went
-on between the novice in grey and the man on the black
-horse. For all her trouble Igraine won little upon him,
-lost little as the hours went by; while the rider in turn
-seemed in no wise desirous of being rid of her for good.
-They passed the pine woods with their midnight aisles,
-forded a stream, climbed up a heath, went over it amid the
-heather. From the last ridge of the heath Igraine saw
-the country sloping away into undulating grasslands, piled
-here and there with domes of thicketed trees. Far to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-south a dense black mass rose like a rounded hill against
-the sky. The man in red was still about a mile in front
-of her, riding slowly, a red speck in a waste of green.
-Igraine, having him in view from her vantage point, lay
-down full length to rest and take some food. She was
-tired enough, but dogged at heart as ever. She vowed that
-if the man was playing with her she would tell him her
-mind, love or no love, when she came up with him in the
-end.</p>
-
-<p>As the sun swam into the noontide arc she went on
-again downhill, and found in turn that the man had halted,
-for he had been hidden by trees, and getting view of him
-suddenly she saw him sitting on a stone with his horse
-tethered near. As soon as Igraine was within measurable
-distance she took advantage of a hollow, dropped on her
-hands and knees, and began to crawl like a cat after a bird.
-Edging round a thicket she came quite near the man, but
-could not see his face. His spear stood in the ground by
-his horse, and he had his shield slung about his neck, and a
-bare poniard in his hand. It was clear that he was watching
-for Igraine, for despite her craft he caught sight of her face
-peering white under the hem of a bush, and climbed quickly
-into the saddle. Igraine started up, made a dash across the
-open, calling to him as she ran. Perverse as hate his horse
-broke into a canter and left her far in the rear. The girl
-shook her fist at him with a sudden burst of temper. She
-was standing near the stone where the man had been sitting.
-Looking at its flat face she saw the reason of the naked
-poniard in his hand, for he had been carving out thin
-straggling letters in the stone.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sancta Igraine,&rdquo; she read&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ora pro nobis.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The screed dispelled the doubts in Igraine&rsquo;s mind on the
-instant. Palpably the man knew well enough who was
-following him, and was avoiding her of set purpose; but
-for what reason Igraine racked her wit to discover. She ran
-through many things in her heart, the possible testing of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-her devotion, a vacillating weakness on Pelleas&rsquo;s part that
-would not let him leave her altogether, a freakish wish to
-give her penance. Then, she knew that he was superstitious,
-and the thought flashed to her that he might think
-her a wraith, or some evil spirit that had taken her shape
-to have him in temptation. Maugre her vexation and her
-pride she held again on the trail, eating as she went some
-dried plums that she had in her wallet. The man had
-slackened down again and was less than half a mile away,
-now limned against the sky, now folded into a hollow or
-shut out by trees. Like a marsh-fire he tantalised her with
-a mystery of distance, holding steadily south at a level tramp,
-while Igraine plodded after him, her hair down and blowing
-out to the casual wind, her eyes at gaze on the red lure in
-the van.</p>
-
-<p>So the mellower half of the day passed, and towards
-evening they neared the mount of trees Igraine had seen
-from the last ridge of the heath at noon. The black horse
-was heading straight for the cloudy mass in a way that set
-Igraine thinking and casting about for Pelleas&rsquo;s motive.
-Perhaps he had some quest in the solitary place that needed
-his single hand. Would he take to the wood and let her
-follow as before, or had he any purpose in leading her
-thither? Drowned in conjecture she gave up prophecy
-with a vicious sense of mystification, and accepted inevitable
-ignorance for the time being as to the man&rsquo;s moods and
-motives. She was no less obstinate to follow him to the
-death. If she only had a horse she would come near the
-man, pride or no pride, and tell him the truth.</p>
-
-<p>Pressing on, with her strained ankle beginning to limp,
-she topped the round back of a grass rise and came full in
-view of the wood she had long seen in the distance. It
-looked very solemn in the declining light. The great
-trunks of giant beeches were packed pillar upon pillar into
-an impenetrable gloom. The foliage above, densely green,
-billowy, touched with red and gold, rolled upwards cloud
-on cloud as the ground ascended to the south and east.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-A great bronze carpet of dead leaves swept away into the
-night of the trees. There was an eternal hush, a gross
-silence, over the glooming aisles that seemed to beckon to
-the soul, to draw the heart into the night of foliage as into a
-cavern. Over all was the glowing ægis of the setting sun.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine saw the man on the forest&rsquo;s edge where an arch
-of gloom struck into the inner shadows. He was facing
-the west, motionless as stone on his black horse, with the
-slanting light plucking a dull red gleam from his harness.
-There was a mystery about him that seemed to harmonise
-with the stillness of the trees and the black yawn of the
-forest galleries. Igraine imagined that he might be in a
-mood at last to speak with her if he believed her human.
-At all events, if he took to the trees, and she did not lose
-him, she would have the vantage of him and his horse in
-such a barricaded place.</p>
-
-<p>It began to grow dark very quickly as she passed down
-the gradual slope towards the forest. The trees towered
-above her, a black mass rising again towards the east. Keen
-to see the man&rsquo;s mood, she hurried on and found him still
-steadfast in the great arch, that seemed like the gate of the
-wilderness, ready to abide her. A hundred paces more and
-her heart began to beat the faster, and the moil of the day&rsquo;s
-march dwindled before the influx of a rosier idyl. Every
-step towards Pelleas seemed to take her higher up the turret
-stair of love till her lips should meet those that bent at last
-from the gloom to hers. Pride and vexation lay fallen far
-below, dropped incontinently like a ragged cloak; a more
-generous passion shone out like cloth of gold; she was no
-longer weary. Her eyes were very bright, her face full of a
-splendid wistfulness, as she neared the man under the trees,
-looking up to see his face.</p>
-
-<p>Twilight lay deep violet under the wooelshawe, while
-horse and man were dim and impalpable, great shadows of
-themselves. Igraine could not see the man&rsquo;s face for the
-mask over the mezail of his helmet, and he was silent as
-death. She was quite close to him now and ready to speak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-his name, when he wheeled suddenly, looked back at her,
-and pointed into the wood with his long spear. She ran
-forward and would have taken hold of his bridle, but he
-waved her back and slanted his spear at her in mute warning.
-Igraine, heart-hungry, could hold herself no longer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Man&mdash;man, are you stone?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He rode straight ahead into the night of the trees and
-said never a word. Igraine drew her breath.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The voice that came to her was muffled like the voice
-of a mourner, yet the girl thought she caught the old deep
-tone of it like the low cry of the wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you vex me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Follow!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, Pelleas, I am no nun!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Follow!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I kept this truth from you too long.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Follow!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, would you hurt my heart more?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Follow; God shall make all plain and good.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She gave in with a half-sob, and bent quietly to the
-man&rsquo;s mood, though she had no notion what he purposed
-in his heart, or what his desires were in mystifying her
-thus. No doubt it would be well in the end if Pelleas bade
-her follow like a penitent and promised ultimate peace.
-At least he had not turned her away, and she trusted him
-to the death. He was a strong, deep-sensed soul, she knew,
-and her deceiving may have made him bitter in measure,
-and not easily appeased. In this queer trial of endurance,
-this tempting of her temper, she thought she read a penance
-laid upon her by the man for the way she had used
-his love.</p>
-
-<p>They were soon far into the wood, with the western
-sky dwindling between the innumerable pillars of the trees.
-It began to be dark and utterly silent save for the rustle of
-the dead leaves as they went, and the shrilling chafe of bridle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-or scabbard, or the snort of the great horse. Wherever the
-eye turned the forest piers stood straight and solemn as the
-columns in a hypostyle hall in some Egyptian temple. The
-fretwork of boughs roofed them in with hardly a glimmering
-through of the darkening sky above. There was a pungent
-autumn scent on the air that seemed to rise like the incense
-of years that had fallen to decay on the brown flooring of
-the place, and there was no breath or vestige of a wind.</p>
-
-<p>Presently as the day died the wood went black as the
-winter night, and Igraine kept close by the man, with his
-armour giving a dull gleam now and again to guide her.
-They were passing up what seemed to be a great arcade cut
-through the very heart of the wood, as though leading to
-some shrine or altar, relic of Druid days, or times yet more
-antique. The tunnel ran a curved course, bending deeper
-and deeper as it went into the dense horde of trees. So dark
-was the wood that it was possible to see but a few paces in
-advance, and Igraine wondered how the man kept the track.
-She was close at his stirrup now, with the dark mass of him
-and his horse rising above her like a statue in black basalt.
-Though he never spoke to her, and though she touched no
-part of him, his horse, or his harness, she felt content with
-the queer sense of trust and proximity that pervaded her.
-There was magic in the mere companionship. As she had
-humbled her will to Pelleas&rsquo;s the night when he had taken
-her from the beech tree in Andredswold, so now in like
-fashion she surrendered pride and liberty, and became a child.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the trackway straightened out into a great
-colonnade that ran due south between trees of yet vaster
-girth. Igraine felt the man rein in and abide motionless
-beside her as she held to the stirrup and waited for what
-next should chance. Silence seemed like depths of black
-water over them, and they could hear each other take
-breath like the faint flux and reflux of a sea. Igraine saw
-the man lift his spear, a dim streak less black than the vault
-above, and hold it as a sign for her to listen. Her blood
-began to tingle a very little. There was something far<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-away on the dead, stagnant air, a sort of swirl of sound, shrill
-and harmonious, like a wind playing through the strings of a
-harp. It was very gradual, very impalpable. As the volume
-of it grew it seemed to rush nearer like a wind, to swell into
-a swaying plaintive song smitten through with the wounded
-cry of flutes. It gave a notion of wood-fays dancing, of
-whirling wings and flitting gossamer moonbright in the
-shadows. Igraine&rsquo;s blood seemed to spin the faster, and
-her hand left the stirrup and touched the man&rsquo;s thigh. He
-gave never a word or sign in the dark. She spoke to him
-very softly, very meekly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What place is this, Pelleas?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She saw him bend slightly in the saddle.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is called the Ghost Forest,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What are the sounds we hear?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who can tell!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine had hardly heard him, when a streak of phosphor
-light flickered among the trees, coming and going incessantly
-as the great trunks intervened. It neared them in gradual
-fashion, and then blazed out sudden into the open aisle, a
-man in armour riding on a great white horse, his harness
-white as the moon, his face pale and wide-eyed, his hair
-like a mass of twisted silver wire. A misty glow haloed him
-round, and though he rode close there seemed no sound at
-all to mark his passing. As he had come, so he went, with
-streaks of flickering light that waxed less and less frequent
-till they died in the dark, and left the place empty as before.
-Igraine thought the air cold when he had gone.</p>
-
-<p>She felt the black horse move beside her, and they went
-on as before into the night of the trees. The noise of flute
-and harp that had ceased awhile bubbled up again quite
-near, so that it was no longer the ghost of a sound, but
-noise more definite, more discrete. It had a queer way of
-dying to a sighing breath, and then gathering gradually into
-an ascending burst of windy melody. Igraine could almost
-fancy that she heard the sweep of wings, the soft thrill of
-silks trailing through the trees, yet the man on the horse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-said never a word as they went on like a pair of mutes to a
-grave.</p>
-
-<p>The colonnade opened out abruptly on a great circular
-clearing in the wood shut in by crowded trunks, its open
-vault above cut by a dense ring of foliage. A grey light
-came down from the sky, showing great stones piled one
-upon another, others fallen and sunk deep in rank grass and
-brambles. The man halted his horse in the very centre of
-the clearing, with Igraine beside him, watchful for what
-should happen, and for the moment when Pelleas should
-unbend.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had she looked over the great cromlechs, black
-and sinister in that solitary wilderness, than the whole wood
-about them seemed dusted suddenly with points of fire.
-North, south, east, and west torches and cressets came jerking
-redly out of the night, flitting behind the trees in a wide
-circle, gathering nearer and nearer without a sound. They
-might have been great fireflies playing through the aisles
-and ways, or goblin lamps carried by fairy folk. Igraine
-drew very close to the man&rsquo;s horse for comfort, and looked
-up to see his face, but found it dark and hidden. Her hand
-crept up past the horse&rsquo;s neck, rested on the mane a moment,
-and ventured yet further to meet the man&rsquo;s hand, where it
-gripped the bridle. For a minute they abode thus without
-a sound, watching the weird torch-dance in the wood.</p>
-
-<p>With a sudden gibber of laughter and a swirl of pipes the
-throng of lights seemed to seethe to the very margin of the
-clearing. Queer phantastic shapes showed amid the trees,
-and the great circle grew wide with light, and the grey
-cromlechs surprised in sleep by the glare and piping. At
-that very moment Igraine had a thought of some one looking
-deep into her eyes, of a will, a power, streaming in
-upon her like sunlight into a sleepy pool. Her desire went
-from the man on the black horse into the square shadow of
-the great central cromlech, where an indefinite influence
-seemed to lurk. Looking long under the roofing stone, she
-grew aware of a tall something standing there, of a pair of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-eyes like the eyes of a panther, of a lean white hand moving
-in the shadows.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes under the cromlech seemed to follow Igraine
-like fire, and to burn in upon her a foreign influence.
-Rebellious and wondering, she stiffened herself against a
-spiritual combat that seemed moving upon her out of the
-dark. She could have smitten the eyes that stared her
-down, and yet the magnetic stupor of them kindled up
-things in her heart that were strange and newly sensuous.
-She felt her strength sway as though her soul were being
-lifted from her, and she was warmed from top to toe like
-one who has taken wine, and whose being swims into an
-idyllic glorification of the senses. Again her desire seemed
-turned to the man in red harness, yet when she looked the
-saddle was empty, and the horse held by an armed servant,
-who wore a wolfs head for covering. Still mute with fear,
-desire, and wonder, she saw a tall figure move into the full
-glare of the torches, a figure in red harness with a shield of
-green, and a red dragon thereon, and with head unhelmed.
-The armour was like the armour of Pelleas, but the face
-was the face of the man Gorlois.</p>
-
-<p>And now the eyes under the shadow of the cromlech were
-full and strong upon Igraine. Breathing fast with a hand
-at her throat she stepped back from Gorlois&mdash;hesitated&mdash;stood
-still. She was very white, and her eyes were big and
-sightless like the eyes of one walking in a dream. For all her
-strength, her scorn, and the tricking of her heart, she was
-being swept like a cloud into the embraces of the sun.
-Reason, power, love, sank away and became as nothing. A
-shudder passed over her. Presently her hands dropped limp
-as broken wings, and her body began to sway like a tall
-lily in a breeze. A gradual stupor saw her cataleptic;
-she stood impotent, played upon by the promptings of
-another soul.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois went near to her with hands outstretched, stooping
-to look into her face. A sudden light kindled in her
-eyes, her lips parted, and new life flooded red into her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-cheeks as at the beck of love. She bent to Gorlois full of a
-gracious eagerness, a wistful desire that made her face golden
-as dawn. Her hand sought his, while the shadowy shape
-under the cromlech watched them with never-wavering
-eyes. Gorlois&rsquo;s arms were round her now all wreathed
-in her hair; her face was turned to his; her hands were
-clasped upon his neck. Another moment and he had
-touched her lips with his.</p>
-
-<p>A sound of flutes, the tinkling of a bell, and a solemn
-company came threading from the trees, guests, acolytes,
-torch-bearers, in glittering cloth of gold, with a great crucifix
-to lead them. Gorlois and Igraine were hand in hand
-near the stone that hid the frame of Merlin. A priest in a
-gorgeous cape drew near, and began his patter. The vows
-were taken, the pact sealed, with the noise of a chant and
-music. Thus under the benedictions of the great trees,
-and the spell of Merlin, Gorlois and Igraine were made
-man and wife.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>BOOK III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3">THE WAR IN WALES</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a><br /><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>I</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Aurelius Ambrosius the king was dead, taken off in Winchester
-by the hand of a poisoner. He had been found
-stark and cold in his great carved bed, with an empty wine-cup
-beside him, and a tress of black hair and a tress of
-yellow laid twined together upon his lips. The signet-ring
-had gone from his finger, and by the bed had been discovered
-a woman&rsquo;s embroidered shoe dropped under the
-folds of the purple quilt. The truth, sinister enough in its
-bare suggestions, was glossed over by the court folk out of
-honour to Aurelius, and of love to Uther the king&rsquo;s brother.
-It was told to the country how an Irish monk sent by
-Pascentius, dead Vortigern&rsquo;s son, had gained audience of the
-king, and treacherously poisoned him as he drank wine at
-supper. The tale went out to the world, and was believed
-of many with a sincere and honest faith. Yet a certain
-child-eyed woman, wandering on the shores of Wales for
-sight of Irish ships, could have spoken more of the truth
-had she so dared.</p>
-
-<p>Uther Pendragon had been hailed king at York before
-the bristling spears of a victorious host. But a week before
-he had marched against the heathen on the Humber, and
-overthrown them with such slaughter as had not been seen
-in Britain since the days when Boadicea smote the Romans.
-At the head of his men he had marched south in a snowstorm
-to be thundered into Winchester as king and conqueror.
-Twelve maidens of noble blood, clad in ermine
-and minever, had run before him with boughs of mistletoe
-and bay. Five hundred knights had walked bareheaded,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-with swords drawn, behind his horse. The city had glistened
-in a white web of frosted samite, sparkled over by the
-clear visage of a winter sun.</p>
-
-<p>There were many great labours ready to the king&rsquo;s hand.
-Britain lay bruised by the onslaughts of the barbarians; her
-monks had been slain, her churches desecrated. The pirate
-ships swept the seas, and poured torch and sword along the
-sunny shores of the south. Andredswold, dark, saturnine,
-mysterious, alone waved them back with the sepulchral
-threatening of its trees. Yet, for all the burden of the
-kingdom upon his broad shoulders, Uther gave his first care
-to the honouring of the dead. Aurelius Ambrosius was
-buried with great pomp of churchmen and nobles at Stonehenge,
-and a royal mound raised above the tomb. At
-Christmastide, with snow upon the ground, a great gathering
-was made at Sarum of all the petty kings, princes, and nobles
-of the land. Hither came Meliograunt, king of Cornwall,
-and Urience of the land of Gore. Fealty was sworn with
-solemn ordinance to Uther Pendragon the king, and common
-league bonded against the heathen and the whelps of the
-north.</p>
-
-<p>There were other perils brewing for Britain over the sea.
-Pascentius, dead Vortigern&rsquo;s son, had been an outcast and
-a wanderer since the days when the sons of Constantine
-had sailed from Armorica to save the land from the blind
-lust and treason of his father. He had been a drifting fire
-beyond the seas, an intriguer, a sower of sedition, a man
-dangerous alike to friend and foe. Beaten like a vulture
-from the coasts of Britain, he had turned with treasonable
-hope to Ireland and its king, Gilomannius the Black, a
-strenuous potentate, boasting little love for Ambrosius the
-king. Here, in Ireland, a kennel of sedition had arisen.
-Pascentius, keen, hungry plotter, had toiled at the task of
-piling enmity against those who had destroyed his father
-amid the flames of Genorium. A great league arose, a
-banding of the barbarians with the Irish princes, a union
-of the Saxons who ravaged Kent with the wild tribesmen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-over the northern border. Month by month a great host
-gathered on the Irish coast. Many ships came from the
-east and from the south. Mid-winter was past before Gilomannius
-embarked, and, setting sail with a fair wind, turned
-the beaks of his galleys for the shores of Wales.</p>
-
-<p>Noise of the gathering storm had been brought to Uther
-as he journed through the southern coasts, rebuilding the
-churches, recovering abbey and hermitage from their desolate
-ashes. His zeal was great for God, and his love of
-Britain well-nigh as noble. Warned thus in due season, he
-marched for the west, calling the land to arms, assigning
-for the gathering of the host Caerleon upon Usk, that fair
-city bosomed in the fulness of its woods and pastures.
-Many a knight had answered to his call; many a city had
-sent out her companies; the high-roads rang with the cry of
-steel in the crisp winter weather.</p>
-
-<p>Duke Gorlois had come from Cornwall from his castle of
-Tintagel, bringing many knights and men-at-arms by sea,
-and the Lady Igraine his wife, in a great galley whose bulwarks
-glistened with shields. In Caerleon Gorlois had a
-house built of white stone, set upon a little hill in the centre
-of the city. To Caerleon he brought this golden falcon of
-a woman, this untamable thing that he had kept prisoned
-in the high towers of Tintagel. He mewed her up like a
-nun in his house of white stone, so that no man should see
-the fairness of her face. She was wild as an eyas from the
-woods, fierce and unapproachable, and sharp of claw. Robbed
-of her liberty, had she not sought to take her own life with
-a sword, and to throw herself from the battlements of Tintagel?
-Gorlois had won little love by Merlin&rsquo;s subtlety,
-and he feared the woman&rsquo;s beauty and the spell of her
-large eyes.</p>
-
-<p>It was the month of February and clear crisp weather.
-The white bellies of the Irish sails had shown up against
-the grey blue stretch of the sea, a white multitude of canvas
-that had sent the herdsmen hurrying their flocks to the
-mountains. Horsemen had galloped for Caerleon, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-cry of war went up over wood and water. Flames licked
-the night sky. From Caerleon to St. Davids, from St.
-Davids to Eryri, the red blaze of beacon-fires told of the
-ships at sea.</p>
-
-<p>The cry of the storm arose in Caerleon, and the tramp
-of armed men sounded all day in her streets. The great
-host lodged about the city broke camp and streamed westwards
-along the high-road into Wales. Bugles blew, banners
-flapped, masses of sullen steel rolled away into purple of
-the winter woods. Bristling spears and lines of skin-clad
-shields vanished into the west like the waves of a solemn
-sea. On the walls of Caerleon stood many women and
-children watching the host march for the west, watching
-Uther the king ride out with his great company of knights
-and nobles.</p>
-
-<p>At the casement of an upper room in Gorlois&rsquo;s house stood
-a woman looking out over Caerleon towards the sea. She
-was clad in a mantle of furs, and in a tunic of purple linked
-up with cord of gold. A tippet of white fur clasped with
-a brooch of amethysts circled her throat. Her hair was
-bound up in a net of fine silk, and there was a girdle of blue
-silk about her loins, and an enamelled cross upon her bosom.
-She stood with her elbows resting on the stone sill, and her
-peevish face clasped between her hands. Her eyes looked
-very large and lustrous as she stared out wistfully over the
-city.</p>
-
-<p>In the great court below horses champed the bit and
-struck fire from the ringing flags. Men in armour clanged
-to and fro; rough voices cried questions and counter-questions;
-bridles jingled; spear-shafts clattered on the stones.
-Now a clarion blared as a troop of horse thundered by up
-the street, their armour gleaming dully past the courtyard
-gate. The growl of war hung heavy over Caerleon, a grim
-sullen sound that seemed in keeping with the restless chiding
-of the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s face was hard as stone as she watched the men
-moving in the courtyard below. She looked older than of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-yore, whiter, thinner in cheek and neck, her great eyes
-staunch though sad under her netted hair. Her face showed
-melancholy mingled with a constant scorn that had rarely
-found expression with her in the old days, save within the
-walls of Avangel. She looked like one who had endured
-much, suffered much, yet lost no whit of pride in the trial.
-Though she may have been blemished like a Greek vase
-smitten by some barbaric sword, she was her self still, brave,
-headstrong, resolute as ever. The shame of the things she
-had suffered had perhaps wiped out the gentler outlines of
-her character and left her more stern, more wary, less
-honest, more deep in her endeavours. There was no
-passive humility or patience about her soul, and she was the
-falcon still, though caged and guarded beyond her liberty.</p>
-
-<p>As she stood at the casement with the prophetic murmur
-of war in her ears, it seemed to her as though life surged to
-her feet and mocked her bondage like laughing water. The
-desire of liberty abode ever with her even to the welcoming
-of stagnant death. She thirsted for her freedom, plotted for
-it, dreamt of it with a zeal that was almost ferocious. Her
-life seemed a speculation, a perpetual aspiration after a state
-that still eluded her. In the Avangel days she had been
-wild and petulant. Then Pelleas had come through the
-green gloom of early summer to soften her soul and inspire
-all the best breath of the woman in her. Again, thanks to
-Gorlois, she had fallen with the usual reaction of circumstance
-upon evil times; the change had discovered the
-peevish discontent of the girl hardened into the strong wilfulness
-of the woman.</p>
-
-<p>She hated Gorlois with a fanatical immensity of soul.
-When the man was near her she felt full of the creeping
-nausea of a great loathing, and she waxed faint with hate
-at the veriest touch of his hands. His breath seemed to her
-more unsavoury than the miasma of a gutter, and it needed
-but the sound of his voice to bring all her baser passions
-braying and yelping against him. He had driven the religious
-instinct out of her heart, and she was in revolt against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-heaven and the marriage pact forged by the authority of the
-Church. She had often vowed in her heart that she could
-do no sin against Gorlois, her husband. He had no claim
-upon her conscience. The bondage had been of his making;
-let God judge her if she scorned his honour.</p>
-
-<p>Standing by the window watching the knights saddling
-for their lord&rsquo;s sally, she heard heavy footsteps mounting up
-the stairs, and the ring of steel-tipped shoes along the gallery.
-The footsteps were deliberate, and none too fast, as though
-the man walked under a burden of thought. A shadow
-seemed to pass over Igraine&rsquo;s face. She slipped from the
-window, ran across the room, shot the bolt of the door,
-and stood listening. A hand tried the latch. She knew
-well enough whose fist it was that rattled on the oaken
-panels. Her face hardened to a kind of cold malevolence,
-and she laughed noiselessly in her sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>A terse summons came to her from the gallery.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wife, we ride at once.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man could not have made a worse beginning.
-There was a suggestion of tyranny in a particular word that
-was hardly temperate. Igraine leant against the door; she
-was still smiling to herself, and her hands fingered the
-embroidered tassel of the latch.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We are late on the road; I can make no tarrying.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The door quivered a moment as though shaken by a
-gusty wind. Everything was quiet again, and Igraine
-could hear the man breathing. Putting her mouth to the
-crack between post and hinge-board she laughed stridently
-as though in scorn.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The voice was half-imperative, half-appealing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My very dear lord!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you abed?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, dear lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Open to me; I would kiss your lips before I sally.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have never kissed me these many days.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;True, wife; is it fault of mine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nor shall again, dear lord, if I have strength.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She heard the man muttering to himself a moment, but
-this time there was no smiting of the door, no fume and
-tempest. His mood seemed more temperate, less masterful,
-as though he were half heavy at heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why do you whimper like a dog?&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;go, get
-you to war. What are you to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When will you learn reason?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;When you are dead, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I deserve all this.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you so much a penitent?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her mockery seemed to lift Gorlois to a higher range of
-passion, and there was great bitterness in his voice as he
-tossed back words to her with a quick kindling of desire.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Woman, I have been hard in the winning of you, but,
-God knows, you are something to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God knows, Gorlois, I hate you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His hand shook the door.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let me in, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Break down the door; you shall come at me no other
-way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Woman, woman, I am a fool; my heart smarts at leaving
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You sound almost saintly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have left Brastias in charge of you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thanks, lord, for a jailer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine drew back from the door and stood at her full
-height with her hands crossed upon her bosom. She
-quivered as she stood with the intense effort of her hate.
-Gorlois still waited without the door, though she could not
-hear him moving. The silence seemed like the deep hush
-that falls between the blustering stanzas of a storm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was a hoarse cry, quick and querulous. Igraine had
-both her fists to her chin in an attitude of inward effort, as
-though she racked herself to give utterance to the impla<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>cable
-temper of her scorn. Her face had a queer parched
-look. When she spoke, her voice was shrill like a piping
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would you have my blessing?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Give it me, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go then, and look not to me for comfort. When you
-are in battle, and the swords cry on your shield, I shall pray
-on my knees that you may get your death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois gave never a sound as he stood by the barred
-door with his hand over the mezail of his helmet. It
-seemed dark and gloomy in the gallery, and the staunch
-oak fronted him like fate. His eyes were full of a dull
-light as he turned and went clanging down the stairway
-with slow, heavy tread. His sounding footsteps died down
-into the din of arms that came from the great court.
-Igraine ran to the window and watched him and his men
-ride out, smiling a bleak smile as the last mailed figure
-gleamed out by the gate.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>II</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When Gorlois and his knights had gone, Igraine unbarred
-the door, and passed down the narrow stair to the state
-chamber of the house, where a fire was burning. It was a
-solemn room, shadowed with many arches, with vaults
-inlaid with marble, its walls painted green and gold, its
-glimmering casements lozenged with fine glass. Furs were
-spread upon the mosaic floor; painted urns held flowers
-that bloomed in the mock summer of the room.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stood and warmed herself before the fire. From
-an altar-like pillar near she took storax and galbanum from
-brazen bowls, and scattered the resinous tears upon the
-flames. A pungent fragrance rose up into her nostrils.
-The flicker of the fire played upon her face, and set a lustre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-in her eyes. It was winter weather, and the warmth was
-welcome.</p>
-
-<p>The refrain of her talk with Gorlois still ran at fever
-heat like a wild song through her brain. She was stirred
-to the deeps of her strong soul. For Gorlois she had no
-measure of pity. He was a rotten tree to her, a slab of
-granite, anything but quick flesh and blood capable of
-aspiration and desire. She hated him more for his pleading
-than for his tyranny, fearing to be pleased by one she
-dreaded. He was strenuous and obstinate. She knew that
-it would be great joy to her if she saw his face no more, and
-if his body crumbled in the rain on some bleak coast in Wales.</p>
-
-<p>As she stood by the fire and looked into it with pondering
-eyes she heard a curtain drawn and the sound of a footstep
-on the threshold. Turning briskly, like one accustomed
-to suspicions, she saw the man Brastias in the doorway
-looking at her half-furtively, as though none too proud of
-the office thrust upon him. He had great grey eyes and a
-calm face. Bending stiffly to Igraine with his hand over
-his heart, he turned aside to a cabinet by the wall, took
-therefrom an illumined scroll of legendary tales, and sat
-down on a bench to read, as though he had no other business
-in the room.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s long lip curled. She knew the meaning of the
-man&rsquo;s presence there shrewdly enough. Going to a window
-she opened the casement frame and looked out on the
-winter scene. Usk winding silver to the sea, the purple roll
-of the bleak bare woods, the far sea itself dying a sullen
-streak into a sullen sky. It was dreary enough, and yet it
-suited her; she could have welcomed thunder and the rend
-of forked fire above the woods. Thought was fierce in her
-with the wind crying about the house like a wistful voice,
-the voice of days long dead.</p>
-
-<p>To be free of Gorlois!</p>
-
-<p>To cast off her present self like a rotten cloak!</p>
-
-<p>To adventure liberty, though the peril were shrill as the
-wind through the swaying pines on the hillside!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>To deal with Brastias!</p>
-
-<p>Now Brastias was a grave-faced knight, neither young
-nor old, but a very boy in the matter of the mock wisdom
-of the world. He was possessed of one of those generous
-natures that looks kindly on humanity with a simple optimism
-born of a contented conscience. He was a devout
-man, a soldier, and a gentleman. Moreover, he owned a
-holy reverence for women, a reverence that led him into a
-somewhat extravagant belief in the sincerity of their truth
-and virtue. He was blessed too in being nothing of a
-cynic in his conceptions of honour.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois knew the man to the heart, and trusted him, a
-fact well proven by the faith imposed upon him in his
-wardenship of the Lady Igraine. Brastias hated the task
-as much as he hated the telling of a lie. There are some
-men whose whole instinct is towards truth. They are
-golden souls, often too easily deceived with a gross dross
-that makes an outward show of kindred colour.</p>
-
-<p>Brastias was no stranger to Igraine, for he had served
-her as one of the knights of the guard in the great castle of
-Tintagel. He was a man who could look into a woman&rsquo;s
-eyes and make her feel instinctively the clear honour of his
-soul. There was nothing of the flesh about Brastias. And
-it was in this chivalrous faith of his that Igraine discovered
-a credulity that might make him prone to believe a certain
-profession of faith that was taking sudden and subtle form
-within her mind. Months ago, she would have hesitated
-before the man&rsquo;s grey eyes. But feeling herself sinned
-against, and stirred by the shame of the past, she found
-ample justification for herself in the lie Gorlois had practised
-for her undoing.</p>
-
-<p>She left the window, and went and stood by the fire,
-with her back to the man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias,&rdquo; she said, quite softly.</p>
-
-<p>The man looked up from the scroll, and seemed ill at
-ease.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I trust your duty is pleasant to you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Brastias&rsquo;s eyelids flickered nervously, and he cleared his
-throat.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;May the Virgin witness,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have no love of
-the task.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My Lord Gorlois trusts you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He has said so, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And am I not his wife?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias put the scroll aside with a constrained deliberation.
-He felt himself wholly in the wrong, as he always
-did before a woman, and his wit ran clumsily on such
-occasions. It had needed but the observation of a child to
-mark the gulf between Gorlois and his wife. Gorlois had
-spoken few words on the matter, had given commands
-and nothing more. Brastias was not the man to tamper
-officiously with the confidences of others. He thought
-much, said little, and bided quiet for Igraine to speak.</p>
-
-<p>She stood half-turned towards the fire, with her face in
-profile, and her hands hanging limply at her side. Looking
-for all the world like a penitent, she spoke with a certain
-unconscious pathos, as though she touched on a matter that
-was heavy upon her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias, I may call you a friend?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I trust so, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then there is no reason for me to be backward in
-speaking of the truth?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man bowed and said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come then, Brastias, tell me honestly, have I seemed to
-you like a woman who loved her husband?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The girl&rsquo;s blue eyes were staring hard into the man&rsquo;s grey
-ones. There was little chance of prevarication before so
-blunt a question, and Brastias&rsquo;s courtesy, like Balaam&rsquo;s ass,
-refused to deny the scrutiny of truth. Igraine could read
-the man&rsquo;s face like a piece of blazened parchment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never fear to be frank,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;your belief hangs on
-your face like an alphabet, and that shows me how much
-you know of a woman&rsquo;s heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pardon me, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never blush, man, you would have said that I had as
-little love for Gorlois as for the dirtiest beggar in Caerleon?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias frowned mildly and agreed with her, remembering
-as he did a certain wild scene on the battlements of
-Tintagel.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And doubtless you would say that it pained me not a
-whit to see Gorlois my lord ride out from Caerleon into the
-wilds of Wales?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was such reproach in her voice that Brastias fell
-into confusion before her eyes, reddened, and began to excuse
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your ladyship&rsquo;s behaviour,&rdquo; he said, with an ingenuous
-look and an intense striving after propitiation,&mdash;&ldquo;your ladyship&rsquo;s
-behaviour would hardly warrant me in believing that
-my Lord Gorlois was vastly dear to you. And, pardon me,
-a woman does not seek to run away from her husband.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You insinuate&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias felt himself in the mire, and groaned in spirit.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, I would say&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, I understand you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Give me leave&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not another word.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine smiled softly to herself, turned her back on
-Brastias and stared long into the fire. The man stood by,
-watching her with a humbled look, his fingers twisting restlessly
-at the broidery of his black tunic. Igraine traced out
-the mosaic patterns on the floor with the point of her shoe.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I think you men are all fools,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Brastias&rsquo;s silence might have suggested contradiction.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have you ever loved a woman?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man shifted, and went red under his straight fair
-hair. His eyes took a dreamy look.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, as though half-ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine hung her head and sighed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; she said, growing suddenly shy and out of
-countenance, "perhaps you may have learnt the lesson of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-the froward heart, the heart that comes by love when it is
-in peril of great loss."</p>
-
-<p>Brastias drew a quick, deep breath.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By the Virgin, that&rsquo;s true,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine turned to the fire and hid her face from the man.
-There was a pathetic droop about her shoulders, a listless
-curving of her neck, that made Brastias picture her as
-burdened with some immoderate sorrow. He was an impressionable
-man, not in any amorous sense, but in the
-matter of sympathy towards his fellows. He thought he
-heard a catch in the girl&rsquo;s breathing that boded tears. Her
-hair looked very soft and lustrous as it curved over her ears
-and neck.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>No answer. Brastias went a step nearer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A slight turning of the head in response.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What ails you, madame?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never trouble.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I beseech you, tell me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man was quite afire; his face looked bright and
-eager, and his eyes shone.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois has gone to the war.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words were jerked out one by one.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;War&mdash;and death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courage, madame, courage. On my soul, you are not
-going to say&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias, you understand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Man, man, don&rsquo;t drag it out of me; don&rsquo;t you see?
-are you blind?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias invoked a certain saint by the name of Christopher,
-and straightway emphasised his words by falling
-down on his knees beside Igraine. She had contrived to
-conjure up tears as she bent over the fire. Brastias found
-one of her hands and held it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This will be my lord&rsquo;s salvation.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Think you so?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On my soul, my dear lady, I thank our Lord Jesu
-from my heart. For I know my Lord Gorlois, and the
-bitterness that weighed him down, though he spoke little
-to me on this matter, being staunch to you, and to his
-courtesy. And by our Lord&rsquo;s Passion, madame, I love
-peace in a house, and quiet looks, and words like laughing
-water, for there is never a home where temper rules.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias, you shame me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God forbid, dear lady, there&rsquo;s no gospel vanity in my
-heart. I speak but out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s quaint outburst of gladness touched Igraine&rsquo;s
-honesty to the core, but she had no thought of recantation,
-for all the pricking of her conscience. She passed back to
-the open window and leant against the mullion, while Brastias
-rose from his knees and followed her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am faint,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and the fresh wind comforts me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courage, madame; Duke Gorlois fights for Britain and
-the Cross; what better blessing on his shield?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was looking out toward the sea and the grey
-curtain of the sky cut in places by dark woods and the
-sweep of dull green hills. There was a wistful droop about
-her figure that made Brastias molten with intent to comfort,
-and dumb with words of sympathy that died inarticulate in
-his throat. He stood there, a man muzzled by his own
-sincerity, bankrupt of a syllable, though he commanded his
-wit to be nimble with stentorian cry of conscience. He
-felt hot in his skin and vastly stupid. By the time he had
-lumbered up some passable fancy, Igraine had turned from
-the window with a quick intelligence kindling in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen to me, I have come by a plan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A sudden flood of sunlight streamed through a rent in
-the grey canopy of clouds. The landscape took a warmer
-tinge, the purple of the woods deepened. Brastias saw the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-sudden gleam of light strike on Igraine&rsquo;s hair. Her head
-was thrown back upon her splendid neck, and her eyes
-seemed large with love.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will show Gorlois how I love him,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Brastias&rsquo;s face was still hazed in conjecture.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will wipe out the past.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We will follow Gorlois to the war, you and I, Brastias,
-together. What say you to that?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man looked at her with clear grey eyes, and with
-a transient immobility of feature that changed swiftly to a
-glow of understanding. The words had gone home to him
-like a trumpet-cry; their courage warmed him, and he was
-carried with the wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A great hazard&mdash;and a noble,&rdquo; he said, with a flush of
-colour; &ldquo;the peril is on my neck, and yet&mdash;I&rsquo;ll bear it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s face blazed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias, you will go with me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By my sword, to the death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come hither, man; I must kiss your forehead.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias knelt to her again with crossed hands. She looked
-into his grey eyes and touched his forehead with her lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thus I salute honour,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord&rsquo;s lady!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have trusted me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Else had I been ashamed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man went away to arm, warm at heart as any boy.
-Igraine stood a moment looking into the fire with an
-enigmatic calm upon her face. For Brastias she felt a
-throttled pity, an impossible admiration that only troubled
-her. Her lust for liberty bore her like a storm-wind, and
-her hate of Gorlois made her iron at heart. She could dare
-anything to fling off the moral bondage that cramped and
-bound her like a net.</p>
-
-<p>While Brastias was away arming and ordering horses,
-she went to a little armoury on the stairs and filched away
-a short hauberk and a sheathed poniard. She wore these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-under a gown of black velvet bound with a silver girdle, and
-a cloak of sables hooded and lined with sky-blue cloth. She
-had a strange joy of the knife at her girdle as she passed
-down the stairway to the court.</p>
-
-<p>A few silent servants gaped at her as she passed from the
-house. Brastias came out to her in armour. In the court
-she heard the cry of steel bridles, the sparking of hoofs on
-the stones. They were soon mounted and away under the
-great gate and free of Caerleon in the decline of the day.
-The west had no colour, and a wind pined in the trees as
-they swept into the twining shadows of the woods, and saw
-the boughs clutch each other against the sullen sky. Soon
-night came in a black cowl, and with a winter wind that
-roamed the woods like the moan of a prophecy. Igraine,
-riding with her bridle linked in that of Brastias, pressed on
-for the west with a mood that echoed the roar of the trees.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>III</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A man in black armour, a lady in a cloak of sables, a pine
-forest under a winter sky.</p>
-
-<p>Myriad trunks interminably pillared, grey-black below,
-changing to red beneath the canopy of boughs; patches of
-grey-blue sky between; a floor overgrown with whortleberry
-and heather, and streaked seldom by the sun. Through
-the tree-tops the veriest sighing of a wind, a sound that
-crept up the curling galleries like the softly-taken breath
-of a sleeping world. Away on every hand oblivious vistas
-black under multitudinous green spires.</p>
-
-<p>The woman&rsquo;s face seemed white under the sweep of her
-sable hood. Its expression was very purposeful, its mouth
-firm and resolute, its air indicative of a deliberate will. Her
-eyes stared into the wood over her horse&rsquo;s head with a constant
-care, dropping now and again a quick side-glance at
-the man in black armour riding on her flank. She spoke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-seldom to him, and then with a certain assumption of
-authority that seemed to trouble his equanimity but little.
-Often she would lean forward in the saddle as though to
-listen, her eyes fixed, her mouth decisive, her hand hollowed
-at her ear to concavitate some sound other than the wind-song
-of the trees. It was evident that she was under the
-spell of some strong emotion, for she would smile and frown
-by turns as though vexed by perpetual alternatives of feeling.</p>
-
-<p>The man at her side watched with his grey eyes the path
-curling uphill between the trees. Having his own inward
-exposition of the woman&rsquo;s mood, he contented himself wisely
-with silence, keeping his reflections to himself. He was
-not a man who blurted commonplaces when lacking the
-means of inspiration. And he was satisfied with the fancy
-that he understood completely the things that were passing
-through the woman&rsquo;s mind. He believed her troubled by
-those extreme anxieties of the heart that come with war and
-the handiwork of the sword. Perhaps he was fortunate in
-being ignorant of the truth.</p>
-
-<p>The interminable trees seemed to vex the woman&rsquo;s spirit
-as their trunks crowded the winding track and shut the pair
-in as with a never-ending barrier. But for an occasional
-patch of heathland or scrub, no lengthy vista opened up
-before them. Tree-boles stood everywhere to baulk their
-vision, silent and stiff like sullen sentinels. The horses
-plodded on. Igraine&rsquo;s impatience could be read upon her
-face, and discovered in her slighter gestures. It was the
-impatience of a mind at war within itself, a mind prone
-through the chafe of trouble to be vexed with trifles; sore,
-sensitive, and hasty. Brastias watched her, pretending to be
-intent the while on the path that wandered away into the
-mazes of the wood. He was a considerate creature, and he
-suffered her petulance with a placid good-humour, and a
-certain benevolence that was the outcome of pity.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine jerked her bridle, and eyed the trees as though
-they were the members of a mob thrusting themselves
-between her and her purpose. She was inclined to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-unreasonable, as only a woman can be on occasions. Brastias,
-calm-faced and debonair, contented himself with sympathy,
-and refrained from reason as from the handling of a whip.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That peasant fellow was a liar,&rdquo; he said, by way of
-being companionable.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, the whelp.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll swear we&rsquo;ve ridden two leagues, not one.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The fellow should have a stripe for every furlong.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Rough justice, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If justice were done to liars,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the world
-would be hideless, scourged raw.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias edged his horse past an intruding tree and
-chuckled amiably.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It would be a pity to spoil so much beauty.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Eh!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The women would come off worst.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine flashed a look at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Balaam&rsquo;s ass spoke the truth,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>They had not gone another furlong when Brastias reined
-in suddenly and stood listening. He held up a hand to
-Igraine, looking at her with prophetic face, his black armour
-lustreless under the trees.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hark!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stared into his eyes. Neither moved a muscle
-for fully a minute.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A trumpet-cry!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias lowered his hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;From the host. And the &lsquo;advance,&rsquo; by the sound on&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then we shall be out of the woods soon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go warily, madame; it would be poor wisdom to
-stumble on an Irish legion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias, I would not miss the day for a year in heaven.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>As they pushed uphill through the solemn shadows of
-the forest, a sound like the raging of a wind through a wood
-came down to them faintly from afar. It was a sullen
-sound, deep and mysterious as the hoarse babel of the sea,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-smitten through with the shrill scream of trumpets like the
-cry of gulls above a storm. In the alleys of the pine forest
-it was still as death, and calm beneath the beniscus of the
-tall trees.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine and Brastias looked meaningly at each other as
-they rode. The sound needed no words to christen it.
-The two under the trees knew that they heard the roar of
-host breaking upon host, the cataractine thunder of a distant
-battle.</p>
-
-<p>Pushing on as fast as the forest suffered, the din became
-more definite, more human, more sinister in detail. It
-stirred the blood, challenged the courage, racked conjecture
-with the infinite chaos it portended. Victory and despair
-were trammelled up together in its sullen roar; life and
-death seemed to swell it with the wind-sound of their wings;
-it was stupendous, sonorous, chaotic, a tempest-cry of steel
-and many voices merged into the grand underchant of war.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s face kindled to the sound like the face of a girl
-who hears her lover&rsquo;s lute at night under her window.
-Blood fled to her brain with the wild strength of the strain
-humming like a wind through the trees. She was in the
-mood for war; the tragedy of it solemnised her spirit, and
-made her look for the innumerable flash of arms, the rolling
-march of a multitude. For the moment it was life, and the
-glorious strength of it; death and the dust were hid from
-sight.</p>
-
-<p>Yet another furlong and the red trunks dwindled, and
-the sombre boughs fringed great tracts of blue, and to the
-north mountains rose up dim and purple under an umbrage
-of clouds. To the west the sea appeared solemn and foamless,
-set with pine-spired aisles, and a great company of
-ships at anchor. Nigh the shore the grey pile of a walled
-town stood out upon green meadows. Igraine and the
-man pushed past the outlying thickets, and drew rein upon
-a slope that ran gradually down from them like the great
-swell of a sea.</p>
-
-<p>Tented by the dome of the sky lay a natural amphi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>theatre,
-shelving towards the sea, but rising in the east by
-rolling slopes to a ridge that joined the mountains with the
-forest. The valley was a medley of waste land, scrub,
-gorse, and thicket, traversed by the white streak of a road,
-and closed on the west by the grey walls of the town rising
-up above the green. It was a wild spot enough. However
-still and solitary it may have seemed in its native desertedness,
-however much the haunt of the wolf and the boar, it
-seethed now like a cauldron with the boiling stir of battle.
-Men swarmed through scrub and thicket; masses of steel
-moved hither and thither, met, mingled, broke, and rallied.
-Wave rushed on wave. Bodies of horsemen smoked over
-the open with flashing of many colours and the glittering
-pomp of mail, to roll with clanging trumpets into some
-vortex of death. The whole scene was one shifting mass
-of steel and strife, dust and disorder, galloping squadrons,
-rolling spears, rank on rank of shields a-flicker in the sun.
-And from this whirlpool of humanity rose the dull grinding
-roar of war, fierce, stupendous, clamorous, grand.</p>
-
-<p>To the trained eye of the soldier the chaos took orderly
-and intelligent meaning, and Brastias stood in his stirrups
-and pointed out to Igraine the main ordering of the hosts.
-Uther Pendragon held the eastern ridge with his knights
-and levies; Gilomannius and Pascentius thrust up at him
-from the sea; while the valley between held the wreck of
-the countercharges of either host, and formed debatable
-ground where troop ran against troop, and man against
-man.</p>
-
-<p>The masses of Uther&rsquo;s army swept away along the ridge,
-their arms glittering over the green slopes, their banners
-and surcoats colouring the height into a terraced garden of
-war, the whole, a solemn streak of gold against the blue
-bosoms of the hills. To the north stood Meliograunt with
-his levies from Wales, and next him Duke Eldol and King
-Nentres headed the men of Flavia Cæsariensis. South of all
-the great banner of Tintagel showed where Gorlois and the
-southern levies reared up their spears like a larch-wood in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-winter. Brastias pointed them all out to the girl in turn,
-keeping keen watch the while on the shifting mob of mail
-in the valley.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, stirred by the scene, urged on from the forest,
-and the knight following her, they crossed some open
-scrubland, wound through a thicket of pines, and stood at
-gaze under the boughs. Igraine&rsquo;s eyes were all the while
-turned on the banner of Tintagel, and from the common
-mob of mailed figures she could isolate a knight in gilded
-harness on a white horse, Gorlois, her husband. The mere
-sight of him set her hate blazing in her heart, and seemed
-to pageant out all the ills she had suffered at his hands.
-Her feud against the man was a veritable insanity, a species
-of melancholia that wrapped all existence in the morbid
-twilight of self-centred bitterness. As she looked down
-upon the host there was a kind of overmastering madness of
-malice on her face, an emotion whose very intensity paled
-her to the lips, and made her eyes hard and scintillant as
-crystal. She was discreet for all her violence of soul.
-Turning to Brastias, who was scanning the valley under his
-hand, she pointed to the banner with a restless eagerness of
-manner that might have hinted at her solicitude for Gorlois,
-her lord.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;See yonder,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is not that the Lord Gorlois on
-the white horse by yonder standard?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Brastias turned his glance thither, considered for a
-moment, and then agreed decisively.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Love is quick of eye,&rdquo; he said with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let us ride down nearer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I care not for the hazard, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who fears at such a season?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By my sword, madame, not your servant; I am but
-careful of your safety.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fear for me, Brastias, when I fear for myself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Methinks, madame, that would be never.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brastias, I believe you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s courage had risen to too high an imperiousness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-for the moment to brook baffling or to endure restraint.
-She had been lifted out of herself, as it were, by the storm-cry
-of battle, and by the splendour of the scene spread out
-before her eyes. A furlong or more down the hillside a
-little hillock stood up amid a few wind-twisted thorns,
-proffering rare vantage for outlook over wood and dale.
-She was away like a flash, and several lengths ahead before
-Brastias had roused up, put spur to horse, and cantered after
-her. The man saw the glint of her horse&rsquo;s hinder hoofs
-spurning the sod, and though the wind whistled about his
-ears, he was left well in the rear for all his spurring.
-Igraine, with her hair agleam under her tossed-back hood,
-and her cheeks ruddied by the wind, headed for the rising
-ground at a gallop, gained it, and drew rein on the very
-verge of a small cliff that dropped sheer to the flat below.
-The hillock was like a natural pulpit, its front face a
-perpendicular some twenty feet high, while its hinder slope
-tailed off to merge into the hillside. Gorlois&rsquo;s mailed
-masses stood but a hundred paces away, and Igraine could
-see him clearly in his gilded harness under the banner of
-Tintagel.</p>
-
-<p>Brastias galloped up to her with a mild bluster of
-expostulation.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You court danger, madame.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What if I do, Brastias, to be near my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your sanctity lies upon my conscience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I take all such care from you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame, that is impossible; duty is duty both night
-and day, in battle and in peace; duty bids me fear for my
-lord&rsquo;s wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine found certain logic invincible in the argument,
-and made good use of it; she meant to rule Brastias for her
-own ends.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Fear,&rdquo; she said; "I forget fear when I am nigh Gorlois,
-my husband; and who can gainsay me the right of watching
-over him? I forget fear when I think of Britain, the
-king, and my lord, and had I a hundred lives I could cast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-them down to help to break the heathen, and serve my
-country."</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; said Brastias, signing the cross upon his breast.</p>
-
-<p>Sterner interests quashed any further polite bickerings
-that might have risen from Igraine&rsquo;s pride of purpose, for
-Brastias, with the instinct of a soldier, marked some large
-development in the struggle that had been passing in the
-valley below them. The scattered lines of horse and foot
-that had been thrown forward by Uther to try the strength
-and spirit of the Irish host, were falling back sullenly uphill
-before the masses of attack poured up from the flats by
-Gilomannius the king. The whole battle had shifted to
-the east. Bodies of horse were spurring uphill, driving in
-Uther&rsquo;s men, cutting down stragglers, harrowing the slopes
-for the solid march of the black columns of foot that were
-creeping up between the thickets, winding like giant dragons
-amid furze and scrub. It was a grand sight enough, the
-advance of a great host, a rocking sea of spears pouring up
-in the lull that had fallen over the valley as though the
-battle took breath and waited. Uther&rsquo;s men kept their
-ground upon the ridge, watching in silence the advance of
-Gilomannius&rsquo;s chivalry. Only a brief wild cry of trumpets
-betokened the gathering of the waves of war.</p>
-
-<p>Even at this juncture Brastias racked his wit and courtesy
-to persuade Gorlois&rsquo;s lady to fall back and watch from the
-shelter of the woods. He pointed out her peril to Igraine,
-besought, argued, cajoled, threatened. All he gained was a
-blunt but half-smiling declaration from the woman that she
-would hold to her post on the hillock till the battle was over,
-or some mischance drove her from the place. Brastias
-caught her bridle, spurred round, and tried to drag her back
-by main force, but she was out of the saddle instanter, and
-obstinate as ever. In the end the man capitulated, and
-gave his concern to the fortunes of war.</p>
-
-<p>The sudden uproar that sounded out along the hillside
-made mere individual need dull and impossible for the
-moment. The shock of the joining of the hosts had come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-like the fall of snow from a mountain&mdash;a sound sweeping
-down the valley, echoing among the silent fastnesses of the
-hills. Men had come pike to pike, shield to shield, upon
-the ridge. Mass rushed upon mass, billow upon billow.
-From the mountains to the forest the sweat and thunder of
-strife rolled up from the long line of leaping steel, from the
-living barrier, steady as a cliff. It was one of the many
-Marathons of the world where barbarism clawed at the
-antique fabric of the past.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s glance was stayed on Gorlois and the southern
-levies about the banner of Tintagel. Her hate surged up
-the green slope with the onrush of the Irish horde, and
-brandished on the charge in spirit towards the tall figure in
-the harness of gold. She saw Gorlois in the press smiting
-right and left with the long sweep of his sword. In her
-thirst for his destruction she grudged him strength, harness,
-sword, the very shield he bore. She was glad of his courage,
-for such would militate against him. Moment by moment
-her desire honoured him with death as she thought him
-doomed to fall beneath the surge of steel.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden shout from Brastias brought her stare from this
-chaos of swords. The man was standing in his stirrups,
-and pointing to the west with his face dead white and his
-mouth agape.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By God, look!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Truth to tell, there was little need of the warning. A
-dull rumble of hoofs came up like thunder above the shriller
-din around. Igraine, looking to the west, saw a black mass
-of horsemen at the gallop, swaying, surging, rocking uphill
-full for Gorlois&rsquo;s flank. The sight numbed her reason for
-the moment. She was still as stone as the column swept
-past the very foot of the hillock&mdash;a flood of steel&mdash;and
-plunged headlong upon Gorlois&rsquo;s lines, hewing and trampling
-to the very banner of Tintagel. An oath from Brastias
-made her turn and look at him. He had his hand on his
-sword, and his face was twisted into a snarl of wrath and
-shame as he stood in his stirrups and watched the fight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;my God! they run.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was palpable enough that the southern line was breaking
-and crumbling ominously before the rush of Gilomannius&rsquo;s
-knights. Little bunches of men were breaking
-away from the main mass like smoke, and falling back over
-the ridge. Igraine guessed at Brastias&rsquo;s pride and fury, saw
-her chance of liberty, and took it. She set up a shrill cry
-that stirred his courage like a trumpet-cry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My Lord, my Lord Gorlois, Brastias, what of him?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s sword had flashed out.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Send me to death, lady, only to strike a blow for
-Britain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine spread her hands to him like a Madonna, and
-made the sign of the cross in the air. Brastias lifted up his
-drawn sword, kissed it, and saluted her with the look of a
-hero. Then he wheeled his horse, plunged down from the
-hillock, and rode full gallop into the battle. Igraine soon
-lost sight of his black harness in the mêlée, and since he met
-his death there, she saw Brastias alive no more.</p>
-
-<p>Despite the grim uproar of the overthrow, despite the
-taunts of a patriot pride, there was an under-current of gladness
-through her thought as she watched Gorlois&rsquo;s men
-giving ground upon the ridge. Her lord&rsquo;s shame was her
-gratification. To such a pitch of passion was she tuned that
-she could find laughter for the occasion, and a shrill cry of
-joy that startled even her own ears when the banner of
-Tintagel quivered and went down into the dust. Men
-were falling like leaves in autumn, and the southern wing
-of Uther&rsquo;s host seemed but a rabble&mdash;trampled, overridden,
-herded, and smitten over the ridge. Everywhere the swords
-and spears of Gilomannius&rsquo;s knights and gallowglasses spread
-rout and panic, while the wavering mass gave ground, rallied,
-gave again, and streamed away in flight over the hillside.
-She could see no sign of Gorlois, and with a whimper of
-hate the strong doubt of his escaping the slaughter took hold
-on her heart, and found ready welcome there. She was rid
-of Brastias&mdash;good fellow that he was&mdash;and though she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-honoured him, she loved liberty better. Liberty enough!
-Gorlois her lord had been slain. Such were her reflections
-for the moment.</p>
-
-<p>Pendragon&rsquo;s host seemed threatened with overthrow.
-The southern wing had been driven off the field by a charge
-of horse; Gilomannius held the southern portion of the
-ridge, and pressed hard on Meliograunt, both flank and face.
-The imminent need of Britain was plain enough even to
-Igraine, yet a sense of calm and liberty had come upon her
-like the song of birds or the gush of green in springtide.
-Even her patriotism seemed dim and unreal for the moment
-before the treasonable gratitude that watched the overthrow
-of Gorlois&rsquo;s arms. She was alone at last, solitary among
-thousands, able after the bitterness of past months to pluck
-peace from the very carnage of battle. Trouble had so
-wrought upon her mind that it seemed a negation of all
-probable and natural sentiment, a contradiction of the ethical
-principles of sense.</p>
-
-<p>The day was fast passing, and the grand fires of a winter
-sunset were rolling all the caverns of the west into a blaze
-of gold and scarlet. The pine forest, black and inscrutable
-as night, stood with its spines like ebony to the fringe of
-the west, while the slanting light lit the glimmering masses
-of steel on hill and valley with a web of gold. To the
-north the mountains towered in a mystery of purple, a
-gleam of amber transient on their peaks.</p>
-
-<p>Sudden and shrill came a cry of trumpets from the hills,
-a sinister sound that seemed to issue in the climax of the
-last phase of a tragedy. Igraine&rsquo;s eyes were turned northwards
-to the green slopes of the higher ground where the
-great banner of the Golden Dragon had flapped over Uther
-the King. Here a great company of knights, the flower of
-the host, had stood inactive throughout the day. With a
-cry of trumpets this splendid company had moved down to
-charge the masses of Gilomannius&rsquo;s men, who now filled the
-shallow valley east of the ridge, and threatened King
-Meliograunt and the whole host with overthrow. Uther<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-had ridden out to lead the charge with his own sword. It
-was one of those perilous hours when some great deed was
-needed to grapple victory from defeat.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the scene seemed blotted out as Igraine
-watched from her hillock the glittering mass rolling downhill
-with the evening sun striking flame from its thousand
-points of steel. On over the green slopes, past the pavilions
-of the camp, it gathered like a wave lifting its crest against
-a rock, on towards the swarm of men squandered in pursuit
-of Gorlois&rsquo;s broken line, on to where Gilomannius formed
-his knights for the charge. The green space dwindled and
-dwindled with the rush and roar of the nearing gallop.
-Igraine saw the rabble of Saxons, light-armed kerns and
-Irish gallowglasses, split and crack like a crumbling wall.
-For a short breath the black mass held, with Uther&rsquo;s storm
-of mail cleaving cracks and wedges in it&mdash;streaks of tawny
-colour like lava through the vineyards and gardens of a
-village. Then as by magic the whole mass seemed to
-deliquesce, to melt, to become as mist. All visible was a
-thunderstorm of horsemen tearing like wind through a film
-of rain with scattering fringes of cloud scudding swiftly to
-the west. The knights had passed the valley and were
-riding up the slope, hewing, trampling, crushing, as they
-came. Gilomannius&rsquo;s columns that had pushed Gorlois&rsquo;s
-men into rout had become a rabble in turn&mdash;wrecked, scattered
-to the wind, trodden down in blood and dust. They
-were streaming away in flight over the ridge, scampering
-for scrub and thicket, no lust in them save the lust of life.
-Igraine saw them racing past on every quarter, a blood-specked,
-dust-covered herd, their hairy faces panting for the
-west and the ships on the beach. Not a hundred paces
-away came the line of trampling hoofs and swinging swords,
-a demoniac whirlwind of iron wrath that hunted, slew, and
-gave no quarter.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the summit of the ridge, and all about the
-hillock where Igraine stood, the glittering horde of knights
-came to a halt with a great shout of triumph. Right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-beneath Igraine and the straight face of the hillock a man
-in red armour on a black horse, with a golden dragon on
-his helmet, stood out some paces before the ranks of the
-splendid company. A great cry rolled up, a forest of
-swords shook in the sun. The knight on the black horse
-stood in his stirrups, and with sword and helmet upstretched
-in either hand lifted his face to the red triumph fire of the
-west. Igraine knew him&mdash;Pelleas, Uther, the King.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IV</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The sun had rolled back between the pylons of the west.
-Night was in the sky, night in her winter austerity&mdash;keen,
-clear, aglitter with stars as though her robe were spangled
-with cosmic frost. The mountains&rsquo; rugged heads were
-dark to the heavens, and the sea lay a faintly glimmering
-plain open to the beck of the moon.</p>
-
-<p>The Irish host had broken and fled at sunset before
-Uther&rsquo;s charge and the streaming spears of Eldol and King
-Nentres. The green meadows, the wild scrubland, had been
-chequered over with the black swarm of the flying soldiery;
-the whole valley had surged with swords and the sound of
-the slaughter. By the grey walls of the town it had beleaguered,
-the driven host had turned and rallied in despair
-to stave off to the last the implacable doom that poured
-down from the hills. It was the vain effort of a desperate
-cause. Broken and scattered like dust along a highway,
-there had been no hope left them but their ships. The
-battle had ended in the very foam of the breaking waves.
-Crag and cliff, rock-citadel and yellow sand, had had their
-meed of blood and the shrill sound of the sword. The
-great ships had saved but a remnant, and had put out to
-sea in the dusk, their white sails like huge ghosts treading
-the swell of the twilight waters. Yet with night there had
-come no ceasing of the carnage. Despair had turned to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-front victory; Irish gallowglass and heathen churl, forsaken
-by their ships and hemmed in by sea and sword, had fought
-on to the end, finding and knowing no mercy. Gilomannius
-the King and Pascentius were dead, and the blood of invasion
-poured out like water.</p>
-
-<p>Now it was night, and in the clear passionless light of
-the moon a figure in a cloak of sables moved towards the
-mound where Gorlois of Cornwall had flown his banner
-early in the day&rsquo;s battle. Everywhere the dead lay piled
-like sheaves in a cornfield, their harness glinting with a
-ghastly lustre to the moon&mdash;piled in all attitudes and
-postures, staring blankly with white faces to the sky, or
-prone with their lips in blood, contorted, twisted, clutching
-at throat and weapon, mouths agape or clenched into a grin,
-man piled on man, barbarian upon Briton. Dark quags
-chequered the grass with the sickly odour of shed blood,
-and sword and spear, shield and helmet, flickered impotently
-among the dead.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine went among the bodies like a black monk seeking
-some still quick enough to be shriven before their souls
-took flight from the riven clay. Her cloak was gathered
-jealously about her as she threaded her way among the
-huddled figures, peering under helmets, scanning harness
-narrowly in her death-inspired quest. Casting hither and
-thither in the moonlight, she came to a tangled bank of
-furze, and beyond it a low hillock that seemed piled and
-paved with the bodies of the slain. Here had stood the
-banner of Tintagel, and here the prowess of Gorlois&rsquo;s household
-knights had fallen before the charge of Gilomannius&rsquo;s
-chivalry. Igraine saw the medley of mail, the dead horses,
-jumbled figures, wreck of shield and spear rising out above
-her in the moonlight, cloaked with a silence grim and
-irrefutable, as though Death himself sat sentinel on the
-pyramid of carnage. Half shuddering at the sight like an
-aspen, for all the intent that was in her heart, she drew
-near, determined and resolved to search the mound. Compelled
-to climb over the dead and to set her foot on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-breasts and shoulders of the slain, her tread lighted more
-than once on a body that squirmed like a dying snake.
-Strong to do the uttermost after that day of revelation she
-struggled on, loathing the task, her shoes clammy with the
-blood-sweat of death. On the summit of the mound she
-came upon Gorlois&rsquo;s white horse lying dead by the wreathing
-folds of the fallen banner of his house.</p>
-
-<p>A whimper of joy came up into Igraine&rsquo;s heart. Sinister
-as the sign seemed, she was soon searching the mound with
-an alert desire in her eyes that prophesied no vestige of
-pity for the thing for which she sought. Hunt as she
-would, and she was marvellously patient over the gruesome
-business, no glint of Gorlois&rsquo;s golden harness flattered her
-hate as she searched the mound. Many a good knight lay
-there, some that she had known at Tintagel, and hated
-because they served her husband, but of Gorlois she found
-no trace. As a last hope, she dragged aside the great
-standard and found a dead man there sheeted in its folds, a
-man in black armour with his face to the sky&mdash;Brastias,
-who had ridden with her from Caerleon.</p>
-
-<p>She stood a moment looking down at him with a sudden
-feeling of awe such as had not come upon her through all
-that day. A white face lay turned to the sky,&mdash;a face that
-had looked kindly into hers with a level trust,&mdash;and smiled
-with a wealth of manly sympathy. It was a simple thing
-enough, nothing but one death among many thousands, but
-it touched Igraine to the core, and made her ashamed of the
-lies she had given him. She found herself wondering like
-a child whether Brastias was in heaven, and whether he
-watched her and her thoughts with his calm grey eyes.
-The notion disquieted her. She bent down, took his naked
-sword from his hand, and shrouded him again in the gorgeous
-blazonry of the flag for which he had died, and so left
-him with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>As she climbed back again from the mound, a gashed
-and clotted face heaved up and stared at her from a heap of
-slain. It was the face of a man who had struggled up on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-his hands to look at her with mouth agape, dazed after a
-sudden waking from the stupor of a swoon. For a moment
-in the moonlight she thought it was Gorlois by certain
-likeness of feature, but discovered her error when the man
-spoke to her in gibberish she did not understand. He
-began to crawl towards her with a certain air of menace
-that made her start back and rear up the sword she had
-taken from dead Brastias. The threat of steel proved
-needless enough, for the man dropped again with a wet
-groan, and seemed dead when she went and bent over him
-with thoughts of succour.</p>
-
-<p>Passing back again to her hillock, she stood there brooding
-and looking out towards the west. A great bell in the
-town by the sea was pulsing heavily as though for the dead,
-and there were many cressets flaring on the walls, and
-torches going to and fro in the meadows. The sound of a
-triumph hymn chanted by hundreds of deep voices floated
-up like a prayer from the western meadows.</p>
-
-<p>At the sound Igraine&rsquo;s eyes were strangely full of tears.
-By some strange echoing of the mind the idyls of past days
-woke like the song of birds after a storm of rain. Clear in
-the dusk she seemed to see the red figure on the black horse,
-his face lit like a god&rsquo;s by the slanting light from the west
-as he stretched his sword to heaven. Again the scene
-changed, and she saw him riding through the flowering
-meads of Andredswold, looking down on her with a grave
-and luminous pity. She was glad of him, glad of his great
-glory, glad that he had kissed her lips, and bewrayed the
-love to her that was in his heart. The scene and the occasion
-were strange enough for such broodings, yet her
-eyes were very dim as she stood in a half-dream and let
-the picture drift across her mind.</p>
-
-<p>The revelation had come upon her with such suddenness
-that she had been for the moment like one dazed. She had
-watched Uther sweep on with his horde of knights, and had
-stood mute and impotent as one smitten dumb while the
-red harness and the golden dragon of Britain vanished again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-into the moil of war. Now her whole soul yearned out
-with a wistfulness born of infinite regret. If he had only
-come to her alone; if he had only come to her as Pelleas in
-some gloom of green, she could have fallen down before his
-horse&rsquo;s feet, kissed the scabbard of his sword, wept over his
-helmet, and burnished it with her hair. Sight of that dark
-sad face had made a beacon of her on the instant.</p>
-
-<p>And Gorlois! If she had hated him yesterday, she hated
-him with a tenfold vigour since she had looked again upon
-Pelleas&rsquo;s face. Certainly her malice had grown with an
-Antæan strength with each humbling of her heart to the
-dust, and the very thought of Gorlois seemed blasphemy
-against her soul at such an hour.</p>
-
-<p>With the memory of Gorlois a cloud dulled the clear
-mirror of her mind, and her mood of dreams melted into
-mist. The strong sense of bondage, of ineffectual treason,
-came back with a fuller force as though to menace her with
-the fateful realism of her lot. A hand seemed to sweep
-down and wave her back with a meaning so sinister that
-even her hate stood still a moment as in sudden fear; she
-had some such feeling as of standing on the brink of a
-mysterious sea whose waves sang to her a song of peril, of
-misery and desire cooped up together in the dim green
-twilight of some coral dungeon. The lure of the unknown
-beat upon her eyes, while love and hate, like attendant spirits,
-beckoned her over the yawn of an open grave.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment the importunity of her immediate need
-drew her from meditations alike bitter and divine. A
-battlefield after dark, with all its lust and pillage, was no
-pleasant place for a woman. The lights of the town still
-showed up brightly in the west, but Igraine had little desire
-of the teeming streets where victory would be matching
-blood with wine, and where the revels of the soldiery would
-celebrate the day in primal fashion. She was content to
-be alone under the stars, and even the dead seemed more
-sympathetic than the living at such an hour.</p>
-
-<p>A wind had risen, and she heard the hoarse &ldquo;salvé&rdquo; of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-forest in the night. The thousand voices of the trees
-seemed to call to her with a weird perpetual clamour. She
-saw their spectral hands jerking and clutching against the
-sky, and heard the creak and gibber of the criss-cross boughs
-swaying in the wind. Leaving the hillock, and still bearing
-Brastias&rsquo;s sword, she held across the open, seeing as she
-went the dark streaks that dotted the hillside&mdash;the bodies of
-men fallen in the flight. She gained the trees, and was soon
-deep among the crowded trunks, pondering on her lodging
-for the night.</p>
-
-<p>Wandering hither and thither, looking for some more
-sheltered spot, her glance lighted on a dim swelling of the
-ground that proved to be an ancient mound or barrow. It
-had been opened in times past, probably in the search for
-buried treasure or for weapons. Brambles, weeds, and
-heather had roofed the shallow cutting into a little recess
-or cave that gave fair shelter from the wind, and Igraine,
-braving the notion of barrow ghost or spirit, claimed the
-place as a God-send, and took cover therein.</p>
-
-<p>The last crumbs in her wallet finished, she sat with her
-face between her palms, brooding, big-eyed, in the night,
-like any Druidess wreathing spells in her forest solitude.
-The wind was crying through the trees, swaying them
-restlessly against the starry sky, making plaintive moan
-through all the myriad aisles. Igraine listened like one
-huddled among her thoughts to keep out the cold. Miserable
-as was her lodging, her mind seemed packed with the
-day&rsquo;s battle; the whirl and thunder of it were still moving
-in her brain, a wild scene towered over by a man bare-headed
-on a black horse, holding his helmet to the setting
-sun. Often and often she heard the roar of hoofs and saw
-the rush of the charge that had trampled the banner of
-Tintagel and hurled Gorlois and his men in rout from the
-ridge. Had it been death or life with the man? Was he
-with the King hearing holy mass and lifting up the wine
-cup to heaven under a flare of lights, or lying stiff and
-pinched under the mild eyes of night? It was this thought,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-holding hope and doubt in common yoke, that abode with
-her all the night in her refuge under the trees.</p>
-
-<p>It was bleak enough, with a silvering of frost over the
-land, when darkness had rolled back over the western sea,
-uncovering the wreck of death that lay huddled on ridge
-and slope. Igraine was stirring early from the barrow.
-With the cold and her own thoughts she had slept but an
-hour, and at the first filtering of light through the branches
-she was glad and ready for the day. She wandered through
-the forest towards the open land that showed glimmering
-through the tree-boles, with no certain purpose moving in
-her mind. The future as yet was a blank to her, lacking
-possibilities, jealous of its secrets, saturnine as death itself.
-There shone one light above her that seemed to burn
-through the unknown; it had long led her from distant
-hills, yet even her red lamp of love beckoned her over
-a sepulchre.</p>
-
-<p>Coming to the forest margin, she came full upon the
-incontestable handiwork of war. Under the sweep of a
-great pine lay the body of a knight in black harness, all
-blazoned with gold, while his grey horse was still standing
-with infinite patience by his side, nosing him gently from
-time to time. The man&rsquo;s helmet, a visored casque, somewhat
-gladiatorial in type, had fallen off, and a young beardless
-face was turned placidly up to the blue, a white oval
-pillowed upon a tuft of heather. There was no blood or
-sign of violence visible save a blue bruise on his left temple;
-it seemed more than probable that he had been pitched from
-the saddle and found death in the fall.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stood and looked at him in some pity while the
-horse snuffed at her, staring with great wistful eyes as
-though for help or sympathy. The man was young, with a
-certain nobility of early manhood on his face, and it seemed
-to her very pitiful that he should be cut off thus in life&rsquo;s
-spring. As she looked at him she noted that he was slim
-of figure, and not much above middle height. A sudden
-fancy took her on the instant. She tethered the horse, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-kneeling down by the man her fingers were soon busy at
-the buckles and joints of his armour. Ungirding his sword,
-she drew it from the scabbard and set it upright at his
-head, sheathing Brastias&rsquo;s in its place. Having stripped off
-his armour and long surcoat she covered him reverently with
-her cloak, slung the horse&rsquo;s bridle round her wrist, and
-gathering up his arms and helmet went back to the barrow
-where she had passed the night.</p>
-
-<p>The wood had received a woman in the dress of a woman;
-it gave in exchange a knight on a grey horse&mdash;a knight in
-black armour blazoned with gold under a surcoat of violet
-cloth. The brazen helmet, visored and hooded with mail
-over nape of neck and throat, gleamed and flashed under the
-green boughs. There were three lilies, snow-white, and a
-cloven heart upon the shield, and the horse trappings were
-bossed and enamelled gold and blue.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine rode out from the trees with the pomp of
-a Launcelot. The grey horse&rsquo;s mane tossed in the wind,
-the furze rippled on the hillside, the cloud-ships sailed the
-blue with white sails spread. The girl was aglow with new
-life under her guise of steel. The essence of manhood
-seemed to have created itself within her as from the soul of
-the dead knight, and she suffered the glory of arms with a
-pride that was almost boyish.</p>
-
-<p>Holding out from the trees at a solemn pace, she headed
-westward down the valley along the grass slopes that slid
-between scrub and thicket to the sea. On the road below
-her a company of spears trailed eastward uphill in a snakelike
-column that glittered through the green. Pushing on
-boldly across ground where the battle had raged hotly the
-night before, she reached the road as the head of the column
-swung up at a dull tramp on their march home for Caerleon.
-Gruffing her voice in her throat she hailed the knight who
-headed the troop for news of the battle of yesterday, posing
-as one late on the scene, and sore at having struck no blow
-for Britain.</p>
-
-<p>The knight drew aside, and letting his men tramp by,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-he gave tersely the tale of the fight as he had seen it from
-King Nentres&rsquo;s lines.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;St. Jude be blessed,&rdquo; said Igraine at the end thereof.
-&ldquo;I am glad, friend, of these tidings. As for the field, it
-looks to have been as bloody a one as ever I set eyes on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bloody enough,&rdquo; quoth the man, giving his moustache
-a twirl; &ldquo;too bloody for Gilomannius and dead Vortigern&rsquo;s
-whelp.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What of Uther?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Scarce a scratch.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;King Meliograunt?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wounded, but drunk as the devil.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Gorlois of Cornwall?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man laughed as at a jest.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bedded in an abbey,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;with a split face; mere
-flesh, mere flesh, nothing deeper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine thanked him with her helm adroop, and turning
-her horse, rode back towards the forest heavy of heart.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>V</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The King&rsquo;s house at Caerleon stood out above the Usk on
-a little hill whose slopes were set with shrubberies and
-gardens, the white pillars and broad façade glimmering
-above the filmy cloud of green that covered the place as
-with a garment. A great stairway ran to the river from
-the southern terrace that blazed in summer with flower-filled
-urns and stacks of roses that overspread the balustrade
-with crimson flame. It was a place of dawns and sunsets;
-of lights rising amber in the east over purple hills and
-amethystine waters; of quiet glows at evening in the west,
-with cypresses and yews carven in ebony against primrose
-skies; while in the burgeoning of the year birds made the
-thickets deep with melody; and all beyond, Caerleon&rsquo;s
-solemn towers, roofs, casements bowered in green, rested<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-within the battlemented walls that touched the domes and
-leaf-spires of the woods.</p>
-
-<p>It was noontide in Caerleon, and down the great stairway,
-with its rows of cypresses, its banks of yew and myrtle,
-a fair company was passing to the river, where many barges
-clustered round the water-gate like gilded beetles sunning
-their flanks in the shallows. Knights and churchmen in
-groups moved down from the palace talking together as they
-went. There had been a council of state in the King&rsquo;s hall,
-a great assembling of the noble folk and prelatry, to consider
-the need of Britain, the cry of the martyred and the homeless
-from Kentlands and the east. Anderida, that great
-city of the southern shores, had fallen in a tempest of fire
-and sword; no single soul had escaped from its smoking
-walls; the barbarian had entered in and made great silence
-over the whole city. Now it was told that more galleys
-had come bearing the fair-haired churls from the sand-dunes
-and pinewoods, the rude hamlets of that Angle land over the
-sea. Vectis had been overrun, Porchester burnt to the
-ground, even the noble city of Winchester threatened
-despite its walls. Beast and robber had sole rule in Andredswold;
-much of nether-Britain was a wilderness, a wistful
-land given over to solitude and the wild creatures of the
-forest. Churches were crumbling; gillyflowers grew on
-the high altars, and ivy wrapped the tombs; sanctuary bells
-were silent, homes empty and still as death. Desolation
-threatened the south, while the valleys of Armorica oversea
-gave refuge to many who fled before the Saxon sword.</p>
-
-<p>In the great hall of the palace Uther still sat in his chair
-of ivory under a gilded roof that mingled huge beams with
-banners, spears, and rust-rotted harness. The walls were
-frescoed with Homeric scenes&mdash;Helen meeting Paris in the
-house of Menelaus, Achilles slaying Hector, Ulysses and
-Calypso. Twelve painted pillars held the crossbeams of the
-hall, and from the fire on the great hearth a fragrant scent
-of burning cedar wood drifted upon the air. A long table
-covered with parchment, tablets, quills and inkhorns, and an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-array of empty benches testified to the number of noble
-folk who had assembled at the royal conclave. A single
-councillor remained before the King&mdash;Dubricius, Bishop of
-Caerleon, a tall spare man, whose white hair and sensitive
-ascetic face bore testimony to an inward delicacy of soul.</p>
-
-<p>Uther was clad in a tunic of scarlet, with a dragon in
-gold thread blazoned upon his breast. No crown, coronet,
-or fillet was on his brow; on his finger he wore the signet
-of Ambrosius, and his sword was girded to him with a girdle
-of embroidered leather. His look was much the same as
-when he rode as Pelleas in Andredswold and was nursed of
-his wound by Igraine in the island manor. Possibly there
-were more lines upon his face, a deeper dignity of sadness in
-his eyes. Circumstance had put upon him the cherishing
-of an imperilled kingdom, and with the charge his natural
-stateliness of soul had risen into a heroism of benignant
-chivalry. No more kingly man could have taken a land
-under the strong sweep of his sword. With the grand
-simplicity of a great heart he had grappled the task as a
-thing given of God, bending ever in prayer like a child
-before the inscrutable wisdom of heaven.</p>
-
-<p>There had been grave business on his mind that day, and
-his face was dark with a cloud of care as he talked with
-Dubricius on certain matters that lay near his heart. Uther,
-like the men of old time, was superstitious and ever prone
-to regard all phenomena as possessing certain testamentary
-authority from the Deity. In mediæval fashion he referred
-all human riddles to religious instinct for their solving, and
-searched in holy writ for guidance with a faith that was
-typical of his character. Wholly a Christian in a superstitious
-sense, he gained from the very fervour of his belief
-a strength that seemed to justify his very bigotry.</p>
-
-<p>It was a certain experience, that to his mystic-loving
-instinct omened history still dark in the womb of the future,
-and kept him closeted with Dubricius that day after knight
-and churchman had filed out from the conclave. In the
-twilight of the hall, with its painted frescoes and glimmering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-shields, Dubricius listened to the King as he spoke of
-portents and visions of the night. Uther, with his elbow
-resting on the arm of his chair and his chin upon his palm,
-stared at the cedar wood burning pungently upon the hearth
-and catechised Dubricius on visionary belief. The old man
-looked keenly at the King under his arched white brows.
-He was as much a mystic in his creed as this son of Constantine,
-a believer in miracles and in manifestations in the
-heavens. Certainly unusual powers had been given to the
-early Church, and it was not for the atomic mind of man to
-deny their presence in any later age.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord dreamed a dream,&rdquo; said Dubricius tentatively
-when he had heard the tale to the end.</p>
-
-<p>Uther quashed the suggestion with the calm confidence
-of a man sure of his reason.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never a dream, Dubricius.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The old man&rsquo;s eyes were very bright, and his face seemed
-full of a luminous sanctity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A vision, then, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am no woman, Dubricius; I must believe the thing
-a vision, or damn my senses.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, it is no mere woman&rsquo;s part to see visions;
-search holy writ where the chosen of God&mdash;the great ones&mdash;were
-miraculously blessed with portent and with
-dream.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther looked into the old man&rsquo;s face as though for
-succour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am troubled to know what God would have me
-know,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Dubricius, you are aged in the service
-of the Church!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, I have no privilege from heaven in the rendering
-of dreams.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Am I then a Pharaoh disappointed of mine own soothsayers?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, what of Merlin?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merlin&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>"The man has the gift of prophecy and can speak with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-tongues. Send for him, my lord; he is a child of the
-Church, though a mage."</p>
-
-<p>Uther warmed himself before the fire of cedar wood, his
-face motionless in contemplative calm. Presently he turned,
-and looked deep into Dubricius&rsquo;s vigil-hollowed eyes as
-though to read the thoughts therein.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merlin, the black-haired man who told Vortigern of
-the future!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;He spoke the truth, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sad truth for Vortigern.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yet who should fear the truth?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dubricius, to hear of death!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Death, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Remember Vortigern.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, he was a planet lurid with murder, and so
-damned to darkness. Need the sun fear light?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther smiled sadly in the old man&rsquo;s face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are too faithful a courtier, Dubricius.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, you are the pillar of a distraught land; God
-be merciful and spare you to us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have done my duty.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Amen, sire, to that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther went and stood by the great window of the room
-with his arms folded upon his breast. His hollow eyes
-looked out over the city, and there was a gaunt grandeur of
-thought upon his face. He was not a man who galloped
-down destiny like a huntsman on the trail of a stag; deliberation
-entered into his motives, and he never foundered
-reason with over-use of the spur. Dubricius stood and
-watched him with the smile of a father, for he loved the
-man.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Uther turned back towards the fire. Dubricius
-saw by his face that he had come by decision, and that his
-mind was steadfast.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merlin is at Sarum, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall not play Saul at Endor.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The man shall come to me with no jugglery in dark
-corners.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wise forethought, my lord king.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I remember me, Dubricius, that you have little leisure
-to hear of dreams. I have given you the names of the holy
-houses to be rebuilt and consecrated in the name of God.
-We will save Britain by the help of the cross. God speed
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Alone in the half light of the hall Uther stood and stared
-into the fire, his eyes luminous in the glow, while the
-pungent scent of the burning wood swept up like a savour
-of eastern spices. There was intense feeling on his face,
-a kind of passionate calm, as he gazed into the red bosom
-of the fire. Presently, as though turning in thought from
-some enchantment of the past, he sighed wearily, put his
-black hair from his forehead with both hands, and looked at
-his image in a mirror of steel that hung from a painted
-pillar. There was a wistful look upon his strong face; he
-had a soul that remembered, a soul not numbed by time
-into mere painless recollection of the past. As in some
-mysterious temple, love, with solemn sound of flute and
-dulcimer, kept fire unquenched night and day upon the altar
-of his heart.</p>
-
-<p>Rising up out of his mood of gloom, an earthly Hyperion
-whose face shone anew over Britain, he passed out, and
-calling to the guards lounging on the terrace, descended the
-stairway that sloped through gardens to the river. His
-state barge was in waiting at the gate, and entering in he
-was borne downstream towards the town whose white walls
-rose up amid the emerald mist of spring. Over all Uther
-cast his eye with a lustre look of love, a love that shone like
-the smile of a child at a mother&rsquo;s face. Caerleon was dear
-to him beyond all other cities; its white walls held his
-heart with the whispered conjure word of &ldquo;home.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Landing at the great quay, where many ships and galleys
-lay moored, he passed up towards the market square with
-the files of his guard, smiling back on the reverences of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-people, throwing here and there a coin, happy in the honour
-that echoed to him from every face. Before the walls of a
-pilastered house his guards halted with a fanfare of trumpets,
-a sound that rolled the gates wide and brought a mob of
-servants to line the outer court. Knights came down from
-the house with heads uncovered. It was the King&rsquo;s first
-entry into Gorlois&rsquo;s atrium since the disbanding of the host
-after the war in Wales.</p>
-
-<p>A face scarred with red across cheek and chin, with nose
-askew, one lower lid turned down, came out to Uther from
-the doorway of an inner room. There was a drawn look
-upon the man&rsquo;s face, a sullen saturnine air about him as
-though he were vexed inwardly with the chafe of some
-perpetual pain. The pinched frown, the restless bloodshot
-eyes, the hunched shoulders, were all strange to Uther, who
-looked for Gorlois, the man of arrogant and imperial pride,
-whose splendour of person, carriage of head, and long lithe
-stride had marked him a stag royal from the herd of meaner
-men.</p>
-
-<p>Uther, grave as a god, gripped the other&rsquo;s thin sinewy
-fingers, his eyes searching Gorlois&rsquo;s face with a large-minded
-scrutiny inspired by the natural sympathies of his heart.
-Gorlois, for his part, half crooked the knee, and drew a
-carved chair before the ill-tended fire. He had an Asmodean
-pride, and the look in Uther&rsquo;s eyes was more troublesome
-to him than a glare of hate. His face never lightened from
-the murk of reserve that covered it like a mask, and it was
-the King who spoke the first word over the flickering fire.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What of your wounds?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s black beard was down on his breast, and he
-looked only at the fire. He seemed like a man furtive
-beneath the consciousness of some inward shame, mocking
-his honour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My wounds are well, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You look like a man newly risen from a sick bed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>"If I look sick, sire, blame my physician; he has tinctured
-me to the level of perdition. Bodily I never felt in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-better fettle. I could hew down a horse, and thrust my
-spear through a pine trunk. A man&rsquo;s face is a fallacy."</p>
-
-<p>Uther saw the scars, the harsh smile, and caught the
-twinge in the seemingly careless voice. He could comprehend
-some humiliation in the marring of personal comeliness,
-but not the humiliation that seemed to lurk deep
-beneath Gorlois&rsquo;s pride. There was more here than the
-scarring of a cheek.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is some care upon you, Gorlois,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, you have much observation.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your men have spoken of the change to you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They are too discreet, God save their skins.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pride, pride.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, you are right; my pride suffers the inquisitiveness
-of kings, not subjects. Eagle calls to eagle; men are
-mere magpies. Chatter maddens me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I grip your hand in spirit.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Both men were silent for a while, the fire crackling sluggishly
-at their feet. Gorlois&rsquo;s eyes were on the window
-and the scrap of green woodland in the distance; Uther&rsquo;s
-eyes were on Gorlois&rsquo;s face. The latter, with the sore
-sensitiveness of a diseased spirit, felt the look and chafed
-at it. His petulance was plain enough to Uther as he sat
-and watched him, and pondered the man&rsquo;s trouble in his
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am no gabbler.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;True, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are trouble ridden.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s eyes flashed up to Uther&rsquo;s, faltered, and fell.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What of that, sire?&rdquo; he said curtly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have a deadly pride.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I own it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther leant forward in his chair, and looked earnestly
-into the other&rsquo;s face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I too am a proud man in my trouble,&rdquo; he said, "buck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>ling
-up unutterable things from the baseness of the world,
-jealous of my inward miseries. Yet when I see a strong
-man and a friend chained with the iron of a silent woe, I
-cannot keep my sympathy in leash, so tell him to unburden
-to a man whose pride feels for the pride of others."</p>
-
-<p>The words seemed to stir Gorlois from his lethargy of
-reserve and silence. Uther&rsquo;s very largeness of soul, his
-stately faith and courtesy, were qualities that won largely
-upon the mind, lifting it above factious things to the serene
-level of his own soul. Gorlois, impulsive spirit, could not
-rebuff such a man as Uther. There was a certain calm
-disinterestedness in the King&rsquo;s nature that made trust imperative
-and condemned secretiveness as churlish. Gorlois
-was an obstinate man in the extreme rendering of the
-epithet. He had spoken to no one of his trouble, leaving
-his thoughts to be inferred. Yet staunch sympathy like
-Gige&rsquo;s ring has power over most hidden things of the heart,
-and Gorlois was very human.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is a woman, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mine was a woman, too.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois scattered the half-dead embers with his foot.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I married a wife,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I had never heard it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Few have.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The woman&rsquo;s name?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never ask it, sire; it will soon lie with her in the dust.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;These are grim words.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Grim enough for the man of my own house,&mdash;my
-own familiar friend.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mother of Christ,&mdash;your friend!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My brother in arms, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The shedding of such blood seems like justice. Had
-I suffered thus&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, you warm to my temper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It should be the sword.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mine yet waits white for blood.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois, implacable, grim as a werewolf, threw open the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-door of a closet and led Uther within the narrow compass
-of its walls. It was a little oratory, dim and fantastic, with
-lamps hanging from the roof, and black curtains over the
-narrow casement. Two waxen candles burnt with steady,
-windless flames upon the altar, and beneath their light
-glimmered a great sword, naked, and a cup half filled with
-purple wine. Gorlois took up the sword and touched it
-with his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For the man,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Then he set the sword down beneath its candle and
-touched the goblet with his fingers; his black eyes
-glittered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For the woman, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And the candles?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I burn them till I have crushed the life out of two souls;
-then I can pinch the wicks between my fingers, and snuff
-them out in smoke.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VI</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was spring at Caerleon, and a web of green had swept
-upon the empty purple of the woods and shut the naked
-casements to the sun. The meadowlands were plains of
-emerald that glimmered gold; the gorge blazed with its
-myriad lamps lighting the dark gateways of the pine
-forests, and covering all the hillsides as with a garment of
-yellow. In the woods the birds sang, and hyacinths and
-dog violets spread pools of blue beneath the infinite greenness
-of the boughs. In Caerleon&rsquo;s orchards the fruit trees
-stood like mounts of snow flecked with ethereal pink and
-a prophecy of green. Yew, cypress, cedar, reared their
-dark bosoms betwixt the gentler foliage, and many a bronze-leafed
-oak made mimic autumn with a mist of leaves.</p>
-
-<p>In a forest glade that opened upon the high-road some
-three leagues eastward of Caerleon, an old man sat beside a
-shallow spring, whose waters lay a pool of tarnished silver<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-within the low stone wall that compassed them. The old
-man by the pool was clad in a ragged cloak of coarse brown
-cloth lined with rabbit skin; he had sandals on his feet, a
-staff and wallet by his side, and under the shadow of his
-hood of fur a peaky white beard hung down like an icicle
-under the eaves of a house. His hands were thin and
-white, and he seemed decrepit as he sat hunched by the well
-with a crust of brown bread in his lap and a little bronze
-pannikin that served him as a cup.</p>
-
-<p>It was late in the day, and the great oaks that reached
-out their arms over the well stood solemn and still in the
-evening calm, while the cloud masses bastioned overhead
-were radiant with the lustre of the hour. The road curled
-away right and left into the twilight of the woods; no folk
-passed to and from Caerleon to throw alms to the beggar
-who squatted there like any old goblin man out of a tomb.
-From time to time he would turn and look long into the
-pool as into a mirror, as though he watched the future
-glimmering dimly in a magic well. He had finished his
-crust of bread, and his head nodded over his lap as though
-sleep tempted him after a day&rsquo;s journey. Rabbits were
-scampering and feeding along the edge of the forest; a
-snake slid by in the grass like a streak of silver; far down
-the glade a herd of fallow deer browsed as though caring
-nothing for the huddled scrap of humanity by the well.
-The beggar man might have been dead, for all the heed he
-gave to the forest life that teemed so near.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it was soon evidenced that his faculties were keenly
-alive to all that passed about him by a marvellous perception
-of sound, a perception that made itself plain before the sun
-had drifted much further down the west. The old man
-had heard something that had not stirred the fallow deer
-browsing in the glade. A thin metallic sound shimmered
-on the air, the clattering cadence of hoofs far away upon the
-high-road. The beggar by the pool had lifted his head, and
-was listening with his hooded face turned towards the west,
-his thin fingers picking unconsciously at his beard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Presently the deer browsing in the glade reared up their
-heads to listen, snuffed the air, and swept back at a trot into
-the forest. Jays chattered away over the trees; rabbits
-stopped feeding and sat up with their long ears red in the
-sunlight. The indifferent suggestion of a sound had grown
-into a ringing tramp that came through the trees like a
-blunt challenge to the solitary spirit of the place. Through
-the indefinite and mazy screens of green a glitter of harness
-and a streaking of colour glimmered from the wizard amber
-glow of the west. Three horsemen were coming under the
-trees,&mdash;one in lurid arms before, and two abreast behind in
-black. The beggar by the pool pulled his cowl down over
-his face, and stood by the roadside with his bronze pannikin
-held in a shaky right hand to pray for alms.</p>
-
-<p>The knights drew rein by the pool, and he in the red
-harness flung down money from his belt, and required tidings
-in return:</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Lord Jesus have mercy on your soul in death,&rdquo;
-came the whine of gratitude; &ldquo;what would your lordship
-learn from an old man?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther considered him from the shadow of his casque.
-He had his suspicions, and was half wise in his conjectures.
-He could see nothing of the old man&rsquo;s face, and so elected
-to be innocent for the moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Grandfather, have you heard in your days of Merlin the
-prophet?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have I heard of the devil, lording!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Were he to ride here, should you know his face?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sir, I have seen no man these three hours. Yet, in
-truth, I did but now smell a savour as of hell; and there
-was a raven here, a black villain of a bird that croaked
-&lsquo;Abracadabra to the letter.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther smiled.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you from Caerleon?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, sire, it is Uther the King who comes from the City
-of Legions.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther, say you? Put back that hood.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, lo! I bow myself; I have kept the
-tryst.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The cowl fell back, the cloak was unwrapped, the beard
-twitched from the smooth, strong chin. The bent figure,
-feeble and meagre, straightened and dilated to a stature and
-bulk beyond mere common mould. A man with hair black
-as a raven&rsquo;s wing, and great glistening eyes, stood with his
-moon-face turned up to Uther Pendragon. A smile played
-upon his lips. He was clad in a cloak of sombre purple,
-wreathed about with strange devices, and a leopard&rsquo;s skin
-covered his shoulders; his black hair was bound with a fillet
-of gold, and there were gold bracelets upon his wrists. It
-was Merlin who stood before Uther under the arch of the
-great trees.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The benisons of all natural powers be upon you; the
-God of the stars and the spirit fires of the heavens keep you.
-Great is your heart, O King, and great your charity. Bid
-me but serve you, and the beggar&rsquo;s pence shall win you a
-blessing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man bowed himself even to the ground. Uther left
-his horse tethered to a tree, and faced Merlin over the pool.
-Both men were solemn as night in their looks.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merlin,&rdquo; said the King.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have a riddle from the stars.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak it, O King.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To your ear alone.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, pass with me into the forest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Blessed be thy head if thou canst read the testament of
-the heavens.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was towards sunset, and the place was solemn and
-still as some vast church. In the white roadway the black
-knights stood motionless, with spear on thigh, their sable
-plumes sweeping like cloudlets under the dark vault of the
-foliage. Merlin, with the look of an eternity in his eyes,
-bowed down once more before Uther, and pointed with his
-hand into the dim cloister of the trees. Red and purple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-passed together from the pool, and melted slowly into an
-oblivion of leaves.</p>
-
-<p>In a little glade under a great oak, whose roots gripped
-the ground like talons, Uther told to Merlin the vision that
-had come to him in the watches of the night. He had stood
-late at his window, looking over Caerleon shimmering white
-under the moon, and had seen a star of transcendent glory
-smite sudden through the blue vault of the heavens. A
-great ray had fallen from the star, and from the ray had
-risen a vapour, a golden mist that had shaped itself into a
-dragon of gold, and from the dragon&rsquo;s mouth had proceeded
-two smaller rays that had seemed to compass Britain between
-two streams of fire. Then, like smoke, both star and dragon
-had melted out of the heavens, and only the moon had looked
-down on Usk and the sleeping woods about Caerleon.</p>
-
-<p>When Uther had spoken his whole soul in this mystery
-of the night, Merlin withdrew himself a little and looked
-long into the sky, his tall figure and strong face clear as
-chiselled stone in a slant gleam of the sun. For fully the
-third part of an hour he stood thus like a pillar of basalt,
-neither moving nor uttering a sound, while the sky fainted
-over the tree tops and flashed red fire from the armour
-of the King. Suddenly, as though he had caught inspiration
-from the heavens, prophecy came upon him like a
-wind at sunset. He stretched his hands to the sky. His
-body quivered; his eyes were as rubies in a mask of
-marble.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have seen, O King! I have looked into the palpitating
-web of the stars, into the glittering aisles of the infinite.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther strode out from the tree trunk where he had leant
-watching the man&rsquo;s cataleptic pose grow into the quick furor
-of prophecy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Say on,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Merlin swept a hand towards him with a magnificence
-of gesture.</p>
-
-<p>"Thou art the star, the dragon is thy son. He shall
-compass Britain with a band of steel, beat back the wolves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-of heathendom, and cast stupendous glory over Britain&rsquo;s
-realm. His name shall shine in history, sun-bright, magnificent,
-and pure; his name shall be Arthur. Thus, O
-King! Uther of the Dragon, read I this vision of the night."</p>
-
-<p>Uther, a gradual lustre in his eyes, looked long at the
-sun behind the swart pillars of the forest. He seemed to
-gather vigour from the glow. Prophecy was in his thought,
-a prophecy that tempted the inmost dreamings of the heart,
-and linked up the past with promise of the future. To love,
-to be loved, to win the woman among women! To beget
-a son, a warrior, a king; to harden his body like to an oak,
-temper his heart like steel; to set the cross in his hands and
-send him forth against the beast and the barbarian like a
-god! Such, indeed, were the idyls of a King!</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merlin, I have no wife, and you speak to me of a son,&rdquo;
-was his sole answer.</p>
-
-<p>The retort echoed from the man.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The King must wed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This is no mere choosing of a horse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, you can learn to love. It is not so difficult a
-thing, no more than falling down upon a bed of roses.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The retort was in no wise suited to Uther&rsquo;s humour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am no boy to be married on the moment to cap the
-reading of a vision.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bring me the woman I may love, if you are magical
-enough,&mdash;then bid me wed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, you mock me with a dream.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She is dead then?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On my soul I know not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then, sire&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All women are dead to me save one. Conjure her into
-my being, and I will give you the wiser half of myself, even
-my heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For an instant Merlin smiled&mdash;a smile like an afterglow
-in a winter sky,&mdash;clear, cold, and steely. He drew nearer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-Uther, his purple robe with its fantastic scroll-work dim in
-the twilight, his black hair falling down about his face. His
-words were like silken things purring from his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, tell me more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are a prophet. Read my past.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, my vision fails at such a depth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But not thy flattery.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Her name, sire?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will read you a fable.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther, his eyes lit as with a lustre of recollection, turned
-from Merlin and the ken of his impenetrable face. He leant
-against a tree trunk, and looked far away into the dwindling
-vistas of the woods. His voice won emphasis from the
-absolute silence of the place, and he spoke with the level
-deliberation of one reading aloud from some antique book.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A woman befriended a knight who was smitten of a
-dread wound. It was summer, and a sweet season full of
-the scent of flowers,&mdash;odours of grass knee deep in dreamy
-meadows. The woman had red-gold hair, and eyes like a
-summer night; her mouth was more wistful than an opening
-rose; her voice was like a flute over moonlit waters.
-And the knight lost his soul to the woman. But the
-woman was a nun, and so, to save his vows, he battled down
-his love and left her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Merlin&rsquo;s eyes took a sudden glitter.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A nun, sire?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A nun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;With hair of red gold and eyes of amethyst. Her
-convent, sire?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Avangel. Burnt by the heathen on the southern
-shores.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And the nun&rsquo;s name?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Merlin gave a shrill, short cry; badges of colour had
-stolen into his cheeks, and he looked like a Bacchanal for
-the moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, sire, the woman is no nun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Uther still leant against the tree, and looked into the
-distance with his hand shadowing his eyes. It might have
-seemed that he had not heard the words spoken by Merlin,
-or at least had not understood their meaning, so unmoved
-was his look, so motionless his figure. Unutterable thoughts
-were moving in his mind. There was a grandeur of self-suppression
-on his face as he turned and fronted Merlin
-with the quiet of a great strength.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Man, what words are these?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Merlin had recoiled suddenly within himself. He was
-silent again, subtle as steel, and very debonair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, I swear she is no nun.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Give me fact, not assertion.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The woman is but a novice. I had the whole tale from
-one who knew her well at Radamanth&rsquo;s in Winchester,
-where she found a home. She had grieved, sire, for Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas&mdash;Igraine! My heart is great in me, Merlin;
-where saw you her last?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Wandering in a wood by Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alone?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alone in heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where now?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord&mdash;I know not.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;O God!&mdash;to see her face again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Merlin cast his leopard skin across his visage and stood
-like a statue, even his immense grandeur of reserve threatened
-for the moment with summary overthrow. In the taking
-of twenty breaths he had calmed himself again to stand with
-bare head and frank face before the King&mdash;a promise on
-his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My lord, give me a moon&rsquo;s season to stare into this
-mystery. On the cross I swear it&mdash;I will bring you good
-news at Caerleon.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On the cross!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;On the cross of your sword.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>"Merlin, if this thing should come to be, if life returns
-to one whose hopes were dead, you of all men in Britain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-shall be next my heart. Behold&mdash;on the cross&mdash;I
-swear it."</p>
-
-<p>A certain season of youth seemed to have come down
-upon Uther, and lighted up the solemn tenor of his mood.
-His face grew mellow with the calm of a great content; he
-was reasonable as to the future, not moved to any extravagant
-outburst of unrest; the constant overshadowing of the
-cross seemed to give his faith a tranquil greenness&mdash;a rain-refreshed
-calm that pervaded his being like moist quiet after
-a wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merlin, what of the night?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, I am well provided; I have a pavilion near a brook
-where a damsel serves me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I go to Caerleon. You have conjured me back into
-the spring of life; my heart is beholden to you. Take my
-hand&mdash;and remember.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, I am your servant.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>When Uther had passed, a streak of scarlet, into the blue
-twilight of the darkening wood; when the dull clatter of
-hoofs had dwindled into an ecstasy of silence, Merlin, white
-as the faint moon above, found again the pool under the
-trees by the high-road to Caerleon. Going on his knees by
-the brink he looked into its waters, black, sheeny, mysterious,
-webbed with a flickering west-light, sky mosaics dim and
-ethereal between swart-imaged trees. Still as a mirror was
-the pool, yet touched occasionally with light as from a
-rippling star-beam, or a dropped string from the moon&rsquo;s
-silver sandals. Merlin bent over it, his fateful face making
-a baleful image in the water. Long he looked, as though
-seeking some prophetic picture in the pool. When night
-had come he rose up with a transient smile, folded his cloak
-about him, and passed like a wraith into the forest.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>While Gorlois was lowering over an imagined shame, and
-Uther given to brooding on a vision, the Knight of the
-Cloven Heart wandered through wild Wales and endured
-sundry adventures that were hardly in concatenation with
-the distaff or the cradle.</p>
-
-<p>In rough ages might was right, and every man&rsquo;s inclination
-law unto himself. To strike hard was to win crude
-justice; to ride a horse, to wear mail, to carry a sword, were
-characteristics that ensured considerable reverence from men
-less fortunate, by maintaining at least an outward arrogance
-of strength. Not only on these grounds alone did the
-Knight of the Cloven Heart hold at a disadvantage those
-folk of the wilderness who went&mdash;to speak metaphorically&mdash;naked.
-She made brave show enough, had a strong arm
-and a strong body, and could match any man in the mere
-matter of courage. The moral effect of her great horse, her
-shield and harness, and the sword at her side, carried her
-unchallenged through wood and valley where meaner wayfarers
-might have come to grief, or suffered a tumbling.
-The forest folk assumed her a knight under her helmet and
-her harness; a certain bold magnificence of bearing in no
-wise contradicted the assumption.</p>
-
-<p>It would be wearisome to record the passage of two
-months or more, to construct an itinerary of her progress, to
-chronicle the events of a period that was solitary as the wilds
-through which she passed. She never slept a night under
-populous roof the whole time of these wanderings. Luckily
-it was fair weather, and a mild season; forest shade, such as
-it was, and the caves of the wilderness, a ruined villa, the
-forsaken hut of a charcoal burner, an empty hermitage,&mdash;such
-in turn gave her shelter from the placid light of the moon,
-or the black stare of a starless sky. She never ventured
-even among peasant folk unhelmeted. Her food was won
-from cottager or herdsman by such store of money as she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-had about her, though many she came across were eager to
-appease so formidable a person with milk, and pottage, and
-the little delicacies of the rude home. Often her fine
-carriage and youthful voice won wonders from the bosom
-of some peasant housewife. She had her liberty, and was
-free to roam; the life contented her instincts for a season,
-and at least she was saved the sight of Gorlois. Since war
-had failed to loose her from the man, she would essay her
-best to keep him at a distance.</p>
-
-<p>If hate repelled, love drew with dreams. Yet had Igraine
-been asked of peace at heart, she would have smiled and
-sighed together. There are degrees of misery, and solitary
-suffering is preferable to that publicity which is very torture
-in itself, a galling whip to the tender flanks of pride. In
-being free of Gorlois she was happy; in thinking of Uther
-and in contemplation of the shadows of the unknown she
-was of all women most miserable. A mood of self-concentration
-was settling slowly upon her like an inevitable season
-upon the face of the earth. Day by day a dream prophetic
-of the future was pictured in the imagery of thought till it
-grew familiar as an often looked on landscape that awakes no
-wonder and no strange unrest. The ordinances of man had
-thrust on her a damnable tyranny, and she was more than
-weary of the restrictions of the world. The inevitable
-scorn of custom had long taken hold upon her being, and
-she had been driven to that state when the soul founds a
-republic within itself, and creates its ethics from the promptings
-of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>Uther was at Caerleon; she had heard the truth from
-many a peasant tongue. Caerleon therefrom drew her
-with magic influence, as a lamp draws a golden moth
-from the gloom, or the light in the night sky wings on
-the wild-fowl with the prophecy of water. Caerleon
-became the bourn of all her holier thoughts; strange
-city of magic, it held love and hate for her, desire and
-obloquy; though its walls were as a luring net scintillant
-with spirit gossamer, her very reason lulled her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-fears to sleep, and turned her southwards towards Uskland
-and the sea.</p>
-
-<p>It came to pass, on the very day that Uther spoke with
-Merlin in the forest, that Igraine rode over a stretch of hills
-by a sheep-track, and came down into a valley not many
-leagues from Caerleon. The place stood thick with woodland,
-ranged tier on tier with the peaked bosses of huge
-trees. That impenetrable mystery of solitude that abides
-where forests grow was deeply hallowed in this silent dale.
-The infinite majesty of nature had cast a spell there, and
-the vast oaks, like pyramids of gloom, caverned a silence
-that was utter and divine.</p>
-
-<p>Glimmering beneath the huge, stupendous boughs,
-through darkling aisles and the colossal piers that held the
-innumerable roofing of the leaves, Igraine passed down
-through umbrage and still ecstasies of green, by colonnade
-and gallery,&mdash;interminable tunnels, where stray light struck
-slantwise on her armour, that it seemed a moving lustre in
-the solemn shade.</p>
-
-<p>Deep in the woodland lay a valley, a pastureland girt
-round with trees, and where the meadows, painted thick
-with flowers, seemed all enamelled white and azure, green,
-purple, pink, and gold. A peace as from the sun shone
-over it like saffron mist. A pool gleamed there, tranquil
-and deep with shadows; all the trees that Britain knew
-seemed girdled round it&mdash;oak, beech and holly, yew, thorn
-and cedar, the elfin pine, the larch, whose delicate kirtle
-shames even broidery of silk. No sound save the cuckoo&rsquo;s
-cry, and the uncertain twittering of birds, disturbed the
-sanctuary of that forest solitude.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, halting on the brink of the meadowland, looked
-down over wood and water. The quiet of the place, the
-clear glint of the pool, the scent of the meadows, brought
-back the valley in Andredswold, and the manor in the mere.
-She loved the place on the instant. Even a blue plume of
-smoke rising straight to the sky, and the grey-brown backs
-of a few sheep in the meadows, evidencing as they did the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-proximity of man, failed to disenchant the solitary grandeur
-of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>There is no stable perpetuation of peace in the world;
-care treads upon the heels of Mammon, and lust lies down
-by the side of love. Even in the quiet of the wilderness
-the hawk chases the lark&rsquo;s song out of the heavens, and
-wind scatters the bloom from the budding tree. Thus it
-was that Igraine, watching from under the woods, saw the
-sheep scampering suddenly in the meadows as though disturbed
-by something as yet invisible to her where she stood.
-Their bleating came up with a tinge of pathos, to be
-followed by a sound more sinister, the cry of one in whom
-pain and terror leapt into an ecstasy of anguish&mdash;a shrill,
-bird-like scream that seemed to cleave the silence like the
-white blade of a sword. Igraine&rsquo;s horse pricked its ears
-with a snort of wrath, as though recognising the wounded
-cry of some innocent thing. The girl&rsquo;s pulses stirred as she
-scanned the valley for explanation of this discord, sudden
-as the sweep of a falcon from the blue. Nor was she long
-at gaze. A flickering speck of colour appeared in the
-meadowlands, the figure of a woman running through the
-grass like a hunted rabbit, darting and doubling with a
-whimpering outcry. Near as a shadow a tall streak of
-brown followed at full stride, terrible even in miniature.
-Hunter and hunted passed before the eye like the figures of
-a dream, yet with a fierce realism that whelmed self in an
-objective pity.</p>
-
-<p>Never did Britomart herself, with splendid soul, find fitter
-cause in faerie-land than did the Knight of the Cloven
-Heart in that woodland dale. Igraine rode down from the
-trees, a burning figure of chivalry that galloped through the
-green, and bore fast for the scudding forms, that skirted
-round the pool. Like a stag pressed to despair, the hunted
-one had taken to the water, and was already waist deep in
-ripples that seemed to catch the panic of the moment.
-Plunging on past tree and thicket, Igraine held on, while
-sheep scattered from her, to turn and stare with the stupidest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-of white faces at the horse thundering over the meadows.
-The pursuer had passed the water-weeds, and was to his
-knees in the pool when the Knight of the Cloven Heart
-came down to the bank and halted, like a mailed statue of
-succouring vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>The white heat of the drama seemed cooled for the
-moment. Over the flickering scales of the little mere the
-girl&rsquo;s white face, tumbled hair, and blue smock showed, as
-she half-floated and half-paddled with her hands. Nearer
-still, the leather-jerkined, fur-breeched figure of the man
-bent like a baffled satyr baulked of evil. On the green
-slope of the bank the mailed splendour of chivalry waited
-like Justice to uphold the right.</p>
-
-<p>The man in the mere wore the short Roman sword, or
-parazonium; any more effective weapon that he had possessed
-had been thrown aside in the heat of the chase and
-in the imagined security of his rough person. He had the
-face of a wolf. In girth and stature he seemed a young
-Goliath, a savage thing bred in savage times and savage
-places, and blessed with the instincts of mere barbarism.
-Igraine&rsquo;s disrelish equalled her heat as she looked at him,
-and slanted her great sword over her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>In another instant the scene revived, and ceased to be a
-mere picture. The girl in the pool had found a footing,
-and her half-bare shoulders showed above the water. The
-man, with his short sword held behind him, was splashing
-through the shallows with a grin on his hairy face that
-meant mischief. Igraine, every whit as hot as he, held her
-horse well in hand, and put her shield before her. Matters
-went briskly for a minute. The man made a rush; Igraine
-spurred up and sent him reeling with the charging shoulder
-of her horse; the short sword pecked at nothing, the long
-one struck home and drew blood. A second panther leap,
-a blow turned by the shield, a counter cut that made good
-carving of the fellow&rsquo;s skull. The shallows foamed and
-crackled crimson; hoofs stirred up the mire; a plunge; a
-noise of crossed steel; a last sweep of a sword, and then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-victory. Igraine&rsquo;s horse, neighing out the spirit of the
-moment, trampled the fallen body as it had been the carcase
-of a slaughtered dragon.</p>
-
-<p>The girl in the pool waded back at the sight, her blue
-smock clinging about her, and showing an opulent grace of
-shoulder, arm, and bosom&mdash;a full figure swept by the damp
-tangle of her dark brown hair. She had full red lips, eyes
-of bright blue, a round and ruddy face, that told of a mind
-more for tangible pleasures than for spiritual aspiration. She
-came up out of the shallows like a water-nymph, her
-frightened face already all aglow with a smile of gratitude,
-mild shame, and infinite reverence. Going down on her
-knees amid the water-weeds and flags, she held up her
-playful hands as to a deliverer direct from heaven. &ldquo;Grace,
-Lord, for thy servant.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With the peril past, Igraine could not forego the sly
-scrap of mischief that the occasion offered; her white
-teeth gleamed in a smile under her helmet, as she wiped
-her sword on the horse&rsquo;s mane, before sheathing it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Give Heaven thy thanks,&rdquo; she said, with a quaint
-sententiousness of gesture. &ldquo;Be sure in thy heart that it
-was a mere providence of God that I heard thy screaming.
-As for yon clod of clay, we will bury it later, lest it should
-pollute so goodly a pool. For the rest, child, I am an old
-man, and hungry, and would taste bread.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The girl jumped up instantly, with a shallow and half-puzzled
-smile. The voice from the helmet was young, very
-young, and full of the free tone of youth; yet both manner
-and matter were sage, practical, leavened with a hoary-headedness
-of intention that seemed to baulk the inferences
-suggested by such panoply of arms. With a bob of a
-curtsey, she took the knight&rsquo;s bridle, and led the horse
-some fifty paces round the pool, where, under the imminent
-shoulder of a cedar tree, a little cabin nestled under a hood
-of ivy. It was built of rough timber from the forest, and
-thatched with reeds; honeysuckle clustered over its rude
-façade, and thrust fragrant tendrils into its reed-latticed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-windows, where an early rose or so shone like a red star
-against the russet-wood. A garden full of flowers lay before
-the rustic porch that arched the threshold; and an outjutting
-of the pool brought a little fiord of dusky silver up
-to the very green of the path, a streak of silver blazoned
-with violet flags, golden marigolds of the marsh, and a lace-like
-fringe of snowy water-weed in bloom. All around,
-the great trees, those solemn senators, stood with their green
-shoulders bowed in a strong dream of deep eternal thought.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine left the saddle and suffered the girl to tether her
-horse to a cedar bough. Her surcoat of violet and gold
-swept nearly to her ankles, and saved from any marring the
-infinite art of the anomaly that veiled her sex. Her man&rsquo;s
-garb seemed every whit as worthy of a woman, nor did it
-hinder that loving grace that made her beauty of body the
-more admirable and rare.</p>
-
-<p>The girl came back with more bendings of the knee, and
-led Igraine amid the flowers to the porch of the forest
-dwelling. Once within, she drew a settle close to the
-doorway, spread a rug of skins thereon, and again bowed
-herself in homage.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let my lord be seated, and I will serve him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am hungry, child; but first put off that wet smock of
-thine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The girl crept behind the door of a great cupboard,
-with a blush of colour in her cheeks. Cloth rustled for a
-moment; a circle of blue and a slim pair of legs showed
-beneath the cupboard door; soon she was back again in a
-gown of apple green, fastening it with her fingers over the
-full swell of her bosom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What will my lord eat?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What you have, child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bread and dried fruit, the flesh of a kid, new milk and
-cheese, a little cider.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Give me milk, child, a mere flake of meat, some cheese
-and bread, and I ask nothing more. I will pay you for all
-I take.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Lord, how should you pay me, when I owe more than
-life to your sword?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The little shepherdess went about her business with a
-barefooted tread, soft as any cat&rsquo;s. The cottage proved a
-wonder of a place. The great cupboard disgorged a silver-rimmed
-horn, wooden platter, a napkin white as apple
-blossom, red fruit piled up in a brazen bowl. The girl set
-the things in order on the table, with an occasional curious
-look stolen at the figure in mail on the settle&mdash;splendid
-visitant in so humble a place. And what a rich voice the
-knight had,&mdash;how mellow, with its many modulations of
-tone. His hands too were wonderfully shapen, fingers
-long and tapering, with nails pink as sea-shells. There
-surely must be a face worth gazing at, for its very nobility,
-under that great brazen helmet that glinted in the half
-light of the room.</p>
-
-<p>The meal was spread, but the guest still unprepared.
-The forest child dropped a curtsey, and a mild suggestion
-that the knight should make a beginning.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Will not my lord unhelm?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A rich, mischief-loving laugh startled her for answer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child, take the thing off if you will.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The little shepherdess obeyed, and nearly dropped the
-helmet in the doing of it. A mass of gold fell rippling
-down over the violet surcoat; a pair of deep eyes looked
-up with a sparkling laugh; a satin upper lip and chin gave
-the lie to the nether part of the picture.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Christ Jesu!&rdquo; quoth the girl with the helmet, and again
-&ldquo;Christ Jesu,&rdquo; as though she could get no further.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine caught her smock and drew her nearer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come, little sister, kiss me for&mdash;&lsquo;thank you.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>With a contradictory impulse the girl fell down on her
-knees and began to cry, with her brown hair tumbled in
-Igraine&rsquo;s lap.</p>
-
-<p>When persuasion and comforting had quieted her somewhat,
-she sat on the floor at Igraine&rsquo;s feet, her round eyes
-big with an unstinted wonder. Even Igraine&rsquo;s hunger and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-the devoir done upon the new milk could hardly persuade the
-girl that this being in armour was no saint, but a very real
-and warm-blooded woman. She even touched Igraine&rsquo;s
-fingers with her lips, to satisfy herself as to the warmth
-and solidity of the slim strong hand. She had never heard
-of such a marvel, a woman, and a very beautiful woman,
-riding out as a man, and doing man&rsquo;s bravest work with
-courage and cleverness. The girl made sure in her heart
-that Igraine was some princess at least, who had been blessed
-with miraculous power by reason of her maidenhood and
-the magic innocence of her mind.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine talked to the girl and soon began to win her to
-less devotional attitude with that graciousness of manner
-that became her so well at such a season. She forgot herself
-for the time, in listening to this child of solitude. The
-girl&rsquo;s father&mdash;an old man&mdash;had died two winters ago, and
-she had buried him with her own hands, under a tree in the
-dale. Since his death, she had lived on in the cabin, alone,
-a forest child nurtured in forest law. Every Sabbath,
-Renan, a shepherd lad in a lord&rsquo;s service, would come over
-the hills and pass the day with her. They were betrothed,
-and the lord of those parts had promised Renan freedom
-next Christmastide; then Renan and Garlotte were to be
-married, and the cabin in the dale was to serve them as a
-home.</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte was soon chattering like any child. She talked
-to Igraine of her sheep and goats, her little corn-field on a
-sunny slope, her garden, her wild strawberry beds and vine,
-her fruit trees, and her marigolds. The lad Renan, bronze-haired
-and brown-eyed, sprang in here and there with irresistible
-romance. He could run like a hound, swim like
-an otter, fish, shoot with the bow, and throw the javelin a
-great many paces. He had such eyes, too, and such gentle
-hands. Igraine&rsquo;s sympathies were quick and vivid on matters
-of the kind. The girl&rsquo;s head was resting against her
-knees before an hour had gone.</p>
-
-<p>The evening was still and sultry and the sky overcast.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-When Igraine went to the porch after supper, rain had begun
-to fall, and there was the moist murmur of a heavy, windless
-shower through all the valley. The sheep had huddled under
-the trees. Infinite freshness, unutterable peace, brooded
-over the green meadows and the breathless leaf-clouds of the
-woods. For all the sweet, dewy silence a bitter discontent
-lay heavy upon Igraine&rsquo;s heart, and woe made quiet moan in
-her inmost soul. Green summer swooned in the branches
-and breathed in the odours of honeysuckle, musk, and rose,
-yet for her there seemed no burgeoning, no bursting of the
-heart into song.</p>
-
-<p>The girl Garlotte stood by and looked with a quaint awe
-into the proud, wistful face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What are you thinking of, lady?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s lips quivered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Of many things, child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me of them.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What should you know, child, of plagues and sorrow,
-of misery in high places, of despair coroneted with gold, of
-hearts that ache, and eyes that burn for the love of the
-world that never comes?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am very ignorant, dear lady, but yet I think you are
-not happy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is any woman happy on earth?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yet you are so good and beautiful.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child, child, beauty brings more misery than joy; it is
-a bright fire that burns upon itself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Renan has told me I am beautiful.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So you are, and to Renan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never think of it, lady, save when Renan looks into
-my eyes and touches my mouth with his lips; then say in
-my heart, &lsquo;I am beautiful, and Renan loves me, God be
-thanked!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words echoed into Igraine&rsquo;s soul. There was such
-pain in her great eyes that the girl was startled from the
-simple contemplation of her own affairs of heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are sad, lady.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child, I am tired to death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bide with me and rest. See, I will feed your horse
-and give him water; he will do famously under the tree.
-There is my bed yonder in the corner; I spread a clean sheet
-on it this very morning. Shall I help you to unarm?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thanks, child. How the rain hisses into the pool.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I love the sound, and the soft rattle on the green leaves.
-All will be fresh and aglister to-morrow, and the flowers
-will smile, and the trees shake their heads and laugh. How
-clumsy my fingers are; I am so slow over the buckles;
-ah! there is the last. I will put the sword and the shield
-by the bed. Shall we say our prayers?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You pray, child; I have forgotten how to these many
-months.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VIII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There is a charm in simplicity of soul, and in sympathies
-green in the first rich burgeoning of the mind, unshrivelled
-and untainted by the miserable misanthropies of the world.
-The girl Garlotte was as ignorant as you will, but she loved
-God, had the heart of a thrush in spring-time, and was possessed
-naturally of a warm and delicate appreciation of the
-feelings of others that would have put to utter shame the
-majority of court ladies.</p>
-
-<p>Women of a certain gilded class are prone to judge by
-superficialities. Living often in an artificial air of courtesy,
-the very life about them is a cultured, perfumed atmosphere
-unstirred by the deeper wind-throbs of true passion, or the
-solemn sweep of the more grand emotions. Hypocrisy,
-veneered with mannerisms, propped with etiquette, pegged
-up with gold, passes for culture and the badge-royal of fine
-breeding. Of such things the girl Garlotte was indeed
-flagrantly ignorant; she had lived in solitudes, and had
-learnt to comprehend dumb things&mdash;the cry of a sheep in
-pain, the mute look from the eyes of a sick lamb. Her life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-had made her quick to see, quick to discover. She had all
-the latent energy of a child, and her senses were the undebauched
-handmaids of an honest heart. She knew nothing
-of the trivial prides, the starched and petty arrogances, the
-small self-satisfactions, that build up the customs of the
-so-called cultured folk. She thought her thoughts, and
-they were generous ones, mark you, and spoke out on
-the instant without fear, as one whose words were in
-very truth the audible counterpart of the vibrations of her
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>To Igraine at first there was some embarrassment in the
-ingenuous methods of this child of the forest. It was in
-measure disturbing to be confronted with a pair of blue eyes
-that looked at one like two pools of truth, and a pair of lips
-that naively remarked: &ldquo;You seem pale, lady, and in pain;
-you slept little, and talked even when you slept. I am rosy
-and cheerful, and I sleep from dusk till dawn. What is
-there in your heart that is not in mine?&rdquo; Still, with the
-abruptness once essayed, there was a refreshing sincerity in
-Garlotte&rsquo;s openness of heart. It was as the first plunge into
-a clear, cool pool&mdash;a gasp at the first moment, then infinite
-warmth, intense kindling of all the senses, with the clean
-ripples bubbling at the lips and the swinging water buoying
-up the bosom. Garlotte recalled Lilith&mdash;Radamanth&rsquo;s
-daughter&mdash;to Igraine, only that she had more penetration,
-more liberty of thought and character. The one was as a
-warm wind that lulled, the other a breeze blowing over open
-water&mdash;clean, invigorating, kind.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s mood of unrest found refuge in the valley, and
-in Garlotte&rsquo;s cottage. She won some measure of inward
-calmness in the simple life, the simple tasks, that kept the
-more sinister energies of the mind at bay. It contented her
-for a season with its companionship, its air of home, its green
-quiet and tranquil beauty. Garlotte&rsquo;s cheerfulness of soul,
-like some penetrating essence, suffused itself upon Igraine,
-despite the militant savour of things more turbulent. She
-fell into temporary contentment almost against her will,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-even as sleep enforces itself upon a brain extravagantly
-possessed by the delirium of fever.</p>
-
-<p>For all the quiet of the place, circumstances were gathering
-and moving down upon her with that ghostly and
-inevitable fatefulness that constitutes true tragedy. No one
-could have seemed more hidden from the eye of fate than
-she in the deep umbrage of the trees, yet often when the
-heart imagines itself most secure from the factious meddling
-of the world, the far, faint cry of destiny smites on the ear
-like some sudden stirring of a wind at night.</p>
-
-<p>It was late evening, on the fifth day of Igraine&rsquo;s sojourn
-in the valley. The day had been dull, grey, and colourless,
-wrapped in a blue haze of rain that had fallen heavily,
-drenching the woods and making monotonous music on the
-water. Towards evening the sky had melted to a serene
-azure; the air was a web of shimmering amber, the west
-streamed through a mist of gold, and every leaf glittered
-with dew. A luminous vapour hovered over the little mere,
-and there were rain pools in the meadows that burnt with
-a hundred sunsets like clear brass.</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte and Igraine had been bathing in the mere.
-They had come up from the water to dry themselves upon
-a napkin of white cloth, the bronze-gold and brown hair of
-each meeting like twin clouds, while their linen lay like
-snow on the trailing branches of a tree near the pool.
-Their limbs and shoulders gleamed against the silver-black
-mirror spread by the mere; their voices made a mellow
-sound through the valley as they talked. Igraine had
-fastened her violet surcoat about her beneath her breasts;
-Garlotte&rsquo;s blue smock still hung from a branch above her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>As they sat under the tree, drying their hair and looking
-over the pool to the forest realm beyond, Igraine told the
-girl much of the outer world as she had seen it; nor was
-her instruction unleavened by a certain measure of cynicism&mdash;a
-bitterness that surprised Garlotte not a little. The
-girl had great dreams of the glories of old cities, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-splendour of court life, the zest of a mere material
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You do not love the great world,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Once, child, I did. Everything outside a convent wall
-seemed good to me; I thought men heroes, and the world
-a faerie place; who has not! Thoughts change with
-time: that which I once hungered for, now I despise.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have never been into a great city, not even into
-Caerleon. My father loved the country and said it was
-God&rsquo;s pasture.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I would rather have a dog for a friend than most men,
-child. Man is always thinking of his stomach, his strength,
-or his passion; he is vain, dull, and surly often; takes delight
-in slaying dumb things; drinks beer, and sleeps like
-a log save for his snoring.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But Renan doesn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There are some <i>men</i>, child, among the swine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And the women?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have known good women.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In the convent?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I suppose there they were good, just as stones that lie
-in the grass are good in that they do very little harm.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But they served God!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mere habit, just as you eat your dinner.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A hard saying.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your sayings would be hard, child, if you had learnt
-what I have learnt of the world.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte pulled her blue smock from the tree and wrapped
-it round her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But you love God?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What is God?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Great Father who loves all things.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Methinks then I am nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>"You say God loves all men and women. Why, then,
-have I been cursed with perversities ever since I was born,
-tormented with contradictions, baffled, and mocked, till the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-eternal trivialities of life now make my soul sick in my
-body?"</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sorrow is heaven sent to chasten, just as rain freshens
-the leaves.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Old, old proverb. Rain comes from clouds; clouds
-hide the sun; how can sorrow be good, child, when it
-darkens the light of life, hides God from the heart, and
-makes the soul bitter?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That seems the wrong spirit, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So meek folk say; we are not all mild earth to be
-smitten and make no moan. There are sea-spirits that lash
-and foam, fire-spirits that leap and burn. My spirit is of
-the flame; am I to be cursed, then, because I was born with
-a soul of fire?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We cannot answer all this, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hate to bow down blindly, to cast ashes on the head
-because a superstition bids us so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have faith!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I cannot see with my heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I would you could, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you are right.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte put on her shift and frock with a sigh, and
-straightway went and kissed Igraine on the forehead. They
-sat close together under the tree and watched the valley
-grow dim as death, and the pool black and lustrous as a
-mirror turned to the twilight. Garlotte&rsquo;s warm heart was
-yearning to Igraine; her arm was close about her, and
-presently Igraine&rsquo;s head rested upon her shoulder. She
-began to tell the girl many things in a still, stifled voice;
-her bitterness gushed out like fermented wine, and for a
-season she was comforted&mdash;with no lasting balm indeed, for
-there was but one soul in the world that could give her
-that.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Believe, Igraine, believe,&rdquo; said Garlotte very softly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Believe&mdash;child!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That there is good for every one in the world if we
-wait and watch in patience.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I seem to have watched years go by, and life stretches
-out from me as a sea at night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Look not there, Igraine, but into your own heart and
-into the gold of faith.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have no heart to look to, child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Save into a man&rsquo;s. And it was a good heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good as a god&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Then look into it still.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You speak like a mother.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They had talked on into the dusk of night, forgetful of
-time, hearing only the dripping from the leaves, seeing
-nothing but the short stretch of water and herbage at their
-feet. Yet an hour ago a figure in a palmer&rsquo;s cloak and cowl
-had come out from the western forest and stood leaning
-upon its staff, to stare out broodingly over the valley. The
-laurel green of the man&rsquo;s cloak harmonised so magically
-with the green of grass and tree that it was difficult to isolate
-his figure from the framing of wood and meadow.</p>
-
-<p>The pilgrim had stood long in the shadows and watched
-the two white forms come up out of the waters of the pool.
-He had seen them sit and dry their hair under the tree as
-the dusk crept down. While they talked he had passed
-down towards the cottage, accompliced by the trees, slipping
-from trunk to trunk, to enter the cottage itself while the
-girls&rsquo; faces were turned from it towards the pool. From one
-of the narrow casements his cowled face had looked out; he
-had marked Igraine&rsquo;s red gold shimmering hair; he had
-seen her face for a moment, also the shield hanging in the
-room with its cloven heart and white lilies, the sword and
-helmet, the harness of workmanship so subtle. When he
-had seen all this he had stolen out again into the gloaming,
-a thin gliding streak of green under the gnarled thorns and
-the night-bosomed cedars. The forest had taken him to
-its depths again and the unutterable silence of its shades.
-The girls by the pool had heard no sound, nor dreamt of
-the thing that had been so near, watching like a veritable
-ghost through the mist of the mere&rsquo;s twilight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Caerleon slept under the moon, a dream city in a land of
-dreams. Its walls were like ivory in a dark gloom of green.
-The tower of the palace of the king caught a coronet from
-the stars, while in the window of an upper room a thin flame
-flickered like a yellow rose blown athwart the black foliage
-of the night. Within blood-red curtains breathed over the
-arched door; a little altar stood against the eastern wall,
-guarded above by angels haloed with gold, standing in a mist
-of lilies with wings of crimson and green. The silence of
-the hour seemed embalmed in silver&mdash;so pure, so still, so
-hallowed was it.</p>
-
-<p>Uther knelt before the little altar in prayer; the light
-from the single lamp slanted down upon him, but left his
-face in the shadow. It was past midnight, yet the man&rsquo;s
-head was still bowed down in his devotion. He was in an
-ecstasy of spiritual ascent to heaven, a mood that made the
-world a Patmos, and his own soul a revelation to itself. At
-such a time his imagination could mount with a mystery of
-poetic rapture. Angels drumming on golden bells or bearing
-diamond chalices of purple wine seemed to gaze deep-eyed
-on him from a paradise of snow and amethyst. Above all
-shone the Eternal Face, that clear sun of Christendom shining
-with wounded love through the crimson transgressions
-of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Deliberate footfalls and the rustle of a drawn curtain
-intervened between solitude and devotion. The curtain fell
-again; footfalls echoed away to die down into a well of
-silence; a tall man wrapped in a cloak stood motionless in
-the oratory. Uther, still upon his knees, turned to the
-window and the moonlight, with big prayerful eyes that
-questioned the intruding figure.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Merlin,&rdquo; he said, with a breath of prophecy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Even so, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was praying but now for such a thing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, pray no longer. I have kept my tryst.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther rose up straightway from before the altar and stood
-before the square of the casement. The moonlight made a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-halo of his hair, and lit his face with a whiteness that seemed
-almost supernatural. Strong as he was, his hands shook like
-aspen leaves; his lips were parted, and his eyes wide with
-the shadow of the night. Merlin stood in the dark angle of
-the room; his voice seemed to come as from a tomb; the
-single lamp flame shook and quivered in a fickle draught.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, the moon is not yet full.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Suffer me, sire, a moment.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak quickly. God knows, I have prayed like a
-Samson.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Merlin cast his mantle from him, and stood out in the
-moonlight wrapped in the mystic symbolism of his robe.
-Sapphire and emerald, ruby and sardonyx, flashed with a
-ghostly gleam in the pale light, and caught the moonbeams
-in their folds. Merlin&rsquo;s thin hands quivered like a spray of
-May blossom waving in the night wind, and his eyes were
-like the eyes of a leopard.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, thou wert Pelleas once.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should remember it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thou art Pelleas again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Again?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In thy red harness with thy painted shield, thy black
-horse; take them all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The past rushes back like dawn.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Near Caerleon lies a valley.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There are twenty valleys.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go north, sire, in thought. Pass the Cross on Beacon
-Hill, hold on for the Abbey of the Blessed Mary, take to the
-hills, go by a ruined tower, ford Usk, where there is a hermitage.
-Pass through a waste, cross more hills, go down into
-a valley that runs north and south.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I follow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go alone, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alone.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The valley is piled steep with forestland. Go down
-and fear not. In the valley&rsquo;s lap lie meadowlands, a pool,
-a cottage. In that cottage you shall find a knight; his
-armour is gilded gold, his horse a grey, his shield shows a
-cloven heart set amid white lilies. Speak with that knight.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yet more!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak with that knight, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In peace?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you love your soul.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Igraine&mdash;Merlin, what of her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That knight shall lead you to her. Sire, I have said.&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IX</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>It was early and a clear dewy morning when Uther rode
-down alone from the palace by a narrow track that curled
-through the shrubberies clothing the palace hill. A
-generous sky piled its blue dome with mountainous clouds
-that billowed up above the horizon. The laurels in the
-shrubbery flickered their leaves like innumerable scales of
-silver in the sun; amber sun rays slanted through the dense
-branches of the yews, and flashed on the red harness that
-burnt down the winding track. The wind sang, the green
-larches tossed their &rsquo;kerchiefs, in the distance the sea
-glimmered to the white frescoes of the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Uther&mdash;Pelleas once more&mdash;tossed his spear to the tall
-trees, and burst into the brave swing of a <i>chant d&rsquo;amour</i>.
-With caracole and flapping mane his horse took his lord&rsquo;s
-humour. It was weather to live and love in, weather for
-red lips and the clouding down of perfumed hair. God and
-the Saints&mdash;what a grand thing to be strong, to have a clean
-heart to show to a woman&rsquo;s eyes! What were all the
-baser fevers of life balanced against the splendid madness of
-a great passion!</p>
-
-<p>Down through Caerleon&rsquo;s streets he rode unknown of
-any on his tall black horse. It was pleasant to be unthroned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-for once, and to put a kingdom from off his shoulders.
-With what a swing the good beast carried him, how the
-towers and turrets danced in the sun, how bright were the
-eyes of the women who passed him by. All the world
-seemed greener, the sky bluer, the city merrier; the
-laughter of the children in the gutter echoed out of heaven;
-the old hag who sold golden lemons under a beech tree
-seemed almost a madonna&mdash;a being from a better world.
-Uther laughed in his heart, and blessed God and Merlin.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the rare reflections of philosophy dear to the
-contemplative mind, how joy jostles pain in the world, and
-pleasure in gold and scarlet elbows the grey-cloaked form of
-grief. Even innocent merriment may throw a rose in the
-face of one who mourns, innocent indeed of the desire to
-mock. The throstle sings in the tree while the beggar lies
-under it dying. So Uther the King flashed hate in the eyes
-of one who watched,&mdash;knowing him only that morning
-as Pelleas the knight. In an old play the jealous man saw
-the devil ride by, and promptly followed him on the chance
-of finding his lost wife, deeming, indeed, the devil&rsquo;s guidance
-propitious for such a quest.</p>
-
-<p>It was the shield that caught Gorlois&rsquo;s eye as he stood
-on a balcony of his house and looked out over Caerleon.
-The device smote him sudden as the lash of a whip. The
-red harness, the black horse, the painted shield, mingled a
-picture that burnt into his brain with a vividness that passed
-comprehension. He knew well enough to whom such
-arms should belong; had he not carried them fraudulently
-to his own doubtful profit? This knight must be that
-Pelleas whose past had worked such mischief with his own
-machinations, that Pelleas who had won Igraine the novice
-fresh from the shadow of her convent trees. Gorlois
-watched the man go by with a kind of superhuman envy
-twisting in him like a colic. The smart of it made him
-stiffen, go pale, gnaw his lip.</p>
-
-<p>If this was the knight Pelleas, what then? Gorlois
-could not reason for the moment; his brain seemed a mass<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-of molten metal in a bowl of iron. Convictions settled
-slowly, hardened and took form. Igraine had loved the man
-Pelleas; Igraine was his wife; he had lost her and Brastias
-also; poison and the sword waited to do their work.
-Supposing then this Pelleas was in quest of Igraine; supposing
-they had come to know each other again; supposing
-Brastias and Pelleas were one and the same man. Hell and
-furies&mdash;what a thought was this! It goaded Gorlois into
-action. He would ride after the man, hunt him, track him,
-in hope of some fragment of the truth. Hazard and hate,
-blood and battle, these were more welcome than chafing
-within walls as in a cage, or frying on a bed as on a gridiron.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s voice rang through gallery and hall like a
-battle-cry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ho, there!&mdash;my sword and harness.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a grimness in the sound that made those who
-came to arm him bustle for dear life. They knew his
-black, furious humour, the hand that struck like a mace,
-the tyranny that took blood for trifles. The stoutest of
-them were cowards before that marred and moody face.
-Be as brisk as they would, they were too slow for Gorlois&rsquo;s
-temper, a temper vicious as a wounded bear&rsquo;s.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God and the Saints&mdash;was ever man served by such a
-pack of stiff-fingered fools! The devil take your fumbling.
-Go and gird up harlots, or hold cooking-pots. On with
-that helmet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A fellow, very white about the mouth, clapped the
-casque on, and drew a quick breath when the angry eyes
-withered him no longer. Armlets, breastplates, greaves,
-cuishes, all were on. Gorlois seemed to emit fire like metal
-at white heat. He went clanging down stairway and
-through atrium to the courtyard, where a horseboy held a
-white charger. Gorlois cuffed the lad aside, mounted with
-a spring, took his spear from an esquire, and rode straight
-for the gate, his horse&rsquo;s hoofs sparking fire from the courtyard
-stones. Half an hour or more had gone since Pelleas
-had passed by on his black horse, and Gorlois spurred at a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-gallop through Caerleon, bent on catching sight of the red
-knight before he should have ridden into the covering
-masses of the woods.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas meanwhile rode on like a lad whose first quest
-led him into the infinite romance of the unknown. Woods
-and waters called; bare night and the blink of the stars
-summoned up that strangeness in life that is like wine to
-the heart of the strong and the brave. He was young again&mdash;young
-in the first glory of arms; the world shone
-glamoured as of old as he turned from the high-road to
-a bridle-track that led up through woods towards the
-north.</p>
-
-<p>Holding on at a level pace he passed the woods and saw
-them rolling back like a green cataract towards the sea.
-Bare hills saluted him; the beacon height with its great
-wooden cross stood out against the sky; mile on mile of
-wooded land billowed out before him, clouded with a blue
-haze where the domes of the trees rose innumerably rank
-on rank. The Abbey of the Holy Mary lay low in meadows
-on his left, its fish pools shimmering in the sun, its orchards
-densely green about its walls. Two leagues or more of
-wood and wild, a climb over hills, a long descent, and Usk
-again shone out trailing distant in the hollows. A crumbling
-tower stood up above the trees. Pelleas passed close to it,
-giving antiquity due reverence as was his custom, looking
-up at its ivied walls, its crown of gillyflowers, its windows
-wistful as a blind man&rsquo;s eyes. Another mile and Usk ran
-at his feet. A hermitage stood by the ford. Pelleas gave
-the good man a piece of silver and besought his prayers
-before he rode down and splashed through the river to the
-further bank. Heathland and scrub rolled to the east,
-merging into the blue swell of a low line of hills. It was
-wild country enough, haunted by snipe and crested plover,
-an open solitude that swept into a purple streak against the
-northern sky.</p>
-
-<p>It was noon before Pelleas had made an end of its
-shadeless glare and taken to the hills that rose gently towards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-the east. His red harness moving over the green was lost
-to Gorlois, who had missed the trail long ago in the woods
-beyond St. Mary&rsquo;s. It was dusk when the Cornishman
-came guided to the ford, and learnt from the hermit there
-that the chase lay across Usk and eastward over the heath.
-Gorlois gave the man no piece of silver, only a savage curse
-to gag his alms-seeking. Night came and caught him in
-the open, and rather than wander astray in the dark he
-spent the night under a whin bush, calming his incontinent
-temper as best he might.</p>
-
-<p>An hour past noon Pelleas stood on the last hill slope
-and looked down upon the massed woodland at his feet.
-Here at last was Merlin&rsquo;s valley choked up with trees&mdash;a
-green lake of foliage that rippled from ridge to ridge.
-Pelleas, with the sun at his back, stood and looked down on
-it with a kind of quiet awe. So Godfrey and his knights
-looked down upon the holy city, so Dante saw Beatrice in
-his vision, and Cortez gazed at the Pacific in the west.
-Pelleas had taken his helmet from his head and hung it at
-his saddle-bow; there was a grand hunger on his face, a
-passionate calm, as he abode on the hill top with his tall
-spear a black streak against the sun.</p>
-
-<p>Mystery waved him on to the great oaks whose tops rose
-like green flames to the blue of the sky. Could Igraine be
-in this valley? Would he set eyes on her that day, and see
-the bronze gloss of her hair go shimmering through some
-woodland gallery? It was nigh upon a year since he had
-seen her. It had been summer then, and it was summer
-now; his heart was singing as it had sung on that mere
-island when Igraine had looked into his eyes under the
-cedar tree. He had borne much, endured much, since then;
-time had hallowed memory and shed a crimson lustre over
-the past. Manwise, for the great love that was in him, he
-almost feared to look on her again lest she should have
-changed in face or in heart. Great God, what a thought
-was that! It had never smitten him before. Stiffened by his
-own strong constancy, he had dowered Igraine with equal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-loyalty of soul, nor had considered the lapse of time and the
-crumbling power of hours. The thought brought a dew of
-sweat to his forehead and made him cold even in the sun.
-No, honour to God, the girl had a heart to be trusted, or
-he had never loved her as he did!</p>
-
-<p>Shaking the bridle, he rode down into the murk of the
-trees. He had to slant his spear and to bow his head often
-as the great boughs swooped to the ground. The dim
-glamour of the place had a sinister effect upon his mind; it
-solemnised him, touched the spiritual chords of his heart,
-uncovered the somewhat gloomy groundwork of philosophy
-that lay deep under the fabric of religious habit. Merlin
-had told a tale and nothing more. God&rsquo;s blessings were
-not man&rsquo;s blessings, God&rsquo;s ways not man&rsquo;s ways. Pelleas
-had learnt to look for what he might have called the
-contradictions of divine charity. We are smitten when we
-pray for a blessing, chided when desirous of comfort. Life
-would seem at times a gigantic tyranny for the creation of
-patience. Pelleas remembered the past, and kept his hopes
-and desires well in hand.</p>
-
-<p>Betimes he judged himself not far from the bottom of
-the valley, for through gaps in the foliage overhead he
-could see the woods on the further slope towering up
-magnificently to touch the sky. Still further the long
-galleries of the wood arched out upon grassland gemmed
-with summer flowers. Showers of sunlight told of an open
-sky. He was soon out of the shadows and standing under
-the wooelshawe, with the dale Merlin had pictured stretching
-north and south before his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The scene smiled up at him from its bath of sunlight&mdash;the
-green meadows flecked white, blue, and gold, the diverse
-foliage of the trees, the little pool smooth as crystal, the
-solemn barriers of the surrounding woods. He looked first
-of all for the cottage built of timber, and could not see it
-for its overshadowing trees. None the less, by the pool a
-girl in a blue smock stood looking up towards him, her face
-showing oval white from her loosened hair. Pelleas held his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-breath for the moment, then saw well enough that it was not
-Igraine. Meanwhile the figure in blue had disappeared as
-though in fear of him; he could no longer see the girl from
-where he watched on the edge of the wood.</p>
-
-<p>Riding out, he sallied down through the long grass with
-its haze of flowers, his eyes turned with a steadfast eagerness
-to the pool in the meadows. His impatience grew
-with every step, but he was outwardly cool as any veteran.
-First the brown thatch of the cottage came into view, then
-the blue smock of the girl who stood by the porch and
-watched. Last of all Pelleas saw a gleam of armour through
-the gloom of a cedar tree, heard the neigh of a horse, the
-jar of a swinging shield. The sight made his heart beat
-more briskly than ever ghost or goblin could have done.
-Pushing through the trees he came full upon a knight
-mounted on a grey horse, who was advancing towards him
-bearing on his shield the cognisance of a cloven heart.</p>
-
-<p>The knight on the grey horse reined in and abode stone
-still in the meadows, the sunlight flashing on his helmet
-and such points of his harness uncovered by his surcoat.
-Pelleas as he rode down took stock of the stranger with an
-eagerness that was half jealous maugre his perspicuity of
-soul. What had this splendid gentleman to do with
-Igraine the novice? Truth to tell, Pelleas would rather
-have had some humbler person to serve as guide on such a
-quest.</p>
-
-<p>The knight on the grey horse never budged a foot.
-Pelleas saw that he carried no spear and that his sword was
-safe in his scabbard. This looked like peace. Drawing up
-some three paces away, he scanned the strange knight over
-from head to foot, voted him a passable man, and admired
-his armour. And since his whole soul was set on a certain
-subject, he made no delay over courteous generalities, but
-came at once to the point at issue.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Greeting, sir; I have ridden from Caerleon to speak
-with you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The knight in the violet surcoat swayed in the saddle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-as though shaken by a spear thrust on his painted shield.
-Pelleas noted that both his hands were tangled up in the
-grey horse&rsquo;s mane, though nothing could be seen of the
-face behind the fixed vizor of the helmet. A voice, husky,
-toneless, feeble, answered him after a moment&rsquo;s silence.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What would you with me, knight of the red shield?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is a lady whose name is Igraine; I seek her. I
-have been forewarned that a knight lodging in this valley
-has knowledge of her, and you, messire, seem to be that
-knight.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That is the truth,&rdquo; quoth the cracked, husky voice
-from the helmet.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas considered a moment and held his peace. There
-was something strange about this knight, something tragical,
-something that touched the heart. Pelleas&rsquo;s instinct for
-superb miseries took hold of him with a queer, twisting
-grip that made him shudder. His dark eyes smouldered
-as he watched the strange knight, and gave voice to the
-grim thought that lay heavy on his mind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The lady is not dead?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the husky voice with blunt brevity.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And she is well fortuned?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Passably.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thank God,&rdquo; said Pelleas.</p>
-
-<p>There was a dry sob in the brazen helmet, but Pelleas
-never heard the sound. He was staring into the woods
-with large, luminous eyes, and a half smile on his lips, as
-though his thoughts pleased him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is the Lady Igraine far from hence?&rdquo; he asked presently.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If you will follow me, my lord, I can bring you to her
-in less than an hour.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas flushed red to the forehead, his dark eyes beamed.
-He looked a god of a man as he sat bareheaded on his
-black horse, his face aglow like the face of a martyr. The
-Knight of the Cloven Heart looked at him, flapped his
-bridle, and rode on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Pelleas said never a word as they passed up the valley.
-There were deep thoughts in his heart, yearnings, and
-ecstasies of prayer that held him in a stupor of silence.
-His was a grandeur of mind that grew the grander for the
-majesty of passion. There was no blurting of questions, no
-gabbling of news, no chatter, no flurry. Like a mountain
-he was towering, sable-browed, impenetrable, while the
-thunder of suspense lasted. The knight on the grey horse
-watched him narrowly with a white look under his helmet
-that was infinitely plaintive.</p>
-
-<p>At the northern end of the valley, on the very edge
-of the forest, stood a thicket of gnarled thorns still
-smothered with the snow of early summer. The Knight of
-the Cloven Heart drew rein in the long grass and pointed
-Pelleas to these white pavilions under the near umbrage of
-the oaks.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Look yonder,&rdquo; said the voice.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas answered with a stare.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would you see your lady?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Be careful how you jest, my friend.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I jest not, Uther Pendragon. Get you down and tether
-your horse; go in amid yon trees and look into the forest.
-I swear on the cross you shall see what you desire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas gave the knight a long look, said nothing, dismounted,
-threw the bridle over a bough. Then he thrust
-his spear into the ground and went bareheaded in among
-the trees. Standing under the shadow of a great oak, he
-peered long into the glooms, saw nothing living but a
-rabbit feeding in the grass.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a voice called to him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was a wondrous cry, clear and plaintive, yet tremulous
-with feeling. It rang through the woods like silver, bringing
-back the picture of a solemn beech wood under moonlight,
-and a girl tied naked to the trunk of a tree. A great
-lustre of awe swept over Pelleas&rsquo;s face; his eyes were big and
-luminous as the eyes of a blind man; he groped with his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-hands as he passed back under the May trees to the
-valley.</p>
-
-<p>In the long grass stood a woman in armour, her helmet
-thrown aside, and her red gold hair pouring marvellous in
-the sunlight over her violet surcoat. Her head was thrown
-back so as to show the full sweep of her shapely throat; her
-face was very pale under her parted hair, while her lids
-drooped over eyes that seemed to swim with unshed tears.
-Her hands, slightly outstretched, quivered as with a shuddering
-impulse from her heart, and her half-parted lips looked
-as though they were moulded to breathe forth a moan.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas stood and stared at her as a dead man might look
-at God. He drew near step by step, his face white as
-Igraine&rsquo;s, his eyes as deep with desire as hers. Neither of
-them said a word, but stood and looked into each other&rsquo;s
-faces as into heaven&mdash;awed, solemnised, silenced. Above
-them towered the green woods; the meadows rippled from
-them with their broidery of flowers; the scent of the white
-May swept fragrant on the air. Solitude was with them,
-and the mild smile of Nature glimmered with the sunlight
-over the trees.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine spoke first.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas,&rdquo; was all she said.</p>
-
-<p>The man gave a great sob, fell on his knees, and would
-have kissed her surcoat. Igraine bent down to him with
-eyes that shone like two deep wells of love. Both her
-hands were upon Pelleas&rsquo;s shoulders, his face was turned
-to hers.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Kneel not to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let me touch you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There, there, you have my hand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, my God!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine gave a low cry, half knelt, half fell before him.
-Pelleas&rsquo;s arms caught her, his face hung over hers, her hair
-fell down and trailed a golden pool upon the grass. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-put her hands up and touched his hair, smiled wonderfully,
-and looked at him as though she were dying.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Kiss me, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas drew a deep breath; his body seemed to quake;
-his whole soul was sucked up by the girl&rsquo;s lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; was all he said.</p>
-
-<p>Her face blazed, her hands clung about his neck.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Again, again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, have I not prayed for this!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His eyes were large and wonderful to look upon. There
-was such awe and love in them that an angel might have
-looked thus upon the Christ and have earned no reproach.
-Igraine kissed his lips, crept close into his bosom, hid her
-face, and wept.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>X</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When Igraine had ended her tears, and grown calm and quiet,
-Pelleas took her hand and led her to a grass bank painted
-thick with flowers that sloped to the white boughs of a
-great May tree. He was radiant in his manhood, and his eyes
-burnt for her with such a splendour of pride and tenderness
-that she trembled in thought for the secret she had kept
-from him in her heart. He could know nothing of Gorlois,
-or he would not have come thus to her. The mocking
-face of fate leered at her like a satyr out of the shadows,
-yet with the joy of the moment she put the thoughts aside
-and lived on the man&rsquo;s lips and the great love that brimmed
-for her in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas sat in the long grass at her feet and looked up at
-her as at a saint. Never had she seen such glory of happiness
-on human face, never such manhood deified by the
-holier instincts of the heart. The sheer strength of his
-devotion carried her above her cares and made her content
-to live for the present, and to gird time with the girdle of
-an hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are no nun, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She smiled at him and shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would to God you had told me that a year ago.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would to God I had.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It would have saved much woe.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine hung her head. The man&rsquo;s words were prophetic
-in their honest ignorance, and the whole tale had almost
-rushed from her that moment but for a certain selfishness
-that held her mute, a fear that overpowered her. She
-knew the fibre of Pelleas&rsquo;s soul. To tell him the truth
-would mean to call his honour to arms against his love, and
-she dreaded that thought as she dreaded death.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was a fool, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said, with a queer intensity
-of tone that made the man look quickly into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You did not know.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pardon, Pelleas, I knew your soul, how true and strong
-it was. God knows I tried you to the end, and bitter truth
-it proved to me. If you had only waited.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only a night; you would have had the truth at dawn.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I struggled for your soul and for mine, as I thought.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, you chose the nobler part, thinking me a mere
-woman, a frail thing blown about by my own passion. I
-loved you, Pelleas, for the deed, though it nigh brought me
-to my death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God knows I honoured you, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Too well; it had been better for us both if you had
-been more human.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was an anguish of regret in her voice, a plaintive
-accusation that made Pelleas wince to the core. He bent
-down and kissed her hand as it lay in her lap, then looked
-into her face with a mute appeal that brought her to the
-verge of tears.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courage, courage, dear heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God bless you, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am very glad of your love.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come now, tell me how the year has passed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine held his hand in hers and began to twist her hair
-about his wrist into a bracelet of gold. Her eyes faltered
-from his, and were hot and heavy with an inward misery of
-thought. The man&rsquo;s words wounded her at every turn,
-and in his innocence he shook her happiness as a wind
-shakes a tree.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is little I can tell you,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Every hour is as gold to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would I had them lying in my lap.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We are young yet, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a joyousness in his voice that sounded to the
-girl like a blow struck upon empty brass, or like the laugh
-of a child through a ruined house. His rich optimism
-mocked her to the echo.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I took refuge in Winchester,&rdquo; she began, &ldquo;with Radamanth
-my uncle, and lodged there many months. I watched
-for you and waited, but got no news of a knight named
-Pelleas. Week by week as my knowledge grew I began
-to think and think, to piece fragments together, to dream
-in my heart. I longed to see this Uther of whom all
-Britain talked. Ah, you remember the cross, Pelleas,
-which you left at my feet?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas smiled. She put her hand into her bosom with a
-little blush of pride and looked into the man&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have it here still,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;where it has hung these
-many months. This scrap of gold first taught me to look
-for Uther.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine, am I a king!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My king, sire. And oh! how long it was before I
-could get news of you; yet in time tidings came. Then it
-was that I left Winchester, went on foot through the land,
-and hearing again of you I set out for Wales and Caerleon
-with rumours of war in my ears. Even from Caerleon I
-followed you, even to the western sea, where I saw the
-great battle with Gilomannius, and the noble deeds you did
-there for Britain.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Pelleas&rsquo;s dark eyes flashed up to hers. A man loves to
-be noble in deed before the face of the woman he serves, a
-species of divine vanity that begets heroes. The girl&rsquo;s
-staunch faith was a thing that proffered the superbest
-flattery.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are very wonderful, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It was all for my own heart; and what greater joy
-could I have than to see you a king before the thundering
-swords of your knights.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You saw that, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do you remember a hillock by the pine forest on the
-ridge, where you reined in after the charge and uncovered
-your head to the sun?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As it were yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I stood on that hillock, Pelleas, and saw your face after
-many months.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine, said I not you were very wonderful?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no, I am only a woman, only a woman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God give me such a wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The word was keen as the barb of a lance. Pelleas&rsquo;s head
-was bowed over the girl&rsquo;s hand as he pressed his lips to the
-gold circlet of hair, and he did not see the frown of pain upon
-her face. Wife! What a mockery, what bitterness! The
-sky seemed black for a moment, the valley bare with the
-blasts of winter and the moan of tortured trees. She half
-choked in her throat, and her heart seemed to fail within
-her like a bowl that is broken. Yet there was a smile on
-her face when Pelleas looked up from the circlet of her hair
-with the pride of love in his large eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What ails you, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A mere thought of the past.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell it me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no, it is a nothing, a mere vapour, and it has
-passed. How warm your lips are to my fingers. Tell me
-of yourself, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But this armour, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>"I took it from a dead knight, God rest his soul. I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-wandered long in Wales, yet ever drew to Caerleon where
-folk spoke your name, yet never might I come near you,
-lest&mdash;lest you were too great for me."</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child, child!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Uther Pendragon, King of Britain!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let the world die.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And let us live; Pelleas, tell me of yourself.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man looked long over the valley in silence. His
-face was very grave, and his eyes were deep with thought
-as though the past awed him with the recollection of its
-bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;May I never pass such another night,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>The words were curt and calm enough as though leaving
-infinite things unsaid. Igraine sat silent by him and still
-plaited her hair about his wrist.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I went away in the dark, for I thought you were a nun,
-Igraine, and I would not break your vows. I was nearly
-blind for an hour. Twice my horse stumbled and fell
-with me in the woods, and once I was smitten out of the
-saddle by a tree. Dawn came, and how I cursed the sun.
-I seemed to see your face everywhere, and to hear your
-voice in every sound. Days came and went, and I hated
-the sight of man; as for my prayers, I could not say them,
-and I was dumb in my heart towards God. I rode north
-into the wilds, and into the fenlands of the east. Strange
-things befell me in many places. I fought often, beast and
-wild men and robber ruffians out of the woods. Fighting
-pleased me; it eased the wrath in my heart that seemed to
-rage up against the world, and against all things that drew
-breath. I wandered in the night of the forests, waded
-through swamps, took my food by the sword, and never
-blessed man or woman. I felt bitter and evil to the core.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine bent down and touched his forehead with her lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Brave heart,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You shall hear how I came by my own soul again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, tell me that.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>"It was as though a still voice came to me out of heaven.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-I was riding in the northern wilds not far from rough coastland
-and the sea, and riding, came upon a little house of
-timber all bowered round with trees. It was a peaceful
-spot, flowers grew around, and the sun was shining, and I
-drew near, moved in my heart to beg food and rest, for I
-was half starved and gaunt as a monk from an African
-desert. What did I see there? A dead man tied to a tree
-and gored with many wounds; a woman kneeling dead
-before his feet, thrust through with a sword; a little child
-lying near with its head crushed by a stone or a club. The
-sword was a Saxon sword, and I knew who had done the
-deed; but sight of the dead folk by their empty home
-seemed to smite my pity like the thought of the dead
-Christ. I had pitied but myself and you, Igraine, and
-had wandered through the land like a brute beast mad with
-the smart of my own wound. Here was woe enough,
-agony enough, to shame my heart. Straightway I went
-down on my knees and prayed, and came through penitence
-and fire to a knowledge of myself. &lsquo;Rise up,&rsquo; said the
-voice in me, &lsquo;rise up and play the man. There is much
-sorrow in Britain, much shedding of innocent blood, much
-violence, and much brute wrath. Rise up and strike for
-woman and for babe, let your sword shine against the
-wolves from over the sea, let your shield hurl them from
-the ruined hearths of Britain, the smoking churches, and the
-children of the cross.&rsquo; So I rose up strong again and
-comforted, and rode back into the world to do my duty."</p>
-
-<p>When Pelleas had made an end of speaking, Igraine&rsquo;s
-eyes were full of tears. The simplicity of the man&rsquo;s words
-had awakened to the full all the pathos of the past in her,
-and she was as proud of him as when she saw him hurl
-Gilomannius and his host down the green slopes towards
-the sea. Her lips quivered as she spoke to him&mdash;looking
-into his face with her eyes dim and shadowy with tears.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Forgive me all this.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It has been good for me, Igraine, nor would I alter the
-days that are gone.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No, no.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We have found love again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What more need we ask?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What more?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was half a wail. Again it was winter, and the
-wind blew as though at midnight; the flowers and the
-green woods were blurred before the girl&rsquo;s eyes. Gorlois&rsquo;s
-hard face and the grey walls of Tintagel came betwixt her
-and the summer. And, though the mood lasted but for a
-moment, it seemed like the long agony of days crushed into
-the compass of a minute.</p>
-
-<p>Evening stood calm-eyed in the east. A tranquil heat
-hung over wood and valley, a warm silence that seemed to
-bind the world into a golden swoon. Not a ripple stirred
-in the grass with its tapestries of flowers; every leaf was
-hushed upon the bough; nothing moved save the droning
-bee and the wings of the butterflies hovering colour-bright
-over the meadows. The sky was a mighty sapphire, the
-woods carved emeralds piled giantwise to the sun. There
-was no discord and no sound of man, as though the curse of
-Adam was not yet.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine had drawn Pelleas&rsquo;s great sword from its sheath.
-She held it slantwise before her, and pressed her lips to
-the cold steel.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Old friend,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;be ever true to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas laughed and touched her hair with his hand. A
-kind of exaltation came upon them, and the zest of life
-crept through the bodies like green sap in spring. Igraine
-had filled her brazen helmet to the brim with flowers, and
-she scattered them and sang as they roamed into the hoar
-shadows of the woods:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">&ldquo;Dear love of mine,</div>
- <div class="verse">Where art thou roaming?</div>
- <div class="verse">The west is red,</div>
- <div class="verse">My heart is calling.&rdquo;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
-<p>Never had the vaults seemed greener, the half light more
-mysterious under the massive trees. The far world was out
-of ken; they alone lived and had their being; the toil of
-man was not even like the long sob of a moonlit sea, or the
-sound of rivers running in the night.</p>
-
-<p>The infinite strangeness of beauty shone over them like
-a wizard light out of the west. Igraine&rsquo;s lips were very red,
-her face white in the shadows, her eyes deep with mute
-desire. Hand held hand, body touched body. Often she
-would lie out upon Pelleas&rsquo;s arm, her head upon his shoulder,
-her hair clouding over his red harness. They were content
-to be together, to forget the world save so much of it as
-came within the ken of their eyes, and the close grip of their
-twined fingers. They said little as they swayed together
-under the trees. Soul ebbed into soul upon their lips, and
-a deep ecstasy possessed them like the throbbing pathos of
-some song.</p>
-
-<p>As the day deepened Pelleas and Igraine turned back
-into the valley, hand in hand. The west burnt gold above
-the tree tops, the gnarled trunks were pillars of agate bearing
-Byzant domes of breathless leaves. By the white May trees
-the two horses stood tethered, black and grey against the
-grass. Loosing them, and taking each a bridle, they passed
-down through flowers to the cottage and the pool.</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte met them there with her brown hair pouring
-over her shoulders, and a clean white kerchief over her
-throat and bosom. She came to them through a little
-thicket of fox-gloves that were budding early, white and
-purple. Her blue eyes quivered for a moment over Pelleas&rsquo;s
-face as she made him a deep curtsey, and bent to kiss
-Igraine&rsquo;s hand. There was a vast measure of sympathy in
-Garlotte&rsquo;s heart, and yet for all her well-wishing she was
-troubled for the two, fearing for them instinctively with
-even her small knowledge of the world. She had learnt
-enough from Igraine to comprehend in measure that
-element of tragedy that had entered with Gorlois into her
-life. Her interest in the man Pelleas was no mere vulgar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-curiosity, rather an intense pity that permeated her warm
-innocence of spirit to the core.</p>
-
-<p>She had spread supper on the table, a much meditated
-feast that had kept her eagerly busy since she had guessed
-the name of the strange knight who had ridden down out
-of the woods. She had the pride of a young housewife in
-her creamy milk, her bread. She had made a tansy cake,
-and there was a rich cream cheese ready in the cupboard,
-and a fat rabbit stewing by the fire. Yet for all her ingenuous
-pride she felt much troubled when it came to the test
-lest her fare should seem rude and meagre to the great
-knight in the red harness. Certainly he had a kind face
-and splendid eyes, but would he not smile at her humble
-supper, her horn cups, and her plates of hollywood? Her
-cares were empty enough, but they were very real to the
-sensitive child who feared to seem shamed before Igraine.</p>
-
-<p>Half the happiness of life lies in the kindly sensibility of
-others to our desire for sympathy. A surly word, a trivial
-ungraciousness, a small deed passed over in thankless silence,
-how much these things mean to a sensitive heart! Garlotte,
-standing in her cottage door, half shy and timid, found her
-small fears mere little goblins of her own invention.
-Igraine, radiant as the evening, came and kissed her on the
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Little sister, you have been very good to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The great knight too was smiling at her in quite a fatherly
-fashion. What a strong face he had, and what a noble
-look; she felt sure that he was a good man, and her heart
-went out to him like an opening flower. When he took
-her hand, and a lock of her hair and kissed it, she went red
-as one of her own roses, and was dumb with an impulsive
-gladness.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Little sister, you have been very good to me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Good, my lord, to you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child, Igraine can tell you how.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But the Lady Igraine, she saved my life!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, I had not heard that. Tell me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Garlotte found her ease in a moment. The whole tale
-came bubbling up like water out of a spring. Pelleas&rsquo;s
-strong face beamed; he touched Igraine&rsquo;s hair with his
-fingers and looked into her eyes as only a man in love can
-look. Garlotte saw that she was giving pleasure, and felt
-a glow from head to heart. Surely this great, grave-faced
-knight was a noble soul; how gentle he was, and how he
-looked into Igraine&rsquo;s eyes and bent over her like a tall elm
-over a slim cypress tree. She caught the happiness of the
-two, and from that moment her heart was singing and she
-had no more fear for herself and her poor cottage. Even
-the horn cups took a golden dignity, and her tansy cake
-and her cream seemed fit for a prince.</p>
-
-<p>The three were soon at supper together round the
-wooden table, with honeysuckle and roses climbing close
-above their heads. Garlotte would have stood and waited
-on Pelleas and Igraine, but they would have none of it; so
-she was set smiling at the head of her little table, and constrained
-to play the lady under her own roof. It was a dull
-meal so far as mere words were concerned. Pelleas&rsquo;s eyes
-were on Igraine in the twilight, and he had no hunger save
-hunger of heart; yet that the supper was a success there was
-no doubt whatever. Garlotte watched them both with a
-quiet delight; young as she was she was wise in the simple
-love of love, and so she mothered the pair to her heart&rsquo;s
-content in her own imagination. If only Renan had been
-there to help her serve, and touch her hand under the table,
-what a perfect guest-hour it would have been.</p>
-
-<p>When the meal was over she jumped up with a shy
-smile, took a rush basket from the wall, and went out into
-the garden. Igraine called her back.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where are you going, child?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Up the valley to the dead oak tree where herbs grow.
-I must make a stew to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It will soon be dark.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte swung her basket and laughed from her cloud
-of hair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You gathered herbs on Sunday, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You squirrel!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Renan was here; you came home after dusk; good-by,
-good-by.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They heard her go singing through the garden, a soft
-<i>chant d&rsquo;amour</i> that would have gone wondrously to flute
-and cithern. It died away slowly amid the trees like an
-elf&rsquo;s song coming from woodlands in the moonlight. Pelleas
-drew a deep breath and listened in the shadow of the
-room with his hands clasped before him on the table. He
-looked as though he were praying. Igraine&rsquo;s eyes were
-glooms of violet mystery as she watched him, her hands
-folded over a breast that rose and fell as with the restless
-motion of a troubled sea. She called the man softly by
-name; her body bent to him like a bow, her hair bathed
-his face with dim ripples of gold as mouth touched mouth.</p>
-
-<p>They went out into the garden together and stood under
-the cedar tree.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, my love, my own.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Heart of mine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You will never leave me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How should the sea put the earth from his bosom, or
-the moon pass from the arms of the night?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am faint, Pelleas; hold me in your arms.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They are strong, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There, let me rest so, for ever. Look, the stars are
-coming out, and there is the moon flooding silver over the
-trees. My lips burn, and I am faint.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courage, courage, dear heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How close you hold me! I could die so.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What is death to us, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Or life?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God in heaven, and heaven on earth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your words hurt me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>XI</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>How the birds sang that evening as a saffron afterglow
-fainted over the forest spires, and when all was still with
-the hush of night how the cry of a nightingale thrilled from
-a tree near the cottage!</p>
-
-<p>The glamour of the day had passed, and now what
-mockery and bitterness came with the cold, calculating
-face of the moon. Igraine tossed and turned in her bed
-like one taken with a fever; her brain seemed afire, her
-hair like so much flame about her forehead. As she lay
-staring with wide, wakeful eyes, the birds&rsquo; song mocked her
-to the echo, the scent of honeysuckle and rose floated
-in like a sad savour of death, and the moonlight seemed
-to watch her without a quaver of pity. Her heart panted in
-the darkness; she was torn by the thousand torments of a
-troubled conscience, wounded to tears, yet her eyes were
-dry and waterless as a desert. Gorlois&rsquo;s face seemed to
-glare down at her out of the idle gloom, and she could have
-cried out with the fear that lay like an icy hand over her
-bosom.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas slept under the cedar tree, wrapped in an old
-cloak, relic of Garlotte&rsquo;s father. How Igraine&rsquo;s heart
-wailed for the man, how she longed for the touch of his
-hand! God of heaven, she could not let him go again, and
-starve her soul with the old cursed life. His lips had
-touched hers, his arms had held her close, she had felt the
-warmth of his body and the beating of his heart. Was all
-this nothing&mdash;a dream, a splendid phantasm to be rent
-away like a crimson cloud? Was she to be Gorlois&rsquo;s wife
-and nothing more, a bitter flower growing under a gallows,
-sour wine frothing in a gilded cup?</p>
-
-<p>God of heaven, no! What had the world done for her
-that she should obey its edicts and suffer for its tyrannies?
-Gorlois had cheated her of her liberty, let him pay the price
-to the fates; what honour, indeed, had she to preserve for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-him? If he was a brute piece of lust, a tyrant, a demagogue,
-so much the better, it would ease her conscience.
-She owed no fealty, no marriage vow, to Gorlois. Her
-body was no more his than was her soul, and a dozen
-priests and a dozen masses might as well marry granite to
-fire. How could a fool in a cape and frock by gabbling a
-service bind an irresponsible woman to a man she hated more
-than the foulest mud in the foulest alley? It was a stupendous
-piece of nonsense, to say the least of it. No God
-calling himself a just God could hold such a bargain
-holy.</p>
-
-<p>And then&mdash;the truth! What a stumbling-block truth
-was on occasions! She knew Pelleas&rsquo;s intense love of honour,
-the fine sensibility of his conscience, the strong thirst for the
-highest good, that made him the victim of an ethical tyranny.
-If he had left her after Andredswold because he thought her
-a nun, what hope now had she of holding him if he knew
-her to be a wife? And yet for all her love she could not
-bring herself to keep him wholly from the truth. For all
-her passion and the fire in her rebellious heart she was not
-a woman who could fling reason to the winds, and stifle up
-her conscience with a kiss. Besides, she loved Pelleas to
-the very zenith of her soul. To have a lie understood upon
-her lips, to be shamed before the man&rsquo;s eyes, were things
-that scourged her in fancy even more than the thought
-of losing him. She trembled when she thought how he
-might look at her in later days if a passive lie were proven
-against her with open shame.</p>
-
-<p>But to tell him of Gorlois, and the humiliation of that
-darkest hour of her life! Could such a man as Pelleas
-serve her longer after such a confession? He would become
-a king again, a stranger, a man set in high places far beyond
-the mere yearning of a woman&rsquo;s white face. And yet, it
-was possible that his love might prove stronger than his
-reason; it was possible that he might front the world and
-frown down the petty judgments of men. Glorious and
-transcendent sacrifice! She could face calumny beside him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-as a rock faces the froth of waves; she could look Gorlois
-in the eyes, and know neither shame nor pity.</p>
-
-<p>Her mood that night was like the passage of a blown
-leaf, tossed up to heaven, whirled over the tree tops, driven
-down again into the mire. Strong woman that she was, her
-very strength made the struggle more indecisive and more
-racking. She could not renounce Pelleas for the great love
-she bore him, and yet she could not will to play a false part
-by reason of this same great love. Her soul, like a wanderer
-in the wilds, halted and wavered between two tracks that led
-forward into the unknown.</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte was sleeping in the far corner of the cottage.
-The girl had given up her bed to Igraine, who envied her
-her quiet, restful breathing as she lay and listened. In her
-doubt she called and woke Garlotte from her sleep, hardly
-knowing indeed what she desired to say to her, yet half
-fearful of lying alone longer in the night with her own
-thoughts for company. Garlotte rose up and came across
-the room to the bigger bed. She knelt down; two warm
-arms crept under the coverlet, and a soft cheek touched
-Igraine&rsquo;s.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why are you awake, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The warmth of the girl&rsquo;s body, her quiet breathing, the
-sweep of her hair, seemed to bring a scent of peace and
-human sympathy into the moonlit room. Igraine put her
-arms about her, and drew her down to her side. Their white
-faces and clouding hair lay close together on the pillow.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are in trouble, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How should I be in trouble?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You breathe like one in pain, and your voice is strange.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hush, Garlotte.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Am I not right?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas must not hear us talking.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They were silent awhile, lying in each other&rsquo;s arms with
-no sound save that of their breathing. Igraine&rsquo;s misery
-burnt in her and cried out for sympathy; Garlotte, half wise
-by instinct, yearned to share a trouble which she did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-wholly comprehend, to advise where she was partly ignorant.
-The girl felt a great stirring of her heart towards Igraine,
-but could say nothing for the moment. Having no better
-eloquence at command she raised her head and kissed the
-other&rsquo;s lips, a warm, impulsive kiss that seemed as rich in
-sympathy as a rose in scent.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s confidence woke at the touch of the girl&rsquo;s lips;
-she hungered even for this child&rsquo;s comfort, her simple guidance
-in this matter of life and love. It was easy enough to
-die, hard to exist as a mere spiritless Galatea devoid of soul.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Garlotte!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Imagine that you were married to a man you hated, and
-you loved Renan.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte raised herself in bed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Renan loved you and knew nothing?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would you tell Renan the truth?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte remained motionless, propped on her two hands,
-and looking out of the window into the streaming moonlight.
-Her brown hair touched Igraine&rsquo;s face as she lay
-still and watched her. The room was very silent, not a
-breeze seemed stirring, the roses athwart the window were
-still as though carved in wood.</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte spoke very softly, looking up with her face
-white and solemn in the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should tell Renan,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because I love him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;go on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should not love him rightly in God&rsquo;s eyes if I kept
-him from the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The coverlet rose and fell over Igraine&rsquo;s bosom, and there
-was a queer twisting pain at her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But if you were never to see Renan again?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;If I told him the truth?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Garlotte dared not look into Igraine&rsquo;s face; her lips were
-twitching, and her eyes were hot with tears.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; she faltered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Think, child, think!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I should not tell him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>In half a breath she had contradicted herself with a little
-gasp.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, I should tell him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The truth?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because I should not be happy even with him if I were
-acting a lie.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine gave a dry sob, and drew Garlotte down again
-to her side. They lay very close, almost mouth to mouth,
-their arms about each other&rsquo;s bodies.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I love Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will tell him the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine, it is best, it is best.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But it will kill me if I lose him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine, but he will love you all the more.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was Garlotte who broke into tears, and hid her face in
-the other&rsquo;s bosom. Igraine&rsquo;s eyes were as dry as a blue sky
-parched with a summer sun, and her voice failed her like
-the slack string of a lute. The moonlight slanted down
-upon them both. Before dawn they had fallen asleep in
-each other&rsquo;s arms.</p>
-
-<p>How many a heart trembles with the return of day;
-what fears rise with the first blush of light in an empty sky!
-The cloak of night is lifted from weary faces; the quiet
-balm of darkness is withdrawn from the moiling care of
-many a heart. To Igraine the dawn light came like a
-message of misery as she lay beside the sleeping Garlotte,
-and watched the gloom grow less and less in the little room.
-This dawn seemed a veritable symbol of the truth that she
-feared to look upon&mdash;and recognise. The night seemed
-kinder, less implacable, less grave of face. Day, like a pale
-justiciary, stalked up out of the east to call her to that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-assize where truth and the soul meet under the eye of
-heaven.</p>
-
-<p>How different was it with Pelleas under the eaves of the
-great cedar. He had slept little that night for mere wakeful
-happiness; the moon had kept carnival for him above
-the world; at dawn the stars had crept back from the choir
-stalls into the chambers of the night. He had known no
-weariness, no abatement of his deep calm joy. His heart
-had answered blithely to the dawn-song of the birds as
-though he had risen fresh from a dreamless sleep. The day
-to him had no look of evil; the sky was never grey; the flush
-in the east recalled no flashing of torches over a funeral bier.
-He rose up in the glory of his clean manhood, the strong
-kindliness of his great love. His prayers went to heaven that
-morning with the lark, and the Spirit of God seemed like a
-wind moving softly in the green boughs above his head.</p>
-
-<p>Very early before it was light he had taken a plunge and a
-swim in the pool, a swinging burst through the still water
-that had made him revel in his great strength. He had
-come up from the pool like a god refreshed, and had put on
-his red harness while the mists rose from the valley, and the
-birds chanted in the ghostly trees. When the day was
-fully awake he walked the grass-path in the garden like a
-watchman, with the scent of honeysuckle and thyme in his
-nostrils, and a blaze of flowers at his feet. As he paced up
-and down with his face turned to the sky, he sang in a
-mellow bass a song of Guyon&rsquo;s, the Court minstrel&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">&ldquo;When the dawn has come,</div>
- <div class="verse">My heart sighs for thee and the gleam of thy hair;</div>
- <div class="verse">Eyes deep as the night</div>
- <div class="verse">When the summer sky arches the world.&rdquo;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>So sang Pelleas as he paced the grass with his eyes wandering
-ever towards the doorway of the cottage.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Igraine came out to him, and stood under the
-shadow of the porch. Her hair hung lustrous about a face<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-that was white and drawn, despite a smile. Certainly a haze
-of red flushed her cheeks when Pelleas came up with a glory
-of love in his eyes, took her hands and kissed them, as though
-there was no such divine flesh in the whole wide world.
-How wonderful it was to be touched so, to have such eyes
-pouring out so strong a soul before her face, to know the
-presence of a great love, and to feel the echoing passion of
-it in her own heart!</p>
-
-<p>After the barren months of winter, and the long bondage
-in Tintagel, it seemed ah idyllic thing to be so served, so
-comforted. And was this faery time but for an hour, a day,
-and no longer? Was she but to see the man&rsquo;s face, to feel
-the touch of his hands, the grand calm of his love, before
-losing him, perhaps for life? Her heart fluttered in her like
-a smitten bird. And Pelleas, too, what a thrust lurked for
-the man, a blow to be given in the name of truth. How
-could she speak to him of Gorlois when he came and looked
-at her with those eyes of his?</p>
-
-<p>Igraine had never felt such misery as this even in the
-gloomy galleries of Tintagel. It tried her courage to the
-death to face Pelleas&rsquo;s wistful gaiety, and the adoration that
-beamed on her from his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Dear heart, it is dawn&mdash;it is dawn!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas held her hands, and waited for her lips to be
-turned to his. Instead, he saw lowered lids and quivering
-lashes, lips that were plaintive, a face white beneath a wealth
-of hair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Igraine, you do not look at me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes trembled up to his with a sudden infinite
-lustre.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Girl, girl!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, I have hardly slept.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nor I, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I think I am worn out with thinking of you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ha, little woman, you are extravagant; you will die like
-a flower even while I hold you in my bosom.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Garlotte came out from the cottage, and was kissed by
-Pelleas on the lips. The girl&rsquo;s eyes were red and heavy;
-she had been crying but a moment ago in the shadow of the
-cottage room, and she was timid and very solemn. Pelleas
-looked at her like a big brother.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come now, little sister,&rdquo; he said, with a rare smile;
-&ldquo;methinks you must be in love too by your looks.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Said I not so? You women take things so to heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, lord.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What a solemn face, little sister!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte mastered herself for a moment, then burst into
-tears and ran back into the cottage. Pelleas coloured,
-looked troubled, glanced at Igraine, thinking he had hurt
-the girl&rsquo;s heart with his words. Igraine&rsquo;s face startled him
-as if the visage of death had risen up suddenly amid the
-flowers. He stood mute before her watching her starved
-lips, her drawn face, her eyes that stared beyond him with a
-kind of cold frenzy.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was like the wild cry of a woman over her dead love.
-The sound struck Pelleas with a vague sense of stupendous
-woe, a dim prophecy of evil like the noise of autumn in
-the woods. Before he could gather words, Igraine had
-turned and run from him as in great fear, skirting the pool
-and holding for the black yawn of the forest aisles. Pelleas
-started to follow her in a daze of wonder. Was the girl
-mad? Had love turned her brain? What was there hid
-in her heart that made her wing from him like a dove from
-a hawk?</p>
-
-<p>By the trees Igraine slackened and turned breathless on
-the man as he came towards her through the long grass.
-Her eyes were dim and frightened, her lips twitching, and
-there was a bleak hunted look upon her face that made her
-seem white and old. Pelleas&rsquo;s blood ran cold in him like
-water; a vague dread sapped his manhood; he stared at
-Igraine and was speechless.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The girl put her arm before her eyes and shook as she
-stood. Pelleas fell on his knees with a cry, and reached
-for her hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine, Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She snatched her arm away and would not look at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, what is this, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t touch me; I am Gorlois&rsquo;s wife!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A vast silence seemed to fall sudden on the world. It
-might have been dead of night in winter, with deep snow
-upon the ground and no wind stirring in the forest. To
-Igraine, swaying in an agony with her arm over her face,
-the silence came like the hush that might fall on heaven
-before the damning of a lost soul to hell. She wondered
-what was in Pelleas&rsquo;s heart, and dared not look at him or
-meet his eyes. God in heaven! would the man never
-speak; would the silence crawl on into an eternity!</p>
-
-<p>At last she did look, and nearly fell at the wrench of
-it. Pelleas was standing near her looking at her with his
-great solemn eyes as though she had given him his death.
-His face seemed to have gone grey and haggard in a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois&rsquo;s wife!&rdquo; was all he said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine hung her head, shivered, and said nothing.
-Pelleas never stirred; he seemed like so much stone, a mere
-pillar of granite misery. Igraine could have writhed at his
-feet and caught him by the knees only to melt for a
-moment that white calm on his face that looked like the
-mask of death.</p>
-
-<p>A voice that was almost strange to her startled her out
-of her stupor of despair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How long have you been wed, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Nine months, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man seemed to be struggling with himself as
-though he strove after the truth, yet could not confront it
-for all his strength. When he spoke his voice was like the
-voice of a man winded by hard running. He appeared to
-urge himself forward, to goad his courage to a task that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-dreaded. There was great anguish on his face as he looked
-into the girl&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must speak what I know, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words seemed slow with effort. Igraine watched
-him in silence, full of a vague dread.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois has spoken to me of his wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Say on, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The truth&mdash;tell me the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She was almost clamorous. Pelleas plunged on.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois told me how his wife was faithless to him, how
-she had fled with Brastias, the knight who had ward over
-her at Caerleon. I never knew her name until this hour.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words might have fallen like the strokes of a lash.
-Igraine stood and stared at the man, her open mouth a
-black circle, her eyes expressionless for the moment, like
-the eyes of one smitten blind. The full meaning of the
-words numbed her and hindered her understanding. A
-babel of shame sounded in her ears. The sinister intent of
-the man&rsquo;s accusation rose gradual before her reason like the
-distorted image of a dream. She felt cold to the core; a
-strange terror possessed her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, what have you said to me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was a mere whisper. Pelleas hung his head
-and said never a word. His silence seemed to fling sudden
-fire into Igraine&rsquo;s eyes, and her face flamed like a sunset.
-It might have been Gorlois who stood and challenged the
-honour of her soul.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Man, tell me what is in your heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was shrill&mdash;even imperious. Pelleas hung
-his head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois keeps poison for his wife,&rdquo; were his words.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s lips curled.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A sword for Brastias.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Generous man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas was watching her as a prisoner watches a judge.
-He had a great yearning to believe. Fear, anguish, anger,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-were in Igraine&rsquo;s heart, but she showed none of the three
-as she stood forward and looked into the man&rsquo;s eyes with a
-steadfastness no honour could gainsay.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Girl!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Look into my eyes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He did so without flinching. Igraine took his sword
-and gave it naked into his hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Listen! Gorlois told you a lie.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Do you believe me, Pelleas? If not, strike with the
-sword, for I will live no longer.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man gave a sudden cry, like one who leaps over a
-precipice, threw the sword far away into the grass, and
-falling on his knees, buried his face in his hands.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>XII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Igraine stood and watched Pelleas as he knelt in the grass
-at her feet with his face hidden from her by his hands. She
-saw the curve of his strong neck, the sweep of his great
-shoulders. She even counted the steel plates in his shoulder
-pieces, and marked the tinge of grey in his coronal of hair.</p>
-
-<p>Calm had come upon her with the trust won by the
-confessional of the sword. She felt sure of the man in her
-heart, and eased of a double burden since she had told him
-the truth and brought him to a declaration of his faith.
-She knew well from instinct that her honour stood sure in
-Pelleas&rsquo;s heart.</p>
-
-<p>Going to him, she bent and touched his head with her
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas,&rdquo; she said very softly.</p>
-
-<p>The man groaned and would not look at her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mea culpa, mea culpa!&rdquo; was his cry.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine smiled like a young mother as she put his hands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-from his face with a gradual insistence. It was right that
-he should kneel to her, but it was also right that she should
-forgive and forget like a woman. Yet as she stood and
-held his hands in hers, Pelleas hung his head and would not
-so much as look into her face. He was convicted in his
-own heart, and contrite according to the deep measure of
-his manhood.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine touched his hair softly with her fingers, and there
-was a great light in her eyes as she bent over him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Come, Pelleas, and sit by me under the trees, and I will
-tell you the whole tale.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Never had she seemed so stately or so superb in Pelleas&rsquo;s
-eyes as she stood before him that morning, strong and
-sorrowful with the burden of her past. He knelt and
-looked up at her, knowing himself pardoned, humbled to
-see love in the ascendent so soon upon her face as she
-looked down at him from her golden aureole of hair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am forgiven?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have shamed me; I am a broken man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He rose up half wearily and stood looking at her as
-though some mysterious influence had parted them suddenly
-asunder. So expressive were his eyes, that Igraine read a
-distant anguish in them on the instant, and fathomed his
-thoughts, to the troubling of her own heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Look not so,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;as though a gulf lay deep
-between us here.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How else should I look at you, Igraine, when you are
-wife to Gorlois?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never in my soul.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How can that help us?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine winced at the words and took refuge in silence.
-She went and seated herself at the foot of a gnarled oak.
-Pelleas followed her and lay down more than a sword&rsquo;s
-length away, leaving a stretch of green turf between, a
-thing insignificant in itself, yet full of meaning to the girl&rsquo;s
-instinctive watchfulness. The man&rsquo;s face too was turned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-from her towards the valley, and she could only see the
-curve of his cheek and chin as she began to speak to him of
-that which was in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You know the man Gorlois?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In Winchester Gorlois saw my face and straightway
-pestered me as he had been turned into my shadow. By
-chance he had rendered me service, and from the favour
-casually conferred plucked the right of thrusting his perpetual
-homage upon me. I trusted Gorlois little from the
-beginning, and trusted him less as the weeks went by.
-His eyes frightened me, and his mouth made my soul
-shiver; the more importunate he grew the more I began to
-fear him.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas shifted his sword and said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A day came when the man Gorlois grew tired of
-courtesies, and would be gainsaid no longer. It was in
-Radamanth&rsquo;s garden; we quarrelled, and the man laid hands
-upon me and crushed me against the wall to thieve a kiss.
-In my anger I broke from him and ran into my uncle&rsquo;s
-house. The same night I fled to an abbey, the abbey of
-St. Helena, and left Winchester in my dress at dawn.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine could see the muscles of Pelleas&rsquo;s jaw standing
-out contracted as though his teeth were clenched in an
-access of anger. He was breathing deeply through his
-nostrils, and his hands plucked at the grass with a terse
-snapping sound. These things pleased Igraine, and she
-went on forthwith.</p>
-
-<p>"I left Winchester on foot at dawn and travelled towards
-Sarum, for I heard that Uther the King was there, and
-it was greatly in my mind, sire, to see his face. An old
-merchant friend of Radamanth&rsquo;s overtook me on the road;
-at a ford the horse he had lent me fell and twisted my
-ankle. I was carried to Eudol&rsquo;s house, and lay abed there
-many days, learning little to my comfort that Gorlois had
-ridden out and was hunting me through the countryside.
-Recovered of my strain, and fearful of Gorlois&rsquo;s trackers, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-held on for Sarum through the woods, and lodged the same
-night in a hermitage in a little valley. Here the first piece
-of craft overtook me, for early in the morning outside the
-hermitage I saw a knight ride by on a black horse, bearing
-red harness, and armed at all points like to you."</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas turned his head for the first time and looked at
-her as though with some sudden suspicion of what was to
-follow. Igraine saw something in his dark eyes that made
-her heart hurry. His face was like the face of a man who
-fronts a storm of wind and rain with brows furrowed and
-eyes half-closed. There was much that was threatening in
-his look, a subdued ominous wrath like a storm nursed in
-the bosom of a cloud.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine told the whole quaint tale, how she followed
-Gorlois in faith, how she was led into the forest, bewitched
-there, and made a wife, mesmerised into a false affection for
-the man by Merlin&rsquo;s craft. It was a grim tale, with a clear
-contour of truth, and credible by reason of its very strangeness.
-It was sufficient to manifest to Pelleas how Igraine&rsquo;s
-strong love for him had lost her her liberty and made her
-the victim of a man&rsquo;s lust.</p>
-
-<p>When she had ended the tale Pelleas left the grass at her
-feet and began to pace under the trees like a sentinel on a
-wall. His scabbard clanged occasionally against his greaves.
-Masses of young bracken covered the ground between the
-trees with a rich carpet of green, and his armour shone like
-red wrath under the wreathing arcs of foliage. His face
-was dark and moody with the turmoil of thought, but there
-was no visible agitation upon him; nothing of the aspen,
-more of the unbending oak. Igraine leant against her tree
-and watched him with a curious care, wondering what
-would be the outcome of all this silence. Down in the
-valley the pool glistened, and she could see Garlotte walking
-in the cottage garden. How different was this child&rsquo;s lot
-to hers. With what warm philosophy could she have
-changed Pelleas into a shepherd, and taken the part of
-Garlotte to herself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Presently Pelleas stayed in his stride through the
-bracken, and came and stood before her, looking not
-into her face but beyond her into the deeps of the
-wood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me more, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What more would you hear from me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That which is bitterest of all.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God, must I tell you that!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let us both drink it to the dregs.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s face and neck coloured rich as one of Garlotte&rsquo;s
-red roses, and she seemed to shrink from the man&rsquo;s eyes
-behind the quivering sunlight of her hair. She put her
-hands to her breast and stood in a strain of thought, of
-struggle against the infinite unfitness of the past.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas saw her trouble, and his strong face softened on
-the instant. He had forgotten milder things in his grappling
-of the truth. Igraine&rsquo;s red and troubled look revived
-the finer instincts of his manhood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never trouble, child,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I know enough of
-Gorlois to read the rest.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>But Igraine, as by inspiration, had come by other reasons
-for telling out the whole to the last pang. She was at pains
-to justify herself to Pelleas, nor was she undesirous of inflaming
-him against Gorlois, her lord. She had wit enough
-to grasp the fact that Pelleas&rsquo;s wrath might be roused into
-insurrection against custom and the edicts of the Church.
-A volcanic outburst might throw down the barriers of man
-and leave her at liberty to choose her lot. Moreover, her
-hate of Gorlois, an iconoclastic passion, had crushed the
-reverence of things existing out of her heart. A contemplation
-of her evil fortune had brought her to the conviction
-that she was exiled from the sympathies of men, a spiritual
-bandit driven to compass the instincts of a rebellious soul.
-In her hot impulse for liberty and the justification of her
-faith, she did not halt from making Pelleas feel the full
-malignity of truth. She neither embellished nor emphasised,
-but portrayed incidents simply in their glaring nakedness in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-a fashion that promised to inflame the man to the very top
-of her desire.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s cheeks kindled, and she could not look at the
-man for the words upon her lips. Pelleas&rsquo;s face was like
-the face of man in torture. The woman&rsquo;s words entered
-into him like iron; his wrath whistled like a wind, and the
-very air seemed tainted in his mouth. What a purgatory
-of passion was let loose into the calm precincts of the place!
-This burning vault of blue, was it the same as roofed the
-world of yesterday? The feathery mounts of green dappled
-with amber, and these flowers, had they not changed with
-the noon lust of the sun? There was a rank savour of
-fleshliness over the whole earth, and all life seemed impious,
-passionate, and unclean.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, my God!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s cry shook Igraine from her rage for truth.
-In her confessional she had been carried like a bird with
-the wind. Looking into Pelleas&rsquo;s face she saw that he was
-in torment, and that her words had smitten him in a fashion
-other than she had foreseen. It was not wrath that burnt
-in his eyes, only a deep grieving, a frenzy of shame and
-anguish that seemed to cry out against her soul. A
-sudden stupor made her mute. With a great void in her
-heart she fell down amid the bracken with a sense
-of ignominy and abasement overwhelming her like a
-deluge.</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas stood and shut his eyes to the sun. A red glare
-smote into his brain; love seemed numb in him and his
-blood stagnant. Prayer eluded him like a vapour. Looking
-out again over wood and valley, the golden haze, the
-torpor of the trees mocked him with a lethargy that smiled
-at the impotence of man.</p>
-
-<p>And Igraine! He saw her prone beneath the green mist
-of the fern fronds, lying with her face pillowed on her arms,
-her hair spread like a golden net over the brown wreckage
-of the bygone year. To what a pass had their love come!
-Better, he thought, to have lived a king solitary on a throne<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-than to have wandered into youth again to give and win
-such dolor.</p>
-
-<p>His face was dark as he stood and looked at the woman&rsquo;s
-violet surcoat gleaming low under the bracken. How
-symbolical this attitude seemed of all that had fallen upon
-his heart&mdash;love cast down upon dead leaves! Igraine had
-feared his honour. Pelleas feared for it in another sense as
-he looked at the woman, and felt his pity clamouring for
-life. He could have given his soul to comfort her if no
-shame could have come upon her name thereby. As it was,
-some spiritual hand seemed at his throat stifling aught of
-love that found impulse on his lips. A superhuman sincerity
-chilled him into silence, and held him in bondage to the
-truth.</p>
-
-<p>A face stared up from the bracken, wan, tearless, and
-tragic. The wistfulness of the face made him quail within
-his harness. He knew too well what was in Igraine&rsquo;s heart,
-and the look that questioned him like the look of a wounded
-hare. Her eyes searched his face as though to read her
-doom thereon. There was no whimpering, no noise, no
-passionate rhetoric. A great quiet seemed to take its
-temper from the silence of the woods.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tell me what is in your heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas hung his head; he could not look at her for all
-his courage. She was kneeling in the bracken with her
-hands crossed over her breast and her face turned to his
-with the white wistfulness of a full moon. Pelleas felt death
-in his heart, and he could not speak nor look into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You do not look at me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Great God, would I were blind!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The truth came crying to her like the wild cry of a bird
-taken by a weasel in the woods. A great sobbing shook
-her; she fell down and caught Pelleas by the knees.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, Igraine, I stifle!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t leave me, don&rsquo;t send me away.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What can I say to you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Only look into my eyes again.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas put his fists before his face; the girl felt him
-quiver, and he seemed to twist in an agony like a man
-dangling on a rope. Igraine&rsquo;s hands crept to his shoulders;
-she drew herself by his body as by a pillar till her face met
-his and she lay heavy upon his breast.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Her breath was on his lips, and her hair flooded over his
-hands like golden wine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas, Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words came with a windless whisper.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have pity, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will never leave you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois&rsquo;s wife!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Never, never!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am not his. Pelleas, take me body and soul; take
-me and let me be your wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How can I sin against your soul, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is it sin, then, to love me?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are Gorlois&rsquo;s wife before God.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is no God.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I will have no God but you, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man took his hands from his face and looked into
-Igraine&rsquo;s eyes. A strong shudder passed over him, and he
-seemed like a great ship smitten by a wave, till every fibre
-groaned and quivered in his massive frame.</p>
-
-<p>A green calm covered the valley, and the whole world
-seemed to faint in the golden bosom of the day. Not the
-twitter of a bird broke the vast hush of the forest. The
-sunlit aisles climbed into a shadowland of mysterious silence,
-and an azure quiet hung above the trees. As for Pelleas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-and Igraine, their two lives seemed knotted up with a cord
-of gold. They had mingled breath, and taken the savour
-of each other&rsquo;s souls. Yet for all the glory of the moment
-it was but autumn with them&mdash;a pomp of passion, a red
-splendour dying while it blazed into the grey ruin of a
-winter day.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine read her doom in the man&rsquo;s face. It was the
-face of a martyr, pale, resolute, yet inspired. A dry sob
-died in her throat, and her hands dropped from the man&rsquo;s
-shoulders. Pelleas stood back and looked at her with a
-warm light in his dark eyes, the green woods rising behind
-him like a bank of clouds.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She nodded, felt miserable, and said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I cannot love you easily.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s eyes stared at him with a mute bitterness. She
-was a woman, and thought like a woman; mere saintly
-philosophy was beyond her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are too good a man, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I would hold my love in my heart like a great pearl in
-a casket of gold.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What comfort is there in mere splendid misery, and in
-such words?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How should I love you best?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Pelleas, ask your own heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man was an impossible being for mere mortal argument.
-He seemed to bear spiritual pinions that tantalised
-the intelligence of the heart. Igraine felt herself adrift and
-beaten, and she was hopeless of him to the core.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Think you I shall be a saint, Pelleas,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;when
-you have given me back to myself?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall pray for you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And for a devil!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She gave a shrill laugh, and twined her hair about her
-wrist.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, Pelleas! you know not what you do.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Too well, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are too strong for me, and yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;I
-should not have loved you so well if you had not been
-strong.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That is how I think of you, Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You love me more by leaving me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I love you more by keeping you pure before my
-soul.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A great calm had come upon Igraine. She was very pale
-and firm about the lips, and her eyes were staunch as steel.
-Her voice was as clear and level as though she spoke of
-trivial things.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall not go back to Gorlois,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Beware of the man.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Doubtless you would speak to me of a convent.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas fell into thought, with his dark eyes fixed upon
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As a novice.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine almost smiled at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And not a nun?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>For answer he spoke three simple words.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois might die.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The stillness of the woods seemed like the hush of a
-listening multitude. A blue haze of heat hung over the
-rolling domes of the western trees, and never a wind-wave
-stirred the long grass. Mountainous clouds sailed radiant
-over ridge and spur, and it might have been Elysium where
-souls wandered through meads of asphodel.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine looked long over the valley with its stately trees,
-its flowering grass and quiet pool in the meadows. She
-was vastly calm, though her eyes were full of a woe that
-seemed to well up like water out of her soul. She still
-twisted and untwisted a strand of her hair about her wrist,
-but for all else she was as quiet as one of the trees that
-stood near and overshadowed her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>The man came two steps nearer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go quickly.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Man, man, how long will you torture me? I am only
-a little strong.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The calm of tragedy seemed to dissolve away on the
-instant. Pelleas thrust his hands into the air like a swimmer
-sinking to his death. His heart answered Igraine&rsquo;s
-exceeding bitter cry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Would we had never come to this!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I cannot say that, though my heart breaks.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Pelleas fell down and clasped her with his arms about
-the knees. His face was hidden in the folds of her surcoat.
-Presently he loosed his hold, looked up, took a ring
-from his hand and thrust it into her palm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The signet of a king,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;keep it for need,
-Igraine. Have you money?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have money, Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God guard you!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was white to the lips, but she never wavered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Heaven keep you!&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was hoarse in her throat, and she began to
-shiver as though chilled by a sleety wind.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go quickly, Pelleas; for God&rsquo;s sake hide your face
-from me!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is death; it is death!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He sprang up and left her without a look. Igraine saw
-him go through the long grass with his hand over his eyes,
-staggering like one sword-smitten to the brain. He never
-stared back at her, but held straight for the cottage and the
-cedar tree where his black horse was tethered under the
-shade. She watched him mount and gallop for the forest,
-nor did she move till his red harness had died into the gloom
-of the trees.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>XIII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Down through the woods that morning rode Gorlois on his
-great white horse, with helmet clanging at saddle-bow, shield<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-hung at his left shoulder, spear trailing under the trees. He
-was hot, thirsty, and in a most evil temper. His bronzed
-face glistened with sweat, and the chequered webs of light
-flickering through the leaves flashed fitfully upon his golden
-harness. Since dawn he had ridden the hills in the glare of
-the sun till his armour blazed like an oven; it was June
-weather, and hot at that; his tongue felt like wood rubbing
-against leather; it was a damnable month for bearing
-harness.</p>
-
-<p>Casting about over the hills he had come upon Garlotte&rsquo;s
-valley, and seeing it green and shadowy, had plunged down
-to profit by the shade. Since the Red Knight was lost to
-him, it was immaterial whether he rode by wood or hill.
-On this account, too, Gorlois&rsquo;s temper was as hot as his skin.
-He hated a baulking above all things; he was moved to be
-furious with trifles, and like the savage who gnashes at the
-stone that bruises his foot, he cursed creation and felt
-thoroughly at war with the world. A grim unreason had
-possession of him, such a mood as makes murder a mere
-impulse of the hand, and malice the prime instinct of the
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>As he rode with loose rein the trees thinned suddenly,
-and the forest gloom rolled back over his head. Gorlois
-halted mechanically under the wooelshawe, and scanned the
-valley spread before him under the brown hollow of his hand.
-He had expected no such open land in this waste of wood&mdash;open
-land with water, a cottage, sheep feeding, and horses
-tethered under the trees. One of the horses tethered there
-was a black. The coincidence livened Gorlois&rsquo;s torpid,
-sunburnt face with a cool gleam of intelligence. He sat
-motionless in the saddle and took the length and breadth of
-the valley under the keen ken of his black eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The man swore a little oath into his peaked black beard.
-His face grew suddenly rapacious as he stared out under
-the hollow of his hand. He had seen a streak of red strike
-through the green wall far up the eastern slope that fronted
-him, a scrap of colour metallic with the hint of armour.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-It went to and fro under the distant trees like a torch
-past the windows of a church. Gorlois&rsquo;s hand tightened
-on the bridle. He watched the thing as a hawk watches a
-young rabbit in the grass.</p>
-
-<p>Betimes he gave a queer little chuckle, and turned his
-horse into the deeper shade of the trees. He began to make
-a circuit round the valley, holding northwards to compass
-the meadows. He cast long, wary glances into the wood as
-he went; tried his sword to see that it was loose in the
-scabbard; took his helmet from the saddle-bow, and let down
-the cheek-pieces from the crown. Before long he kicked his
-stirrups away, rolled out of the saddle, and tied his horse
-to an oak sapling in a little dell. Going silently on foot
-over the mossy grass, stopping often to stare into the sunny
-vistas of the forest, moving more or less from tree to tree,
-he worked his way southwards along the eastern slope.
-Streaks of meadowland and the glint of water showed below
-him, and he heard the bleat of sheep far away, and the
-tinkling of a bell.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the murmur of voices came to him through the
-woods. He ventured on another fifty paces, then stopped
-behind a tree to listen. There were two voices, he was
-sure of that: one was a woman&rsquo;s, and the other had the
-sonorous vibration of a man&rsquo;s bass. Gorlois&rsquo;s eyes took a
-queer, far-away look, and his strong teeth showed between
-his lips.</p>
-
-<p>He worked his way on through the trees with the
-cautious and deliberate instinct of a hunter. The two
-voices gained in timbre, character, and expression. Their
-talk was no jays&rsquo; chatter; Gorlois could tell that from the
-emphasis of sound, and a certain dramatic melody that ran
-through the whole. Soon the voices were very near.
-Going on his belly, with his sword held in his left hand, he
-crawled like a gilt dragon through a forest of springing
-fern. He crawled on till he was quite near the two who
-stood and talked under the trees. Lying flat, never venturing
-to lift his head, he crouched, breathing hard through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-his nostrils and holding his scabbarded sword crosswise
-beneath his chin.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s face, scarred and drawn as it was, seemed as he
-listened a clear mirror for the portrayal of human passion.
-His black moustachios twitched above his angular jaw; his
-eyes took a rapacious and glazed look, and a shadow seemed
-to cover his face. He turned and twisted as he lay, and
-dug the points of his iron-shod shoes into the soft ground as
-though in the crisis of some pain. It was the woman&rsquo;s
-voice that did all this for him. Every word seemed like the
-wrench of a hook in his flesh, as he cursed and twisted
-under the bracken.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he lay still again, as though to listen the
-better. He could hear something of what was said to the
-man in the red harness, but the main drift of their talk was
-beyond him. Pelleas! Pelleas! He squirmed like a crushed
-snake at each sounding of the name. The bracken hardly
-swayed as he crawled on some twenty paces and again lay
-still, with his cheek resting upon the scabbard of his sword.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois might die.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois heard the words as plainly as though they had
-been spoken into his ear. A vast silence hung like thunder
-over the forest. Gorlois lay as though stunned with a
-stone, his dry mouth pressed to the cold steel of the sword.
-His eyes took a stubborn stare under the sweep of his
-casque. With gradual labour he raised himself upon
-his elbows, drew his knees up under his body, and lifted
-his head slowly above the sweep of green.</p>
-
-<p>The ground fell away slightly from where Gorlois knelt
-in the bracken, and he could look down on the two who
-stood under the trees, while the fern fronds hid his harness.
-He saw a woman in violet and gold, her hair falling straight
-on either side of her face, and her arms folded crosswise
-over her breast. He saw also the knight in red harness,
-with his locked hands twisting above his head as in an agony,
-while his face was hidden by his arm. A passionate whisper
-of words passed between the two. Even when Gorlois
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>watched, the man in the red harness jerked round and fell
-on his knees at the woman&rsquo;s feet. Gorlois suddenly saw
-his face; it was the face of Uther the King.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_329.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>&ldquo;LIFTED HIS HEAD SLOWLY ABOVE THE SWEEP OF GREEN&rdquo;</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Gorlois dropped back under the bracken as though
-smitten through with a sword. He lay there a long while
-with his head upon his arms. A sudden breeze came up
-the valley, sounding through the trees, swaying the green
-fronds above the man&rsquo;s harness, calling a gradual clamour
-from the woods. The overmastering image of the King
-seemed to frown down Gorlois for the moment, and he
-crouched like a dog&mdash;with the courage crushed out of his soul.</p>
-
-<p>Betimes Gorlois&rsquo;s reason revived from the stroke that had
-stunned it for a season. Like Jonah&rsquo;s gourd a quick purpose
-sprang up and shadowed him from the too hasty heat of his
-own passions. He was a virile man, capable of great wrath
-and great resentment. Yet he was no mere firebrand.
-His malice, strangely enough, was one-handed and reached
-out only against the woman. For Uther he conceived a
-superhuman envy, a passion that rose above mere bloody
-expiation by the sword. Gorlois had the wit to remember
-the finer cruelties of a spiritual vengeance, the gain of
-wounding the soul rather than the flesh. His malice was
-a thing fanatical in itself, yet taken from the forge to be
-cooled and tempered like steel.</p>
-
-<p>When he lifted his head again above the bracken, Uther
-had gone, and Igraine stood alone under the trees. She
-stood straight and motionless as some tall flower, her hair
-falling like quiet sunlight, unshaken by a wind. Her great
-beauty leapt out into Gorlois&rsquo;s blood and maddened him.
-As she looked out over the valley, Gorlois, straining his
-neck above the bracken, could see that she watched Uther
-as he went down from her towards the pool. Even to
-Gorlois there was something tragic about the solitary figure
-under the trees, a stiff, grievous look as though woe had
-transformed her into a pillar of stone. To him the affair
-seemed a mere assignation, a hazardous passage of romance.
-Measuring the souls of others by his own morality, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-guessed nothing of the deeper throes that surged through
-the tale like the long moan of a night wind.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois saw Uther and his black horse disappear into the
-opposing bank of woodland. Viciously satisfied, he lay in
-the bracken and watched Igraine, coming by a queer
-pleasure in considering her beauty, and in the knowledge
-that her very life was poised on the point of his sword.
-How little she thought of the man-dragon lying in his
-gilded scales under the green of the feathery fronds. Gorlois
-felt a kind of arrogance of ownership boasting itself in his
-heart. Certainly he held a means more sinister than the
-sword wherewith to perfect his vengeance and to preserve
-his honour. A very purgatory, bolgia upon bolgia, stretched
-out in prospect for the souls of the two who had done him
-this great evil. Gorlois made much of it, with a joy that
-was hard and durable as iron.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stirred at last from her stupor of immobility.
-Walking unsteadily, as though faint in the heat, she passed
-out from the trees with their mingling of sun and shadow,
-and went down through the long grass towards the pool
-and the cottage. Gorlois knelt in the bracken, and watched
-her with a smile. There was little chance of her escaping,
-and he could be as deliberate as he pleased over the matter.
-He inferred with reason that the cottage served her as a
-lodging in this woodland solitude, where she lay hid from
-all the world save from Uther, whose courtezan she was.
-Gorlois laughed&mdash;a keen, biting laugh&mdash;at the thought of it
-all. At least he would go back for his horse and spear, and
-make a fitting entry before the woman who was his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, walking as though in her sleep, came into the
-cottage, and almost fell into Garlotte&rsquo;s arms. The girl
-looked frightened, and very white about the lips. She
-could find nothing in her heart to say to Igraine; she
-helped her to the bed, and ran to the cupboard to get wine.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Drink it,&rdquo; she said, the cup rocking to and fro in her
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine did her best, but spilt much of the stuff upon her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-bosom, where it made a stain like blood. She sat on the
-edge of the bed, and looked into the distance with expressionless
-eyes. Her hands were very cold. Garlotte chafed
-them between her own, murmured a word or two, but
-could not bring herself to look into Igraine&rsquo;s face. From
-the valley the bleating of sheep came up with a sudden
-wind, and the red roses flung their faces across the latticed
-casement.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine was looking through the window into the deep
-green of the woods. She could see the place where Pelleas
-had left her, even the tree under which she had stood when
-she had pleaded with him without avail. How utterly quiet
-everything seemed. Surely June was an evil month for her;
-had it not brought double misery&mdash;and well-nigh broken her
-heart? And the end of it all was that she was to go back to
-a convent, to grey walls, vigils, and the sounding of a bell.
-Even that was better than being Gorlois&rsquo;s wife.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, as she sat and stared out of the casement, her
-body grew tense and eager as a bent bow. Her eyes hardened,
-lost their dreamy look; the hands that had rested in
-Garlotte&rsquo;s gripped the girl&rsquo;s wrists with a force that made
-her wince.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Saddle the horse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The words came in a hard whisper. Garlotte stared at
-her, and did not stir.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Child, never question me; be quick, on your life.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, a different woman in a moment, had started up
-and taken her shield and helmet from the wall. Her sword
-was girded to her. Quick as thought, she gathered up her
-trailing hair, thrust on the casque, strapped it to the neck-plate
-under her surcoat. Garlotte, vastly puzzled, but inspired
-by Igraine&rsquo;s earnestness, had hurried out with saddle
-and bridle over her shoulder. As she ran through the garden,
-she looked up to the woods and saw the reason of
-Igraine&rsquo;s flurry. A knight had come out from the forest on
-a white horse, his armour flashing and blazing in the noonday
-sun. He had halted motionless at the edge of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
-woodland, as though to mark what was passing beneath
-him in the valley.</p>
-
-<p>Garlotte found Igraine armed beside her, as she stood by
-the grey horse under the cedar, and tugged with trembling
-fingers at the saddle straps. Bit and bridle were quickly in
-place. Igraine, moved by a hurried tenderness, gripped
-Garlotte to her with both arms.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God guard you, little sister.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Where are you going, Igraine?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God knows!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who is yonder knight?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois, my husband.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine climbed into the saddle from the girl&rsquo;s knee. She
-dashed in the spurs and went at a gallop over the meadows
-towards the south. Gorlois&rsquo;s white horse was coming at
-full stride through the feathery grass. The man was riding
-crosswise over the valley, bent on cutting off Igraine from
-the southern stretch of meadows, and driving her back upon
-the woods. It was Igraine&rsquo;s hope to overtake Pelleas, and
-to put herself behind the barrier of his shield. Gorlois,
-guessing her desire, drove home the spurs, and hunted her
-in earnest.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine headed the man and won a lead in the first half
-mile. Her grey horse plunged like a galley in a rough sea,
-and she held to the pommel of her saddle to keep her seat.
-Gorlois thundered at full gallop in her wake, the long grass
-flying before his horse&rsquo;s hoofs like foam. He had thrown
-away his spear, and his eyes were set in a long stare on the
-galloping horse ahead. The zest of the chase had hold of
-him, and he used the spurs with heavy heel.</p>
-
-<p>The green woods rolled down on them as the valley
-narrowed to its southern end. Igraine had never wandered
-so far from Garlotte&rsquo;s cottage, and the ground was strange
-to her, nor did she know how the country promised. Riding
-at full gallop, she saw with a shudder of fear a barrier of
-rock running serrate across her path and closing the narrow
-valley like a wall. Gorlois saw it too, and sent up a shout<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-that made Igraine&rsquo;s hate flame up into a kind of rapture.
-To have turned right or left up the steep grass slope towards
-the woods, would have given back to Gorlois the little start
-she had of him. With a numb chill at her heart she
-abandoned all hope of Pelleas, and turned to face the inevitable,
-and Gorlois her lord.</p>
-
-<p>The man came up like a wind through the grass, and
-drew rein roughly some ten paces away. He laughed as he
-stared at Igraine, an uncouth, angering laugh like the yapping
-of a dog. He looked big and burly in the saddle, and the
-muscles stood out in his neck as he tilted his square jaw and
-stared down at his wife. Igraine had not looked upon his
-face since he had been smitten in battle. Its ugliness
-seemed to match his soul.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois lifted up his voice and mocked her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ha, my brave, you are trapped, are you? Mother of
-God, but you make a good figure of a man. These many
-months I have missed you, wife in arms. And you have
-served in the pay of my lord the King. Good service and
-good pay, I warrant, and plenty of plunder. I will have
-that harness of yours hung over my bed.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine suffered him not so much as a word. She was
-furious, and in no mood to be scoffed down and cowed by
-mere insolent strength. She looked into Gorlois&rsquo;s libidinous
-face from behind the vizor of her helmet, and thought her
-thoughts. Gorlois ran on in his mocking fashion. His
-bronzed face gleamed with sweat, and a rough lascivious
-smile showed up his strong white teeth to her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ha, now, madame! deliver, and let us have sight of
-you. The King loves your lips, eh! They are red, and
-your arms are soft. I warrant he found your bosom a good
-pillow. Uther was ever such a solemn soul, such a monk,
-such a father. It is good for the heart to hear of him
-knotted up in a woman&rsquo;s hair.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Igraine shook with the immensity of her hate.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You were ever a foul-tongued hound,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Am I your echo?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wish you were dead.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So said the King.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So you spied on us?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois set up a scoffing laugh, showing his red throat
-like a hungry bird.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And saw my wife the King&rsquo;s courtezan; ha, what a jest!
-Come, madame, let us be going; your honest home waits
-for you. I will chatter to you of moralities by the way.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He had hardly delivered himself of the saying, when
-Igraine&rsquo;s hand clutched at the handle of her sword. She
-jerked the spurs in with her heels. Her grey horse started
-forward like a bolt; blundered into Gorlois; caught him
-cross-counter, and rolled his white stallion down into the
-grass. Igraine had lashed out at the shock. Her sword
-caught Gorlois&rsquo;s arm, and cut through sleeve and arm-guard
-to the bone. As he rolled with his horse in the grass, she
-wheeled round, and clapping in the spurs, rode hard uphill
-for the forest.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois, hot as a furnace, scrambled to his feet, and
-dragged his horse up by the bridle. Half off the saddle, with
-empty stirrups dangling, he went at a canter for the yawn
-of the wood. His slashed arm burnt as though it had been
-touched with a branding-iron; blood dripped down upon his
-horse&rsquo;s white shoulder. He was soon steady in the saddle
-and galloping full pelt after Igraine, the ground slipping
-under his horse&rsquo;s hoofs like water, the long grass flying like
-spray.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s horse lost ground up the slope; he had less
-heart than Gorlois&rsquo;s beast, and was weaker in the haunches.
-By the time they reached the trees, Igraine had twenty
-yards to her credit and no more. She saw her chance gone,
-and heard Gorlois close in her wake, caught sideways a
-glimpse of plunging hoofs and angry harness. Drawing
-aside suddenly with all her strength, she let Gorlois sweep
-up on her flank and pass her by some yards. Before he
-could turn, she rode into him as fast as she could gather;
-her sword clattered on his helmet,&mdash;sparks flew.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Gorlois wrenched round and put his shield above his
-head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By God,&mdash;hold off,&mdash;would you have me fight a
-woman?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A swinging cut rattled on his shoulder-plate for answer.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois rapped out an oath and drew his sword.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hold off!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>His roar seemed to shake the trees. To Igraine it was
-the mere meaningless threatening of a sea. She struck
-home again and again while Gorlois foined with her; more
-than once she reached his flesh.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s grim patience gave way at last; a clean cut
-drew spurting blood from his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God curse you!&mdash;take it then.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He swung his sword with a great downward sweep, a
-streak of steel that struck crackling fire from the burnished
-casque. Igraine&rsquo;s arm dropped like a broken bough; for
-half a breath she sat straight in the saddle, swayed, sank
-slantwise, and slid down into the long grass. Her horse
-stood still at her side, looking at her with mild blue
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois gave a queer short laugh. He looked frightened
-for the moment; the flush of anger had passed and left him
-pale. He dismounted, bent over Igraine, unstrapped her
-helmet. She was only dazed by the blow; blood trickled
-red amid her hair, and her blue eyes stared him in the
-face.</p>
-
-<p>She lifted up a hand with a bitter cry of defiance.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Strike, strike, and make an end.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s grimness came back, and his eyes hardened.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That were too good for you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Devil!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By God, I shall tame you&mdash;never fear!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>BOOK IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3">TINTAGEL</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a><br /><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>I</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The castle of Tintagel stood out above the sea on a headland
-that rose bluffly above the white foam that girdled it. The
-waves swinging in from the west seemed to lift ever a hoarse
-chant about the place with their perpetual grumbling against
-the cliff. Colour shifted upon the bosom of the sea. Blue,
-green, and grey it would sweep into the west, netted gold
-with the sun, banded with foam, or spread with purple
-beneath the drifting shadow of a cloud. Hills rose in the
-east. Between these crags and the sea rolled a wilderness
-cloven by green valleys and a casual stream. Tintagel
-seemed to crown a region grand and calamitous as the sea
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was going down over the waters, watched by a
-flaxen-haired lad squatting on the wall of an outstanding
-turret. His legs dangled over the battlements, and his heels
-smote against the weathered stone. There was a premature
-look of age upon his face, a certain wistful wisdom as though
-he had completed his novitiate early in the world. His
-blue eyes, large and sensitive as a dog&rsquo;s, stared away over the
-golden edge of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>This was Jehan the bastard, a pathetic shred of humanity,
-thin and motherless, blessed with nothing save a dreamy
-nature that stood him in poor stead in such a hold as
-Tintagel. Like any mongrel owned of none, he was given
-over largely to the cuffs and curses of the community. Men
-called him a fool, and treated him accordingly. He was
-scullion, horse-boy, pot-bearer, by turns. The men of the
-garrison could make nothing of a lad who wept at a word,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-never showed fight, but crept away to mope and snivel in a
-corner. He had earned epithets enough, but little else; and
-the rude Philistines of the place, beings of beer and bone,
-knew little of those finer instincts with which Nature chooses
-on occasion to endow a soul.</p>
-
-<p>At times Jehan would creep away up this turret stair to
-live and breathe for a season with no friend save the ever-complaining
-sea. He would perch himself on the battlements
-with the salt wind blowing through his hair, the rocks
-beneath him boiling foam from the waves that swept in from
-the west. The perch was perilous enough, but the lad had
-no fear of the windy height, or of the waves breaking against
-the pediment of the cliff. To him man alone was terrible.
-There appeared to be a confident understanding between
-Nature and himself, a sense of good fellowship with his
-surroundings, such as the chamois may feel for its mountain
-pinnacle, and the bird for the tree that bears its nest.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan&rsquo;s thin face was turned often towards the central
-tower of the castle, a square campanile that stood in the
-centre of the main court, forming a species of citadel or keep.
-High up in the wall there was a window, a streak of gloom
-that showed nothing of the room within. Over Jehan this
-window possessed a peculiar influence. It was the casement-royal
-of romance. Day by day, ever since Gorlois had come
-south again, the lad had watched for the white oval of a face
-that would look out momentarily from the shadow. Sometimes
-he saw a woman&rsquo;s hand, a golden head glimmering in
-the sun. Jehan had seen Gorlois&rsquo;s wife brought a second
-time into Tintagel. Her staring grief had taken strange
-hold upon his heart. Ever since, with the kindled chivalry
-of a boy, he had done great deeds in dreams, handled a sword,
-taken strong men by the throat. The imagined event had
-fired the soul in him, and made him the disciple of these sad
-and wistful eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A bell smote in the court below. Its iron clapper dinned
-the fancies out of Jehan&rsquo;s head, calling him to the menial
-realities of life. It was the supper hour, and the men of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-guard would be strenuously inclined over the steaming pot,
-the wine-jar, and the twisting spit. Jehan left his turret
-with the pathetic cynicism of an autumn twilight. Little
-drudge that he was, he yet had the inward independence to
-despise the folk who fed like swine, and terrorised him with
-pure blatant barbarism. He could listen to their blasphemy,
-their ribald songs, and breathe the moral garlic of their
-tongues with a disrelish that never wavered. He had none
-of the innate impudence of youth. Had he been of coarser
-fibre the men would soon have made a lewd and insolent imp
-of him, but he was spared such a fate by a certain spiritual
-instinct that recoiled from the vapouring brutality of it all.</p>
-
-<p>There seemed more ribaldry abroad in the guard-room
-that night than was customary even in so pious a place.
-The company, much like a pack of hounds, hunted jest after
-jest from cover, and gave tongue royally with a zest that
-would have been admirable in any other cause. Lamps
-swirled ill-smelling smoke about the room. There was a
-lavish scattering of armour along the benches, and the floor
-was dirtier than the floor of any tavern.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan&rsquo;s ears tingled as he went among the men, climbing
-over sprawling legs, edging between stools and benches.
-The air reeked of mead, and the miasma of loose talk rising
-from twenty throats. A woman&rsquo;s name was tossed from
-tongue to tongue, bandied about with a familiar insolence
-that made him blush for her like a brother. His heart burnt
-with the bestial impudence, the sweat, the foul breath of it
-all. Yet before these red-bearded faces, these vociferous
-mouths, he was a coward, hating himself for his fear, hating
-the men for the sheer tyranny of the flesh that awed him.</p>
-
-<p>To hear in this den such things spoken of a woman, and
-of such a woman! That she was true his quick instinct
-could aver in the very maw of the world. There was the
-silver calm of the full moon in her face, and she had for him
-the steadfastness, the incomprehensible eloquence, of the
-stars. Were these men blind, that the staring grief, the
-divine scorn, that had smitten him from the first with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-vague awe, were invisible to them? Their coarse cynicism
-was brutally incomprehensible to Jehan. Having a soul, he
-could not see with the eyes of the sot or the adulterer, nor
-had he learnt to mistrust the intelligence of his own heart.</p>
-
-<p>As he laboured from man to man with his jug of mead
-to keep the brown horns brimming, he thought of the
-golden head that had glimmered in the criss-cross light of
-the yews in the castle garden. The woman had been faithless,
-to put popular report mildly; and Gorlois was a hard
-man; he would see her dead before he pitied her. Jehan
-was so far gone in dreams for the moment that he tripped
-over an outstretched pair of legs, and shattered his stone jar
-on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>A &ldquo;God curse you,&rdquo; and lavish largesse in the way of
-kicks, recompensed the dreamer for this contempt of office.
-Jehan, bruised, spattered with mead, crawled away under the
-benches, and took refuge in a dark corner, where he could
-recover his wits behind the piled pikes of the gentlemen who
-cursed him. Such incidents were the trivialities of a menial
-existence. Jehan wiped his face on his sleeve, choked down
-his sobs with a dirty fist, and devoutly hoped to be forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile a broad figure had stood framed in the doorway,
-and drawn the attention of the company from the boy
-squirming like an eel along the floor. Jehan, peeping round
-the pile of pikes, saw a woman in a scarlet gown standing
-under a lamp that flared on the threshold. The woman was
-of unusual girth and height. Her black hair streamed about
-her sensual red face like clouds about a winter sun. Her
-neck was like the neck of a bull, and her bare arms would
-have shamed the arms of a smith. Jehan watched her as he
-would have watched a natural enemy, a thing whose destiny
-was to be brutish and to destroy.</p>
-
-<p>Men called her Malmain, the evil-handed. She was a
-cub of the forest, strong as a bear, cruel as any wolf. Years
-ago she had been caught as a child in the woods, tracked
-down to a rocky hole, a whelp that clawed and bit, and knew
-nothing of the speech of men. She had been brought to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-Tintagel and bred in the place, the pet of the soldiery, who
-had taught her the use of arms and the smack of wine. In
-ten years she had grown to her full strength, a creature wise
-in all the uncomely things of life, coarse, bold, and violent.
-Last of all, Gorlois, with a genius for vengeance, had given
-her charge of Igraine, his wife.</p>
-
-<p>The woman was good to look upon in a large, florid
-fashion. She came in and sat herself down on a stool at the
-end of one long wooden table, and stared round with her hard
-brown eyes. One man passed her a cup, another the wine jar.
-She tossed the former aside with an air of scorn, and buried
-her face in the mouth of the jar. When she had taken her
-pull she spat on the floor with a certain quaint deliberation,
-and wiped her mouth on the back of her bare arm.</p>
-
-<p>A wicked innuendo came from a man grinning at her
-elbow. Malmain laughed and pulled at her lip. Her presence
-conferred no leavening influence upon the place, and
-her sex made no claim for decorum. She was more than
-capable of caring for herself in the company of these gentlemen
-of the guard, for she could take her laugh and liquor
-with the best of them, and claim a solid respect for a fist
-that could smite like a mace.</p>
-
-<p>She flustered up a sigh that ended in a hiccough. &ldquo;I am
-tired,&rdquo; she said, stretching her arms and showing the breadth
-and depth of her great chest.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go to bed, fragile one, and shake the castle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Little chance of that; who says I snore?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gildas the trumpeter.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Curse him; how should he know?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man questioned grinned, and shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I meddle no further,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;How is the lord&rsquo;s
-wife?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Malmain licked her lips and reached for the pot. She
-tilted it with such gusto that the liquor overflowed and ran
-down her chin. After more cat&rsquo;s-pawing and a snivel she
-waxed communicative with a matter-of-fact coarseness, and
-like an old hound soon had the rest tonguing in her track.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois will break her yet,&rdquo; quoth one.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Or bury her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A fit fellow, too,&mdash;and a gentleman; why can&rsquo;t she
-knuckle to him and play the lady?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The woman&rsquo;s worth three of that chit with the white
-face; a fine brat ought to come of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Malmain showed her strong white teeth.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Somehow,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s no more cross-grained
-creature than a woman with a grievance, especially when
-she has been baulked of her man. Let a woman speak for
-a woman, though I break the spirit of her with a whip.
-There&rsquo;s less fighting now; by Jesus, you should see her
-bones staring through her skin.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jehan had listened to their talk behind the pile of pikes
-in the corner. The blatant cynicism of it all chilled him
-like a March wind. He thought of the sad, strong face, the
-patient scorn, the youth, the prophetic May of her of whom
-they spoke. There was a certain terrible realism here that
-tore the tender bosom of his dreams.</p>
-
-<p>The room stifled him with its smoke and stew. Crawling
-round by the wall on all fours, he gained the door and
-crept out unnoticed into the dark. In the sky above the
-stars were shining. The world seemed big with peace, and
-the face of the heavens shone mild and clear as the face of
-God.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan stood under the shadow of the wall and looked
-at the window high up in the tower. It was black and
-lustreless, and only the dust of the stars shone up in the
-vast canopy of gloom. Jehan shook his fist at the dark pile
-of stone. Then he went up to the roof of the little turret
-and watched the sea foaming dimly on the rocks below.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>II</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>&ldquo;I would have you know, madame, that every woman is
-pleasing to man,&mdash;saving his own wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who in turn is pleasing to his friend,&mdash;even if he
-chance to be a king.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The woman on the couch tossed her slipper from her
-small foot, and struck a series of snapping chords from the
-guitar that she held in her bosom. There was a certain
-rich insolence in her look,&mdash;a sensuous wickedness that was
-wholly poetic. The man bent forward from his stool, lifted
-the slipper, and kissed the foot whence it had fallen. He
-won a smile from the face bowered up in cushions, a smile
-like sunlight on a brazen mirror, brilliant, clear, metallic.
-There was a fine flush on her face, and the star on her
-bosom rose and fell as her breathing seemed to quicken and
-deepen for the moment. Her fingers plucked waywardly at
-the strings as she looked out from the window towards the sea.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I love life,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Surely.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The pomp, the pride, the glory of being great. I have
-a future for you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A kind of spiritual echo burnt in the man&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And my wife?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are still something of a madman.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So you say.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;indeed!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He bent forward with a sudden eruption of passion and
-kissed her foot again, till she drew it away under the folds
-of her dress.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah, you are still a little mad,&rdquo; she said, turning and
-smiling at him with her quick eyes; &ldquo;bide so, my dear lord;
-I can suffer it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And yet&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hate her! I hate her! I hate her!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Bah!&mdash;she cannot harm you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I hate her for being a martyr, for being strong, for
-thinking herself a saint. Pah!&mdash;how I could scratch her
-proud, big face. She humiliates me because of her misery,
-because she is contented to suffer. It is impossible to
-trample such a woman underfoot.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The man gave a queer laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are still envious.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I envious,&mdash;I!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Because she is never humbled, never asks mercy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Curse her, let her die! Come and fan me, I am
-sleepy.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>On the southern side of the central tower, between it and
-the State quarters of the castle, lay the garden of Tintagel.
-It was a lustrous nook, barriered by grey walls, sheltered
-from the sea wind, and open to the full stare of the sun.
-Sombre cypresses lifted their spires above flower-beds
-mosaicked red, gold, and blue. The paths were tiled with
-coloured stones, and bordered with helichryse. In the centre
-of all a pool glimmered from a square of bright green
-grass.</p>
-
-<p>The window in the tower that had so seized upon the
-lad Jehan&rsquo;s heart looked out upon this square of colour
-that shone beneath the extreme blue of the summer sky.
-The casement was an open mihrab whence tragedy could
-look out upon the world. The glory of the sea, the sky,
-the cliffs, contrasted with the twilight tint of the prison
-room.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s wife sat in the window-seat and watched the
-waves and the horizon with vacant eyes. She was clad in
-a tattered gown of grey. Her hair had been shorn close,
-leaving but a golden aureole over neck, ears, and forehead.
-One hand was wrapped in a blood-stained cloth, and there
-were marks left by a whip upon her face. Her gown
-reached hardly to her ankles, showing bare feet and wheals,
-where the scourge had been. She was very frail, very worn,
-very spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>Her face was the face of one who looks into the solemn
-sadness of the past. Her lips were pressed together as in
-pain, and a certain divine despair dwelt in her deep eyes
-like light reflected from some twilight pool. The muscles
-stood limned in her neck like cords, and the fingers
-of one hand were hooked in the neck-band of her gown.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Many days had passed since the life in Garlotte&rsquo;s valley.
-They had taught Igraine the deeds that might result from
-the stirring of the passions of such a man as Gorlois. It was
-a strenuous age, and men&rsquo;s souls were cast in large mould
-either to the image of good or evil. Even Boethius could
-not escape the malice of a great king. Attila had scourged
-the nations with a scourge of steel. Old things were passing
-amid disruption and despair. Gorlois had caught the
-Titanic, violent spirit of the age. His personality had won
-a lurid emphasis from tragedies that shook the world.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine had suffered many things, shame, torture, famine,
-since she had fallen again into his power. The man had
-shown no pity, only a fine fecundity in his devices for the
-breaking of her spirit. He could be barbarous as any Hun,
-and though she had guessed his fibre, it was not till these
-latter days that she learnt to know him more fully to her
-own distress. It was not the physical alone that oppressed
-her; Gorlois had imagination, ingenuity; he made her moral
-sufferings keener than the lash, and subordinated the flesh
-to the spirit. Igraine withstood him through it all. She
-felt in her heart that she was going to die.</p>
-
-<p>As she sat at the window, the sound of laughter came
-up suddenly from the garden, glowing in the sunlight.
-Mere mockery might have been its inspiration, so light, so
-merry, and so mellow was it. Igraine heard it, and leant
-forward over the sill to gain a broader view of the tiled
-walks and flower-beds below. She saw a woman dart out
-of a doorway in the wall opposite, and run in very dainty
-fashion, holding her skirts gathered in one hand, the other
-flourishing a posy of red roses. As she ran she laughed with
-an unrestrained extravagance that had in it something
-sensual and alluring.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine watched her with a badge of colour in her cheeks.
-The woman in the garden was clad in a tunic of sky-blue
-silk that ran down her body like flowing water. The tunic
-was cut low at the neck so as to show her white breast,
-whereon shone a little cross of gold. Her hair shimmered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-loose about her in the sunlight like an amber veil. Her
-lips were tinctured with vermilion; her face seemed white
-as apple blossom, and shadows had been painted under her
-lids. She moved with a graceful, sinuous air, her blue gown
-rippling about her, her small feet, slippered with silver
-embroidery, flashing glibly over the stones.</p>
-
-<p>A man was following her among the cypresses, and
-Igraine saw that it was Gorlois, sunburnt and strong, with
-ruddy arms, and the strenuous zest of manhood. There
-was something unpleasing in the muscular movement of his
-mood. He was Græcian and antique, a Mars striding with
-the red face of no godly love; sheer bovine vigour in the
-curves of his strong throat.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine saw the woman run round the garden, laughing
-as she went, her hair blowing behind her in the sunlight.
-She turned up the central path that led to the pool, with its
-little lawn closed by a balustrade of carved stone. Morgan
-la Blanche stood by the water and watched Gorlois abjuring
-the paths and striding towards her, knee-deep in blue and
-purple. He leapt the balustrade, and stood looking at the
-woman laughing at him through her hair.</p>
-
-<p>The red roses were thrust into Gorlois&rsquo;s face as he came
-to closer quarters. There was a short scuffle before the girl
-abandoned herself to him with a kind of sensuous languor.
-Igraine saw her body wrapped up in the man&rsquo;s brown arms.</p>
-
-<p>It was a minute or more before the two became aware
-of the face at the window overhead. Igraine found them
-staring up at her, Gorlois&rsquo;s swarthy face close to the
-woman&rsquo;s light aureole of hair as she stood buttressed against
-his broad chest. By instinct Igraine drew back into the
-room, till pride conquered this shrinking impulse. She
-leant forward upon her hands and stared down at the two,
-allegorical as Truth shaming Falsehood.</p>
-
-<p>The woman, meanwhile, had drawn aside from Gorlois&rsquo;s
-arms. She was pulling the roses to pieces, and scattering
-the red petals on the water, and there was a peevish sneer
-upon her lips.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ever this white death,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine saw the impatient gesturing of Morgan&rsquo;s hands,
-the tap of the embroidered slipper on the grass. The
-woman&rsquo;s words seemed to trouble Gorlois; he stood aside,
-and did not look at her, even when she edged away, watching
-him over her shoulder. It was a conflict of dishonourable
-sensations. Morgan jerked a quick look from her
-large blue eyes at the window overhead. There was
-nothing but rampant egotism upon her face, and it was
-evident that she trusted on Gorlois to follow her. He
-was staring swarthily into the water as though he watched
-the fish moving in the shallow basin. He hardly heeded
-Morgan as she picked up her pride and left him. Other
-thoughts seemed to have strong hold upon his mind, and
-he stood at gaze till the blue gown disappeared under the
-arch of the door it had so lately quitted.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois leant against the balustrade and pulled his
-moustachios. His eyes had no very spiritual look, and his
-red lower lip drooped like an unfurled scroll. More than
-once he cast a quick, restless glance at the window in the
-tower. Irresolution seemed to run largely through his
-mood, and it was some while before he gathered his manhood
-and passed up an avenue of cypresses towards the tower.
-At the foot of the stairway he stood pulling his lip, and
-staring at the stones, oppressed by a certain dubiousness of
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>Climbing the stairs, he found the woman Malmain in an
-alcove, asleep on a settle. Her head had fallen back against
-the wall, her mouth was agape, and she was snoring with
-her black hair tumbled over her face. Gorlois woke her
-with his foot.</p>
-
-<p>The woman started up with the growl of a watch-dog,
-stared, and stood silent. Gorlois, curt as a man burdened
-with a purpose, spoke few words to her. She opened a
-door by a certain, mechanical catch, went in, and closed it
-after her.</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour passed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The door rolled again on its hinges. Malmain came out
-and stood before Gorlois on the threshold. She was breathing
-hard, and sweat stood on her face. Gorlois gave her
-a look and a word, passed in, and slammed the door after
-him. Malmain sat down on the settle, wiped her face, and
-listened.</p>
-
-<p>For a minute or more she heard nothing. An indefinite
-sound broke the silence, like the moving of branches in a
-wind at night. There was the sound of hard breathing,
-and the creaking of wood. Something clattered to the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God judge between you and me.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The voice was half-stifled as with the choking bitterness
-of great shame. Malmain grinned in her corner, and leant
-her head against the door to listen the better.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What of God!&rdquo; said the man&rsquo;s voice with a certain
-hot scorn; &ldquo;what is God?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Take your knife and end it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Madame wife, there is good in you yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was silence again, like a lull betwixt ecstasies of
-rain. Presently the woman&rsquo;s voice was heard, low, sullen,
-shamed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Man&mdash;man, let me die!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Own me master.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&mdash;you! How can I lie in my throat!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is truth so new a thing?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have taught me to love death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Malmain heard Gorlois&rsquo;s hand upon the door. She
-opened it forthwith; he came out upon the threshold.
-His hands were trembling, and his face seemed dull, his
-eyes passionless.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I shall tame you yet,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You can kill me!&rdquo; came the retort from the room.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>III</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was in Tintagel a certain man named Mark, a
-legionary of the guard. The castle had known him two
-months or less, when he had come south into Cornwall
-with Gorlois&rsquo;s troop from Caerleon. He was an olive-skinned
-mercenary, black of beard and black of eye. In
-the guard-room he had become vastly popular; he could
-harp, tell a tale, hurl the bar, with any man in the garrison.
-He was strong and agile as a panther, and as ready with
-his tongue as he was with his sword. His comrades thought
-him a merry rapscallion enough, a good fellow whose life
-was rounded comfortably by the needs of the flesh. He
-could drink and jest, eat, sleep, and be happy.</p>
-
-<p>Women have quick instinct for a man of mettle, one
-whose capabilities for pleasing are somewhat of a perilous
-kind. Malmain of the Forest had taken note of Mark&rsquo;s
-black eyes, his olive skin, the immense self-control that
-seemed to bridle him. He had a fine leg, and a most
-gentlemanly hand. Moreover, his inimitable impudence,
-his supple wit, took her fancy, seeing that he was a man who
-professed a superb scorn for petticoats, and posed as being
-wise beyond his generation. There was a certain insolent
-independence about him that seemed to make of him a
-philosopher, a person pleased with the puerilities of others.</p>
-
-<p>It came about that Malmain&mdash;clumsy, lumbering creature&mdash;took
-to heaving stupendous sighs under the very
-nose of Mark of the guard. She had not been bred to
-reservations. If she liked a man, she told him the truth,
-with a certain admirable frankness. If she hated him, he
-could always rely upon her fist. Any ethical principle was
-like a book to her&mdash;very curious, no doubt, but absolutely
-beyond her understanding.</p>
-
-<p>Now the man Mark was a person of intelligence and
-discretion. He needed the woman&rsquo;s friendship for diplomatic
-reasons snared up in his own long skull, and since<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-such partisanship could be won by a look and a word, he
-soon had Malmain very much at his service. Shrewd and
-cunning wench that she was in the course of nature, she
-was somewhat easily fooled by the man&rsquo;s suave impudence.
-She haunted Mark like a shadow when off her duty,&mdash;a
-very substantial shadow, be it noted,&mdash;and made it extravagantly
-plain that she was blessed after all with some of the
-sentiments of a woman.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, being in the mood, she caught him in a
-bye-passage as he came off guard. He was in armour, and
-carried a spear slanted over his shoulder. His burnished
-casque seemed to give a fine setting to his strong, sallow face.</p>
-
-<p>Malmain, generous creature, filled the passage like a
-gate. Her face matched her scarlet smock, and she was
-grinning like some grotesque head from the antique. Mark
-came to a halt, and leaning on his spear, looked at her in
-the most bland manner possible. He did not trust women
-overmuch, and he mistrusted Malmain in particular. Moreover,
-she smacked of the wine-cask.</p>
-
-<p>The woman edged close, and shook a fist in his face
-with a certain bluff enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A bargain! a bargain!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The passage was open to the west, and a glare of sunlight
-shimmered into Mark&rsquo;s eyes. He could only see the
-woman as a great blur, a mass of trailing hair, a loose,
-exuberant smock haloed with gold.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ha! my cherub, you seem in fettle.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The fist still flickered in his face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A bargain! a bargain!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mother of mercy! you are in such a devil of a
-hurry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A kiss for what&rsquo;s in my hand.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A buffet&mdash;big one&mdash;a rush-ring, or a garter?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;That tongue of yours; look and see, look and see!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Malmain spread her fingers. The man saw a ring of
-gold carved in the form of a dragon, with rubies for eyes,
-and a collar of emeralds about its throat. Lying in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-woman&rsquo;s moist, fat palm, it glimmered in the slant light of
-the sun. Mark&rsquo;s eyes glittered as he looked at it.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I had the thing from the woman above,&rdquo; quoth Malmain,
-jerking her thumb over her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A bribe?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;d bribe me? Not a woman!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Honest soul.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That ring looks well on your finger,&rsquo; said I. &lsquo;I shall
-have it.&rsquo; &lsquo;Never!&rsquo; said she. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s too big a word,&rsquo;
-said I. So I forced it off, for all her temper, and broke
-her finger in the doing of it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A transient shadow seemed to pass across the man&rsquo;s face,
-the wraith of a ghost-wrath insensible to the world.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Close the bargain, cherub.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A buss for it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Twenty kisses in a week, and my mug of supper beer.&rdquo;
-He had the ring.</p>
-
-<p>Malmain did not stand alone in her devotion to Mark of
-the guard. The man had come by another friend in Tintagel,
-a friend without influence, it is true, but one, at least,
-who possessed abundant individuality, and the charm of an
-ingenuous nature. Mark was no mere bravo when he turned
-partisan to the lad Jehan, and took him within the pale of
-his mothering wit. He had a profound knowledge of men,
-and a philosophic insight into character that had not been
-gained solely on the march or in the ale-house. By profession
-he appeared a devil-may-care gentleman of the sword,
-a man of bone and muscle, the possessor of a vigorous
-stomach. These attributes were mere stage properties, so
-to speak, necessary to him for the occasion. For the rest,
-he knew what he knew.</p>
-
-<p>Mark had seen more than cowardice in the sensitive face
-of the lad. He had discovered the soul beneath the surface,
-the warmer, bolder personality behind the deceit of the flesh.
-Jehan appealed to him as a friendless thing, a vial of glass
-jostled in the stream of life by rough potsherds and sounding
-bowls. Mark took the lad in hand and made a disciple of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-him in less than a week. He humoured the lad, encouraged
-him, treated him like a comrade, drew the soul out of his
-limp, starved body. Jehan had never fallen upon such a
-friend before. He was bewitched by the man&rsquo;s personality.
-This Mark with the strong face and the falcon&rsquo;s eye seemed
-to see deep into the finer sentiments of life, to think as he
-thought, to conceive as he conceived. Jehan, unconscious
-little idealist that he was, bubbled over into innumerable
-confidences and confessions of feeling. This dark-eyed
-man, who never laughed at him, whose voice was never
-blatant and threatening, seemed to exert a magnetic influence
-upon his spirit. Jehan throned him a species of demigod,
-and idolised him as he had idolised few living things on
-earth before.</p>
-
-<p>There was more method in Mark&rsquo;s friendship than his
-comrades of the guard ever dreamt of in their thick noddles.
-They had many a laugh at Malmain and many a jest at her
-expense, but their wit never worked beyond vulgar banality.
-As for Jehan, his existence certainly seemed to better itself
-so far as they were concerned, though what the man Mark
-could see worth patronising in the lad, they were at a loss to
-discover. Jehan grew less servile, less diffident, more open
-of countenance. He hided a cook-boy of his own age in a
-casual scuffle. Mark had used a strong arm and a stronger
-wit for him on occasion, and the little bastard was no longer
-cuffed at the random pleasure of every gentleman of Gorlois&rsquo;s
-guard.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan often spoke to Mark of the lady of the tower whose
-hair was like the red-gold cloak of autumn. The man
-seemed ready to hear of her beauty and her distress, and all
-the multitudinous tales concerning her given from the guard-room.
-He kindled to the romantic possibilities of the affair,
-and was as full of sentiment as Jehan himself could wish.
-Saying little at first, he watched the lad with keen, discerning
-eyes, as though tracing out the trend, depth, and sincerity of
-his sympathies; nor was he long ignorant of the strain of
-chivalry that was sounding in the lad&rsquo;s heart. The more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
-generous sentiments leapt out in a look, a word, a colouring
-of the cheek. Given inspiration, it was possible to make a
-fanatic of the boy, a hero in the higher rendering of the
-term.</p>
-
-<p>In due course the man grew more communicative, less
-of a listener. Jehan heard of Avangel, of the island manor
-in Andredswold, of Pelleas, and of the days in Winchester.
-The whole tragedy was spread before him like a legend, some
-mighty passion throe of the past. He listened open-mouthed,
-with blue eyes that searched the man&rsquo;s face. Mark had
-taken to himself of a sudden an air of mystery and peril.
-Jehan knew by intuition that these matters were to be kept
-secret as the grave. Great pride rose in him at being held
-worthy of such trust. He felt even aggrieved when Mark
-spoke to him of discretion, with a finger on his lip. Such a
-secret was like a hoard of gold to the lad. It pleased him
-with a sense of responsibility and of faith, and Jehan loved
-honour, for all his novitiate amid the morals of the guard-room.</p>
-
-<p>He had drunk deep of old songs, and of the heroics of
-the harp. Such things were like moonlight to him, touching
-his soul with a lustre of idyllic truth. He began to
-dream dreams, and to speculate extravagantly as to the things
-that were yet hid from his knowledge. It was borne in upon
-his mind that Mark was this Pelleas in disguise, come to
-save Igraine from Gorlois and the towers of Tintagel. The
-notion took his heart by storm, and his sympathies hovered
-over the woman like so many scarlet-winged moths. He
-desired greatly to speak to Mark of that which was in his
-heart, but feared to seem mischievous and lacking in discretion.</p>
-
-<p>Some three days after Malmain had given Mark the Lady
-Igraine&rsquo;s ring, Gorlois rode hunting with Morgan la Blanche
-and a train of knights and damsels. Half the castle turned
-out to see them sally with their ten couple of hounds in
-leash, and a goodly company of prickers and beaters. Gareth
-the minstrel rode with the company on a white horse and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
-sang to the harp a hunting song, and then a chant d&rsquo;amour.
-Morgan&rsquo;s laugh was as clear as a bell pealing over water as
-she rode at Gorlois&rsquo;s side in the sunlight, her silks and
-samites and gold-green tissues fluttering in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan ran over the bridge to see them go down into the
-valley. The dogs tugged at the thongs, the boar spears
-glittered, the dresses threaded the maze of green as roses
-thread a briar. Jehan climbed a rock, exulting in the life,
-the spirit, the colour of it all. Gareth&rsquo;s strong voice came
-up from the valley as he sang of love and of the fairness of
-women. Jehan envied him his harp and the honour that it
-won him. It was his own hope to sing of the beauty of the
-world, the green ecstasy of spring, of autumn forests flaming
-to the sky, the eternal sorrow of the tortured sea. He came
-by this same desire in later years when he sang to Arthur
-and Guinevere and Launcelot of the Lake in the gardens of
-Caerleon.</p>
-
-<p>A hand plucked him by the heel as he lay curled on the
-rock watching, the cavalcade flickering away into the green.
-Looking down, he saw the strong face of Mark of the guard.
-There was a smile on the man&rsquo;s lips, and to Jehan there
-seemed something prophetic in his eyes. He climbed down
-and stood looking into the other&rsquo;s face, the mute, trusting
-look of a dog.</p>
-
-<p>Mark took him by the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The sea is blue and gold, and the &lsquo;Priest&rsquo;s Pool&rsquo; like
-a violet well.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is time for a swim.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We will watch for a sail from the cliffs.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you will tell me more of Pelleas and Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mark was in a visionary mood; he used his spear as a
-staff and talked little. A sleepy sea bubbled a line of foam
-along the shore. Bleak slopes rolled greenly against an
-azure sky, and landwards crag and woodland stood steeped
-in a mist of sunlight. Jehan, sedulous and reverent, watched
-the passionless calm of thought upon the man&rsquo;s face. His
-eyes were turned constantly towards the sea with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-hope of one waiting for a white sail from the underworld.</p>
-
-<p>When they had gone a mile or more along the cliffs,
-they came to a path leading to a bay whose lunette of sand
-shone red gold above the foam. It was a place of crags and
-headlands, poised sea billows, purple waters pressing from
-the west. Jehan sat on a stone and waited. Mark took his
-cloak and bound it to the staff of his spear. Jehan watched
-him as he stood at his full height like a tall pine on the edge
-of the cliff and lifted his spear at arm&rsquo;s length above his
-head. Seawards, dim and distant like a pearl over the purple
-sea, Jehan saw a sail strike out of the vague west. Mark
-still held the cloak upon his spear. Jehan understood something
-of all this. His mind, packed with plots and subtleties,
-shone with the silvery aureole of romance.</p>
-
-<p>The sail grew against the sky, and a ship loomed gradual
-out of the west. Mark shook the cloak from his spear, and
-climbed down the path that curled from the cliff with Jehan
-at his heels. Below, the waves swirled in amid the rocks
-and ran ripple on ripple up the yellow sand. The whole
-place seemed filled with the hoarse underchant of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>In a narrow part of the track Mark stopped suddenly,
-and stood leaning on his spear. Jehan nearly blundered
-into him, but saved himself by the help of a tuft of grass.
-The man&rsquo;s face was on a level with the lad&rsquo;s, and his eyes
-seemed to look into Jehan&rsquo;s soul.</p>
-
-<p>He pointed to the distant headland, where the towers of
-Tintagel rose against the sky.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Death waits yonder,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For whom?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&mdash;Gorlois&rsquo;s wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jehan looked at him with all his soul. The man was
-no longer the quaint, vapouring soldier, but a being of
-different mould, keen, solemn, even magnificent. Jehan
-felt himself on the verge of romance; the man&rsquo;s face seemed
-to stare down fear.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And Pelleas!&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Art thou not Pelleas?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mark smiled in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your dreams fly too fast,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And yet&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You would see some one play the hero. Who knows
-but that a bastard may save a kingdom.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mark moved on down the path, stopping now and again
-to watch the ship at sea; Jehan followed at his heels. They
-reached the beach, and saw the waves rolling in on them
-from the west, with the white belly of a sail showing over
-the water. Mark made no further tarrying in the matter.
-Standing on a stretch of sand levelled smooth by the water,
-he traced a cross thereon with the point of his spear.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Swear by the cross.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jehan&rsquo;s face was turned to the man&rsquo;s, eager and enquiring.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To whom shall I swear troth?&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To Gorlois&rsquo;s wife.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And to the King.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The King!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jehan crossed himself with great good-will.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By the blood of the Lord Jesu, I swear troth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>They went down close to the waste of waters, and let
-the spume sweep almost to their feet. A vast blue bank of
-clouds mountained the far west; the sea seemed deep in
-colour as an amethyst. Gulls were winging and wailing
-about the cliffs. Tintagel stood out in its strength against
-the sky, and they could see the waves white upon its rocks.</p>
-
-<p>Mark took the ring Malmain had given him from a
-pouch at his belt, and held the gold circle before the lad&rsquo;s
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;From the hand of Gorlois&rsquo;s wife,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;This ring was given her by that Pelleas.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who is Uther Pendragon, the King.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jehan&rsquo;s blue eyes seemed to dilate till they looked strangely
-large in his thin white face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The King!&rdquo; he said, in a kind of whisper.</p>
-
-<p>Mark made all plain to him in a few words.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Lady Igraine loved Pelleas, as well she might, not
-knowing him to be Ambrosius&rsquo;s brother. It was this same
-great love that brought her in peril of Gorlois&rsquo;s sword. It
-is this same love that draws her down to her death&mdash;there
-in Tintagel. Uther Pendragon is at Caerleon; her hope
-is with him. You, Jehan, shall carry word of this to the King.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The lad&rsquo;s heart was beating like the heart of a giant.
-The world seemed to expand about him, to grow luminous
-with the glory of great deeds; he had the braying of a
-hundred trumpets in his ears. He heard swords ring, saw
-banners blow, and towers topple like smitten trees.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am the King&rsquo;s servant,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have sworn troth; so be it. You shall go to the
-King, to Uther Pendragon, at Caerleon. Tell him you had
-this ring from a soldier, bribed to deliver it by the Lady
-Igraine. Tell him the evil that is done to her in the castle
-of Tintagel. Tell him all&mdash;withhold nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jehan flushed to the temples; his lips moved, but no
-words came from them. He stood stiff and erect, looking
-out to sea, following with his eyes the sweep of Mark&rsquo;s
-spear.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am the King&rsquo;s servant,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>The ship had drawn in towards the shore. She was
-lying to with her sails put aback, her black hull rising and
-falling morosely against the tumultuous purple of the clouds.
-Nearer still a small galley came heading for the shore with
-a gush of foam at her prow as the men in her bent to the
-oars. The galley came swinging in on the broad backs of
-the sluggish waves, and shooting the surf, grounded on the
-sands, the men in her leaping out and dragging her beyond
-the reach of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>There was a more mellow light on Mark&rsquo;s face as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-pointed Jehan to the boat, and the ship swaying on the
-sun-gilded waves.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They will carry you to Caerleon,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And you, sire?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is need of me at Tintagel.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have sworn troth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Jehan stood and looked into the west at the clouds gold-ribbed,
-domed, snow, and purple. His face might have been
-lit by the warm glow of a lamp, so clear and radiant was it.
-He had thrust the King&rsquo;s ring into his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The Lord Jesu speed me,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;through the Lady
-Igraine&rsquo;s face I am no longer a coward. God speed me to
-save her!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mark kissed him on the forehead.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You have a soul in you,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>The man stood on the strand under the black cliffs and
-watched the boat climb the waves. He saw the galley hoisted
-up, the sails flapping in the wind as the ship sheered out
-and ran for the open sea. Her sails gleamed white against
-the tumultuous west, and the ridged waters hid her hull.
-Overhead, the gulls screamed and circled. Mark, shouldering
-his spear, turned back and climbed the cliff, with his
-face towards the towers of Tintagel.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IV</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A galley came up the Usk towards dawn, towards dawn
-when the woods were hung with mist, and a vast quiet
-brooded over the world. The river made a moist murmur
-through reeds and sedge, seeming to chant of golden meads
-as it ran to wed the sea. All the eastern casements of Caerleon
-glimmered gold as the dawn struck over wood and hill;
-the city&rsquo;s walls smiled out of the night; her vanes and towers
-were noosed as with fire. The galley drew to the great
-quay, and poled to the steps as the city awoke.</p>
-
-<p>A lad, with his russet mantle turned up over his girdle,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-passed up from the galley and the quay towards the southern
-gate of the city of Caerleon. His step was sanguine, his face
-deep with dreams. He seemed to personate &ldquo;Youth&rdquo; entering
-that city of woeful magic that poets and painters name
-&ldquo;Romance.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Within the walls the stir of life had been sounded in
-by the clarions of the dawn. Seafaring men went down to
-the river and their ships. At the gate arms rang, tumbrils
-rumbled. Slim girls passed out into the orchards and the
-fields, under the trees all heavily grained, russet and green
-and gold. Women drew water at the wells. The merchant
-folk in the market square spread their stalls for the day&mdash;fruit,
-flesh, fish, cloth, and the fabrics of the East, armour
-and brazen jars, vases of strange device.</p>
-
-<p>The city pleased the lad as he passed through its stirring
-streets, and took the vigour of it, the human symbolism,
-into his soul. His idealism shed a glamour over the place;
-how red and white were its maidens; how fair its stately
-houses; how splendid the clashing armour of its guards.
-In the market square he asked a wizened apple-seller concerning
-the palace, and was pointed to the wooded hill where
-white walls rose above the green. Jehan solaced himself
-with a couple of ruddy apples from the stall. It was early
-yet for the palace, so the seller said, and Jehan sat down by
-a fountain where doves flew, and thought of his errand as
-he watched the folk go by.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was high before he came to the great gate leading
-to the gardens of the King. It chanced to be a great
-day at Caerleon, a day of public appeal, when Uther played
-patriarch to his people, and sat to hear the prayers of the
-wronged or the oppressed. Hence it followed that Jehan,
-pressing in at the gate, found himself one among many, one
-of a herd, a boy among his elders. In the antechamber of
-the palace he was edged into a corner, elbowed and kept
-there by stouter clients who, as a mere matter of course,
-shouldered a boy to the wall. Argument availed nothing.
-Men were used to plausible tales for winning precedence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-and each considered his especial matter the most pressing in
-the eyes of justice. The crowd overawed him. The doorkeepers
-thrust him back with their staves when he waxed
-importunate and attempted to parley. Often he bethought
-him of the ring, but, being quick to suspect theft in such a
-mob, he kept the talisman tight in his tunic, and trusted to
-time and the powers of patience.</p>
-
-<p>What with giving way to women whose sex commended
-them, and men whose strength and egotism seemed vested
-in their elbows, Jehan was fended far from the door all day.
-A squabbling, querulous crowd filled the place; women
-with grievances, merchants who had been plundered on the
-road; peasants, priests, soldiers; beggars and adventurers;
-a Jew banker whom some Christian had taken by the beard;
-a farmer whose wife had taken a fancy to a gentleman&rsquo;s
-bed. It was a stew of envy, discontent, and misfortune.
-Jehan, whose none too sumptuous clothing did him little
-service, was shouldered casually into the background. &ldquo;Take
-second place to a brat of a boy! God forbid such an
-indignity!&rdquo; The vexed folk believed vigorously in the
-premiership of years.</p>
-
-<p>It was well towards evening when Jehan, who had gone
-fasting save for a rye-cake, found himself the last to claim
-audience of the King. A fat pensioner, yawning phenomenally
-and dreaming of supper, eyed him with little favour
-from the top step of the stair. The day had been a
-crowded one, and the savoury scent of roast flesh assailed the
-senses of the gentleman of the &ldquo;white wand.&rdquo; Jehan braved
-the occasion with heart thumping, produced the ring, and
-held it as a charm under the doorkeeper&rsquo;s nose.</p>
-
-<p>There was an abrupt revulsion in the methods of this
-domestic demigod. Doors opened as by a magic word;
-servants went to and fro; bells sounded. A grey-bearded
-Pharisee appeared, scanned the lad over with an aristocratic
-contempt, beckoned him to follow. The man with the
-white wand refrained for a moment from yawning over the
-paltriness of the world at large.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Jehan, taken by galleries and curtained doors, and disenchanted
-somewhat with the palatial régime, found himself
-in a chapel casemented towards the west. Lamps burnt
-upon the altar, and a priest knelt upon the steps as in
-prayer. Sacramental vessels glimmered at the feet of the
-frescoed saints. A fragrant scent of musk and lavender lay
-heavy on the air.</p>
-
-<p>Jehan saw a man standing by a window, a man girded
-with a sword, and garbed in no light and joyous fashion. The
-man&rsquo;s face possessed a kind of sorrowful grandeur, a solemn
-kindliness that struck home into the lad&rsquo;s heart. The eyes
-that met his were eyes such as women and children trust.
-Jehan guessed speedily enough that this was the King.</p>
-
-<p>There was a certain intuition big in him, prophesying of
-the pain that burdened his message. He faltered for the
-moment, knelt down, looked into the man&rsquo;s eyes, and took
-courage. There was a questioning calm in them that
-quieted him like the dew of prayer. He took the ring and
-gave it into the King&rsquo;s hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;From the Lady Igraine,&rdquo; was his plea.</p>
-
-<p>Now Jehan, though he looked no higher than Uther&rsquo;s
-knees, saw him rock and sway like some great poplar in a
-storm. A strange lull seemed to fall sudden upon the
-world. The lad listened to the beating of his own heart,
-and wondered. He had soul enough to imagine the large
-utterance of those few words of his.</p>
-
-<p>A deep voice startled him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Your message.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>He knelt there and told his tale, simply, and without
-clamour.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is the truth, sire,&rdquo; he said at the end thereof, &ldquo;so may
-I drink again of the Lord&rsquo;s blood, and eat his bread at the
-holy table.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, what truth!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s voice swept the chapel like a wind, deep,
-sonorous, and terrible. The large face, the broad forehead,
-the deep-set eyes were turned to the casement and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-west. The face was like the face of one who looks into
-hell. Jehan, on his knees, looked up and shivered. He
-had told the truth, and the storm awed him like a miracle.
-It seemed almost impious to be witness of a wrath that was
-as the righteous passion of a god.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois tortures her?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;To her death, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The whole&mdash;spare nothing.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She is starved and scourged, and harlots mock her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They drag her soul in the mire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was sunset, and all the sky burnt gold and crimson in
-the west. Every lozenge of glass in the casement shone
-red as with fire. Beyond Caerleon a mysterious gloom of
-trees rolled blackly against the chaos of the decline. The
-whole world seemed glamoured and steeped in a ghostly
-quiet. Usk, a band of shadowy gold, ran with vague
-glimmerings to the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The King spread his arms to the west, and under his
-black brows his eyes smouldered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Am I Uther of Britain&mdash;and a King?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>And again in a deep half-heard whisper&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine! Igraine! thou art true unto death.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>From the terrace below came sudden the sound of
-harping. It was Rivalin, the Court minstrel, singing as the
-sun went down&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse">&ldquo;Quenched be all the bitter pain,</div>
- <div class="verse">When the roses bloom again</div>
- <div class="verse">Eyes shall smile through glimmering tears.&rdquo;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The face of the King was like the face of a man who
-sees a vision. All the glow of the hills seemed in his eyes.
-His hands shook as he stretched them to the west, the west
-that was a chasm of torrential gold.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine,&rdquo; he said, as in a dream.</p>
-
-<p>And again&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tintagel will I hurl into the sea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Jehan knelt and looked mutely at the King. The gloom
-of the roof seemed to cover him like a canopy, and the
-frescoes glimmered through the blue shadows. Uther wore
-a small crucifix about his neck. Jehan, full of a sense of
-tragedy, saw him tear the crucifix from its chain, and cast
-it at his feet. The priest at the altar, haloed by the
-glowing of his lamps, looked at the King, white and wondering.
-It was an exultant voice that made the chalice
-quiver.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Hitherto I have served a God,&rdquo; it said; &ldquo;now I will
-serve my own soul!&rdquo;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>V</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The woman&rsquo;s face, haloed by the gloom of the casement,
-still looked out from Tintagel over the solitary grandeur
-of sea and cliff. Igraine saw ships pass seldom athwart the
-west, but they brought no hope for her, for she thought
-herself alone, and served of none. How should Uther the
-King know that she was mewed in Tintagel at Gorlois&rsquo;s
-pleasure! Had he not commended her to the calm orchards
-and cloisters of a nunnery? Even the ring he had given
-her had been stolen by sheer force. Days came and went,
-dawn flooded the eastern woods with gold, and evening
-tossed her torches in the west. To Igraine they were as
-alike as the gulls that wheeled and winged white over the
-blue waters.</p>
-
-<p>There are few men of such despicable fibre that they
-are wholly ruled by the egotism of the flesh. Your
-complete villain is no frequent prodigy, being more the
-denizen of the regions of romance than of the common,
-trafficking, trivial world. There are bad men enough, but
-few Neros. Give a human being passions, pride, and
-intense egotism, and his potential energy for evil is unbounded.
-Virtue is often a mere matter of habit or circumstance.
-Joseph might have ended otherwise if Potiphar&rsquo;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-wife had had more wit; and as for Judas, he was unfortunate
-in being made banker to a God.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois of Cornwall was beholden to his own strenuous,
-north-winded nature for any trouble he might incur in his
-madness against Igraine. However much he braved it out
-to his own conscience, he knew well enough whether he
-was content or no. He was a strong man, and selfish,
-resentful, and very human. He was no Oriental monster,
-no mere Herod. What magnanimity he possessed towards
-his wife had been frozen into a wolfish scorn by the things
-that had passed in Garlotte&rsquo;s valley in Wales. Moreover,
-he had a bad woman at his elbow. Like many a vexed
-and restless man, he had turned to ambition, and the darker
-features of his character were being developed thereby. A
-king had wronged him; it was easy for a great noble to lay
-plots against a king. War and the clamour of war became
-like the prophetic sound of a storm from afar in his ears.</p>
-
-<p>Little comment had followed upon the disappearance of
-the lad Jehan on the day when Gorlois and his knights had
-ridden hunting. No one cared for the lad; no one missed
-him materially. Casual gossip arose thereon in the guard-room.
-The lad had risked the halter or the branding-iron,
-and sundry threats were launched after him at random.
-Mark of the guard shrugged his shoulders and laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s pluck in the lad,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for all your bullying.
-By my faith, I guess he grew tired of kicks and leavings,
-and of being cursed by so many sons of the pot.
-Bastard or no bastard, the lad&rsquo;s no fool.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The guard-room scoffed complacently at the notion.
-Jehan do anything in the world but snivel! Not he!
-These gentlemen judged of a man&rsquo;s worth by the animal
-propensities of the creature. They weighed a man as they
-would weigh an ox&mdash;for flesh, and the breed in him.
-Mark, making a show of warming to his wine, enlightened
-his men further as to Jehan&rsquo;s disappearance.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The lad and I went to bathe,&rdquo; he said; "there was a
-ship in the offing, and sailors had come ashore to get water<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-by St. Isidore&rsquo;s spring. They wanted a lad for cabin
-service, so I took two gold pieces, and told them to kidnap
-Jehan."</p>
-
-<p>A laugh hailed the confession, a laugh that changed to a
-cheer when Mark won accomplices by casting largesse for
-a scramble on the guard-room floor.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wish them luck of him,&rdquo; said the captain, pocketing
-silver; &ldquo;devil of a spark could I ever knock out of the lad.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;May be you hit too hard.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;May be not. I&rsquo;ll lay my fist against a rope&rsquo;s-end for
-education.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mark takes his wine like a gentleman,&rdquo; quoth one.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;May he get drunk on pay day.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And sell another Joseph into Egypt.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The woman Malmain came in to join them, corpulent
-and thirsty. Superabundant and colossal, she impressed a
-strenuous and didactic mood upon the company, grumbling
-like a volcano, emitting a smoke of mighty unfeminine
-gossip. Her black eyes wandered continually towards Mark
-of the guard. She watched him with a certain air of possession
-amid all her sweat and jabber, laughing when he
-laughed, making herself a coarse echo to his will.</p>
-
-<p>Some one spoke of Gorlois&rsquo;s wife. So personal a subject
-moved Malmain to mystery on the instant. She tapped her
-forehead with her finger; shook her head with a significance
-that was sufficient for the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mad!&rdquo; said the captain of the guard.</p>
-
-<p>Malmain sucked her lips and yawned with her great
-chasm of a mouth.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She was always that,&rdquo; she said with a hiccough.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Paradise, eh?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And golden harps!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And, damme, no beer!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>There was a certain flavour in the last remark that made
-the men roar.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wonder where they&rsquo;ll bury her,&rdquo; said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Throw her into the sea.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois&rsquo;s little wench won&rsquo;t weep her eyes out.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Malmain smote a stupendous hip, and tumbled to the
-notion. The settle shook and creaked under her as though
-in protest.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll all get married,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;Mark, my man,
-don&rsquo;t blush.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Babylon was compassed round! The same evening a
-soldier on the walls of Tintagel saw a dim throng of sails
-rise whitely out of the west. The streaks of canvas stood
-above the sea touched by the light of the setting sun.
-There was something ominous in these gleaming sails
-sweeping in a wide half-circle out of the unknown. A
-motley throng of castle folk gathered on the walls. Men
-spoke of the barbarians and of Ireland as they watched the
-ships rising solemn and silent from the west. Gorlois himself
-climbed up into a tower and gazed long at these sails
-whose haven was as yet unknown. He learnt little by the
-scrutiny. The ships had hardly risen above the purple
-twilight when night came and shrouded the whole in vague
-and impenetrable gloom.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois ordered the castle into a state of siege, and with
-the night an atmosphere of suspense gathered about Tintagel.</p>
-
-<p>About midnight some dozen points of fire burst out redly
-on the hills. Sudden and sinister they shone like beacon
-fires, but by whom lit the castle folks could not tell. Men
-idled on the walls, shoulder to shoulder, talking in undertones,
-with now and again a bluff oath to invoke courage.
-The black infinite, above, around, seemed to hem the place
-as eternity hems the soul. War and death lurked in the
-dark, and on the rocks the sea kept up a perpetual moan.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois walked the walls with several of his knights.
-He was restless, and in no Christian temper, for the dark
-muzzled him. Not that he feared the unknown, or the
-perils that might lurk on hill or sea. He had the soul of a
-soldier, loved danger for its own sake, and took a hazard as
-he would take wine. Yet there are certain thoughts that
-haunt a man for all his hardihood, thoughts that may not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-weaken him though they may chafe his temper. Such to
-Gorlois was the memory of a starved face looking out at
-him scornfully from the gloom, the face of Igraine, his wife.</p>
-
-<p>That night Gorlois&rsquo;s mind was prophetic in dual measure.
-Like a good captain he scanned the human horizon for
-snares and enmities, old feuds and the vengeances of men.
-The dark sky seemed to hold out two scrolls to him tersely
-illumined as to the near future. To Gorlois they read&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The barbarians,</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">or</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The King!</span></p>
-
-<p>Forewarned thus in spirit, he kept to the walls till dawn.
-The sea sang for him stern epics of tumult and despair.
-Large projects were moving in his mind like waters that
-bubble up darkly in a well. He was in a mood for great
-deeds, alarms and plottings, lusts, gnashings, and the splendid
-agonies of war.</p>
-
-<p>When the grey veil rose from the world many faces
-looked out east and west from Tintagel for sign of legions
-or of ships at sea. Strange truth! not a sail showed upon
-the ocean, not a spear or shield glimmered on the eastern
-hills. The threatenings of the night seemed to have cleared
-like the leaden cloudscape of a stormy sky.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois, scarred, brooding, sinister, appealed his knights
-as to the event.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not a ship, not a shield,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;yet I&rsquo;ll swear we
-saw watchfires on the hills. Were we scared for nothing?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Devil&rsquo;s beacons,&rdquo; quoth one.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have heard sailors tell of the phantom fleet of the
-Ph&oelig;nicians.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Have a care,&rdquo; said Sir Isumbras of the wrinkled face;
-&ldquo;I remember me of the taking of Genorium; given the
-chance of an ambuscado, the good captain&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois cut in upon his prosings.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Scour the country, well and good,&rdquo; he said, "send out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-your riders; we will see whether there is a Saxon betwixt
-Tintagel and Glastonbury."</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois had hardly delivered himself, and the company
-was passing from the battlements, when a trumpet-cry
-thrilled the solitary morning air. Gorlois and his knights
-halted at the head of the turret-stair, and looked out from
-the walls towards the east. A single figure on horseback
-was moving along the ridge leading to the headland. The
-rider was clad in black, and his horse-trappings were of
-sable. He carried neither spear nor shield, but only a
-herald&rsquo;s long trumpet balanced upon his thigh. He rode
-very much at his leisure, as though the whole world could
-abide his business.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois eyed him blackly under his hand.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I was wrong, sirs,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Old Isumbras&rsquo;s wrinkles deepened. He tapped the walls
-with the scabbard of his sword, and waxed oracular after an
-old man&rsquo;s fashion. Gorlois turned his broad back on him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There is trouble in yonder gentleman&rsquo;s wallet,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>They passed with clashing arms down the black well of
-the stairway to the court. Gates were rumbling on their
-hinges. The herald had ridden over the bridge, and the
-guards had given him passage. He was brought into the
-court where Gorlois stood in the centre of a half-circle of
-knights. The herald wore a cap of crimson velvet and a
-mask over his face. He walked with a certain stately
-swagger; it was palpable that he was no common fellow.</p>
-
-<p>There was no parley on either part. Those who watched
-saw that this emissary carried a case of scarlet cloth and a
-naked poniard. He gave the case into Gorlois&rsquo;s hands, but
-threw the poniard on the stones at his feet. A fine insolence
-burnt in his stride and gesturing. Gorlois&rsquo;s scar seemed to
-show up duskily upon his cheek, and he looked as though
-tempted to tear the mask from the stranger&rsquo;s face. An incomprehensible
-dignity waved him back, and while he dallied
-with his wrath, the man turned his back on him and marched
-unconcernedly for the gate. The court bristled with steel,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-but none hindered or molested him. They heard the gate
-roll to, and the rattle of hoofs on the bridge. The sound
-died rapidly away, leaving Tintagel silent as a ruin.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois picked up the poniard, for none of his men
-stirred, and cut the woven band that held the lappets of the
-case. The white corner of a waxen tablet came to light.
-Gorlois drew the tablet out, held it at arm&rsquo;s length, and read
-the inscription thereon. His face grew hard and vigilant as
-he read, and he seemed to spell the thing over to himself
-several times before satisfied to the letter. He stood awhile
-in thought, and then leaving his knights to their conjectures,
-walked away to that quarter of the castle where Morgan la
-Blanche had her lodging.</p>
-
-<p>He found the woman couched by the window that
-looked out towards the sea. Though dawn had but lately
-come, she was awake, and sat combing her hair, while a
-kitten slept on the blue coverlet covering her lap. Wine
-and fruit stood on the table near the bed, with scented
-water, a rouge-pot, and a bowl of flowers. Morgan was
-smothered in fine white linen, banded at neck and wrists
-with sky-blue silk. A kerchief of gold gossamer work
-covered her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois touched her lips, and let her hair run through
-his fingers like water.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Minion, you are awake early.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Morgan&rsquo;s face shone white, and her eyes looked tired
-and faded. She had heard rumours and had watched the
-night through, being tender-conscienced as to her own skin.
-Adversity, even in its meaner forms, was a thing insufferably
-insolent, a cloud in the absolute gold of a sensuous existence.
-Being quick to mark any shadowing of the horizon, she
-was undeceived by Gorlois&rsquo;s mere smile. She caught his
-hand and stared up at him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What troubles you?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is it to be a siege?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois stretched his strong neck, laughed, and eschewed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span>
-subtlety. It interested him to see this worldling ruffled,
-Morgan, whose chief care was how the world might serve
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Read,&rdquo; he said, putting the tablet into her hands.</p>
-
-<p>Morgan sat up in bed with her fair hair streaming over
-her shoulders. She traced out the words hurriedly with a
-white finger-tip. Her eyes seemed to grow large as she
-read; her hands trembled a very little. At the end thereof
-she dropped the tablet into her lap and looked at Gorlois
-with a certain petulant dread.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;How did the man hear of all this?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God knows!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Treachery!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois jerked his belt and said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>The woman Morgan sat and hugged her knees. She
-looked out to sea with a frown on her face, and the blue
-coverlet dragged in tight folds about her waist. The
-kitten woke up and began to play with Morgan&rsquo;s hair as it
-trailed down upon the bed. She cuffed the little beast
-aside, and looked at Gorlois. Her eyes now were steely
-and clear, and very blue under her white forehead.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Obviously, he has learnt all,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois nodded morosely.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And this matter is to be between you alone?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have his word.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And he is a fool for truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Silence held them both awhile, and Morgan seemed to
-dally with her thoughts. Her lips worked loosely as though
-moving with her mind. The kitten clawed its way up the
-coverlet and rubbed its glossy flank against the woman&rsquo;s arm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What of an ambush?&rdquo; she suggested mildly.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois darted a look at her and shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;No; it shall be fair between us.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Honour!&rdquo;&mdash;with a sneer.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am a soldier.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;By the prophet, that is the strange part of it all. You
-go out to kill a man, and yet trouble about the method.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There honour enters.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You kill him, all the same.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Morgan tossed the quilt aside, thrust a pair of glimmering
-feet out of the bed, and stood at Gorlois&rsquo;s elbow. She
-took the tablet of wax and held it over a lamp that was
-burning till the wax softened and suffered the lettering to be
-effaced. Gorlois&rsquo;s great sword hung from the carved bed-post.
-Morgan took it and buckled it to the man with her
-plump, worldly little hands.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let it not fail,&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois kissed her lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;There will be no King; and the heir&mdash;well, you are
-a great soldier, and men fear your name.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>She kept him with her awhile and then bade him farewell.
-The sun was high in the heavens when Gorlois, in
-glittering harness, rode out alone from Tintagel, and passed
-away into the wilds.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VI</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>There was a preternatural brightness over sea and cliff that
-day. Headland and height stood limned with a luminous
-grandeur; the sea was a vast opal; mountainous clouds
-sailed solemn and stupendous over the world. Towards
-evening it grew still and sultry, and storms threatened. A
-vapoury leviathan lowered black out of the east, devouring
-the blue, with scudding mists spray-like about his belly.
-The sky changed to a sable cavern. In the west the sun
-still blazed through mighty crevices, candescent gold; the
-world seemed a chaos of glory and shadow. Sea-birds came
-screaming to the cliffs. The walls of Tintagel burnt
-athwart the west.</p>
-
-<p>Presently out of the blue bosom of an unearthly twilight
-a vague wind rose. Gusts came, clamoured, and died into
-nothingness. The world seemed to shudder. The dry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
-bracken and grass on the hillsides hissed as the wind came
-seldom and tumultuous. The roadway smoked. In the
-valleys the trees moaned, shivered, and stood still.</p>
-
-<p>Mark of the guard stood in the garden leaning on his
-spear, watching the storm gathering above. It was his
-guard that night over the stairway leading to Igraine&rsquo;s
-room, and he stood under the shadow of the tower.</p>
-
-<p>A red sword flashed sudden out of the east, and smote
-the hills. Thunder followed, growling over the world.
-Then rain came, and a whirlwind seemed to fly from the
-face of the storm. In the west a burning crater still poured
-gold upon a restless and afflicted sea.</p>
-
-<p>It grew dark very rapidly, and a thundering canopy soon
-overarched Tintagel. Now and again flaming cracks of
-fire ran athwart the dome of the night, lighting battlements
-and sky with a weird momentary splendour. Rain rattled
-on the stones and drifted whirling against door and casement.
-Small torrents formed along the walks; every spout and
-gully gushed and gurgled. Like an underchant came the
-hoarse cry of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Mark had withdrawn under the arch of the tower&rsquo;s
-entry. A cresset flamed and spluttered higher up the stairway,
-throwing down an ineffectual gleam upon the man&rsquo;s
-armour as he stood and looked into the night. The storm
-fires lit his face, making it start out of the dark white and
-spiritual, with largely luminous eyes. He held motionless
-at his post like a Roman soldier watching the downfall of
-Pompeii.</p>
-
-<p>Solitude possessed garden, court, and battlement, for no
-one stirred on such a night. The knights of the garrison
-were making merry in the great hall, and the men of the
-guard, unpestered by their superiors, had gathered a great
-company in the guard-room to emulate their officers. The
-scullion knaves and wenches had fled the kitchen; the
-sentinels had sneaked from the walls. There was no fear
-now of a leaguer. Had not Duke Gorlois declared as much
-before his sally?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mark alone stood to his post, listening to the laughter
-that reached him between the stanzas of the storm. His
-face was like the face of a statue, yet alert and eager for all
-its calm. More than once he went out through the storm
-of rain to the great gate and stood there listening while the
-wind howled overhead. About midnight the noise of
-gaming and revelling seemed suddenly to cease, as when
-folk hear the tolling of a bell for prayer. Only the wind
-kept up its hooting over the walls.</p>
-
-<p>Mark stood a long while by the guard-room door with
-his ear to the planking. Seldom a quavering cry came out
-to him, and the place grew empty of human sound. All
-Tintagel seemed asleep, though many casements still shone
-out yellow against the gloom. Mark slipped to the main
-gate. There was a postern in it for service after dark. He
-drew back the bolts and loosed the chain from the staple,
-and leaving the small door ajar, passed back to the tower&rsquo;s
-entry.</p>
-
-<p>Thunder went rolling over the sea. Mark left his spear
-by the porch and went up the first few steps of the stairway.
-He took the cresset from its bracket, carried it down,
-and tossed it into the court, where the flames spluttered out
-in the rain. Darkness accomplished, he went up the stairway
-to the short gallery leading to Igraine&rsquo;s room. At the
-top he stood and listened. He heard the sound of breathing,
-and knew that it came from the woman Malmain who slept
-in the alcove before the door.</p>
-
-<p>Mark smote the wall a ringing blow with the handle of
-his poniard. A bench creaked; some one yawned and
-began to grumble. It was so dark that the very walls were
-part of the prevailing gloom.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s there?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Mark stood aside.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The cresset&rsquo;s out on the stairs.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Two arms came groping along the wall.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been asleep, cherub.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mark!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You were forgetting our tryst.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A thick sensual laugh sounded from the stairhead.
-Something opaque moved in the dark; a pair of arms felt
-along the passage; a hand touched Mark&rsquo;s face. Malmain&rsquo;s
-arms wrapped the man&rsquo;s body; she lifted him to her with
-her great strength, and kissed his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Rogue!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Once, twice, a streaking shadow rose and fell with the
-faintest glinting of steel. There was a staggering sound, a
-wet cough, a sharp-drawn breath, and then silence. Malmain
-fell against the wall with her hands to her side, held rigid
-a moment, and then slid into a heap. Mark bent over the
-woman and gripped her wrist.</p>
-
-<p>In a short while he left the body lying there and moved
-to the door. Sliding his long fingers over the panels, he
-found the spring that marked the catch. Light streamed
-through into the gallery and fell upon Malmain as she lay
-huddled against the wall, her hair trailing along the floor
-like rills of blood.</p>
-
-<p>A lamp burnt in the room, showering a thin silvery
-lustre from its pedestal, leaving the angles in dull brown
-shadow. The room was bare and bleak as a beggar&rsquo;s attic.
-The one window had been shuttered up against the rain, and
-the crazy lattice shook in the wind. The whole tower seemed
-to quake, pressed upon by the broad shoulders of the storm.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois&rsquo;s wife lay asleep on a rough bed in the centre of
-the room. Mark went forward and stood over her. The
-light fell upon Igraine&rsquo;s face and haloed it with a quiet
-radiance. Her hands were folded over her breast, and the
-man looking upon her face saw it drawn and haggard even
-in sleep. It had a kind of tragic fairness, a stained beauty
-like the wistful strangeness of an autumnal garden. It was
-pale, piteous, thin, and spiritual. The flesh shone like white
-wax; the short hair glimmered like a net of gold.</p>
-
-<p>So changed, so ethereal, was the face of the sleeper, that
-the man stood and looked at her with gradual awe. Passed
-indeed was the blood-red rose of life, green summer with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-its ecstasy of song. Autumn&rsquo;s rich tapestries of bronze and
-gold were falling before the wind of winter and the shrill
-sword of death. The woman on the bed looked like some
-pale princess slumbering out her doom in some baleful
-tower.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine&rsquo;s sleep was shallow and ineffectual, a restless
-stupor impressed upon a troubled mind. The storm seemed
-to figure in her dreams. A kind of splendid misery played
-upon her face, such misery as floods forth from some old
-legend, strange and sad. Her hands tossed to and fro over
-the coverlet like fallen flowers stirred by a wind. Her lids
-drooped over half-opened eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden gust broke the catch of the casement, and
-swung the frame into the room. All the boisterous
-laughter of the storm seemed to sweep in with the wind.
-With the racket Igraine woke and started up in bed upon
-her elbow. The lamp flame, draught-slanted over the rim,
-gave but a feeble light; the room was filled with wavering
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Mark stood back from the bed. There was blood upon
-his tunic. For a moment he was speechless like a man
-caught in a theft.</p>
-
-<p>In the dim light and to the half-awakened senses of the
-sleeper, the intruder stood for Gorlois, beard, face, and
-figure. A moment&rsquo;s hesitancy lost Mark the lead. The
-door stood wide. What ensued came crowded into the
-compass of a few seconds.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine, quick to conceive, jerked the coverlet from the
-bed. Before Mark could prevent her, she had thrown it
-over the lamp and smothered the flame. The room sank
-into instant darkness and confusion. Mark&rsquo;s voice sounded
-above the storm. Then came the slamming of a door, and
-silence save for the blustering of the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine stood on the threshold in the dark, and drew her
-breath fast. She had shut the man in the room, and the
-door opened only from without by a spring catch. Mark
-of the guard was trapped.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And Malmain!</p>
-
-<p>Igraine remembered the woman, and heeding nothing of
-the voice that called to her from the room, groped her way
-to the stairhead, expecting at every step to hear the woman&rsquo;s
-challenge start out of the gloom. At the end of the gallery
-she nearly tripped and fell over some inanimate thing.
-Reaching down out of curiosity she drew her hand back
-with a half cry, her fingers fouled with a thick warm ooze.
-An indefinite terror seized her in the dark. She went
-reeling down the stairway, clutching at the walls, grasping
-the air. A faint outcry still followed her from the room
-above.</p>
-
-<p>In the garden rain still rattled, and scud blew from the
-pools. Igraine stood motionless under the shadow of a
-cypress, with her face turned to the sky. Her ragged gown
-blew about her bare ankles, and the wind whirled rain into
-her face. She drew deep breaths and stretched out her
-hands to the night, for there was the kiss of liberty in this
-cold, shrill shower.</p>
-
-<p>Anon the old fear urged her on, companioned now by a
-reawakened courage. She was weak and starved, but what
-of that! The storm seemed to enter into her soul with its
-blustery vigour, crying to her with the multitudinous echoes
-of the night. What was the mere peril of the flesh to one
-who had faced spiritual torture more keen than death!</p>
-
-<p>Creeping round under the shadow of the wall with quick
-glances darted into the dark she made her way round the
-court to the great gate. The gate-house was dark as the
-sky, and there was no tramping of sentinels from wall to
-wall. Igraine crept into the yawn of the archway, brushing
-along the stones. With each step she listened for the rattle
-of a spear, and looked for the armed figure that should clash
-out on her from the gloom. She won the gate and leant
-against it, breathless from mere suspense. Her fingers
-groped over the great beams, touched an outstanding edge,
-and tugged at it. The edge moved; a door came open and
-let in the wind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Igraine stood a moment and pondered this mystery in
-her heart. She had chanced on nothing in the whole castle
-save one man and a corpse. Some strange doom might
-have fallen upon the place like the doom that smote the
-Assyrians in their sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Plain before her stood the open gate and liberty. The
-hint was sufficient for the occasion. Igraine, leaving
-Tintagel to the unknown, gathered her rags round her and
-passed out into the night.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A rolling country spread with moor, wood, and crag. A
-storm creeping black out of the east over the tops of a forest
-of pines. On the slope of a hill covered with a mauve mist
-of nodding scabei and bronzed tracts of bracken, two horsemen
-motionless in armour. Far away, the glimmer of a
-distant sea.</p>
-
-<p>Uther the King wheeled his horse and pointed northwards
-towards the pine woods with his sword. The challenge
-came plainly in the gesture. There was no need for vapouring
-or for heroics; a quick stare&mdash;eye for eye&mdash;said everything
-a soldier could desire.</p>
-
-<p>Uther, on his black horse, rode with loose bridle, looking
-straight ahead into the darkness of the woods. He carried
-his naked sword slanted over his shoulder. Frequent streams
-of sunlight flashed down upon his harness and made it burn
-under the boughs, leaving his face calm and solemn under the
-shadow of his helm. Gorlois held some paces away, stiff
-and arrogant, watching the man on his flank with restless,
-smouldering eyes. It was a silent pilgrimage for them both,
-a pilgrimage to a shrine whence, for one of them, there
-might be no return.</p>
-
-<p>A shimmering curtain of sunlight spread itself suddenly
-before them among the pines. The two men rode out into
-an oval glade palisaded by the innumerable pillars of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-wood, bowered in by rolling heights of dusky green. On
-all sides the spires made a jagged circle of the sky. A pool,
-black as obsidian, slept in the sun. Heather bloomed there,
-girdling the confines of wood and water with a blaze of
-purple.</p>
-
-<p>Uther dismounted and tied his horse to a tree. His
-deliberation in no way pandered to Gorlois&rsquo;s self-esteem;
-there was to be no flurry or bombast in the event. No one
-was to witness this judgment of the sword; chivalry and
-malice alike were to be locked up in the heart of the forest.
-A smooth circle of grass lay on the northern side of the pool,
-promising well to the two who moved thither with nothing
-more eloquent than an exchange of gestures.</p>
-
-<p>The heather swept away, a purple dirge to the black
-sounding of the pines, and a whorl of storm-laden clouds
-swam towards the sun. Uther, with a face strong as a god&rsquo;s,
-swung his sword from his shoulder and grounded the point
-in the sod. His destiny waxed great in him in that
-hour. There was something inevitable in the quiet of his
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You are ready,&rdquo; he said very simply.</p>
-
-<p>Gorlois jerked a quick glance at him, and licked his
-lips. He, too, was in no mood for words or matters ethical.
-Temporal lusts ran strong in his blood.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;For a woman&rsquo;s honour!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;As you will, sire,&rdquo; with a shrug.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;We have no need of courtesies.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Over a harlot!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Guard, and God pardon you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Both swords flickered up hotly in the sunlight. Gorlois,
-sinewy and full of fettle, gave a half-shout and sprang to
-engage. He had vast faith in himself, having come scatheless
-out of many such tussles; nor had he ever been humbled
-by man or beast. Vigorous as a March morning he launched
-the first blow, a grim cut laid in with both hands, a cut that
-rattled home half-parried on the other&rsquo;s shoulder. Uther,
-quick for all his calmness, gave the point in retort, a lunge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-that slid under the Cornishman&rsquo;s sword and made the muscles
-gape in Gorlois&rsquo;s neck. There was blood to both.</p>
-
-<p>The swords began to leap and sing in the sunlight, and
-the forest echoed to the clangour of arms. Both men fought
-without shields, and for a season well within themselves, and
-there was much craft on either part. Cut and counter-cut
-rang through the pine alleys like the cry of axes whirled by
-woodmen&rsquo;s hands. As yet there was no bustle, no wild
-smiting. Every stroke came clean and true, lashed home
-with the weight of arms and body.</p>
-
-<p>Hate overset mere swordsmanship anon, and reason grew
-less and less as the men waxed warm. Gorlois, running in
-with a swinging buffet, stumbled over a heather tuft and
-caught a counter full in the face. The smart of it and a
-split lip quickened him immeasurably. The blades began
-to whirl with more malice, less precision. Matters grew
-tumultuous as leaves in a whirlwind. For some minutes
-there seemed nothing but a tangle of swords in the sun, a
-staggering chaos of red and gold.</p>
-
-<p>Such fighting burnt itself to a standstill in less than three
-minutes. Uther drew back like a boar pressed by hounds.
-There was no whit of weakening in his mood, only a reassertive
-reason that would trust nothing to the fortune of
-a moment. The muscles stood out in his strong throat,
-blood ran from his slashed tunic, and he was breathing hard;
-but his manhood burnt strong and true. Gorlois, with
-mouth awry, eyed him with sword half up, and drew back
-in turn. His face streamed. He spat blood upon the
-heather.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;God! what work.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was Gorlois&rsquo;s testimony, wrung from him by the stress
-of sheer hard fighting. The storm-cloud crept across the
-sun and overcharged the world with gloom. The pool grew
-more black in its purple bed; the forest began to weave the
-twilight into its columned halls.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You lack breath, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I wait for you,&rdquo; Uther said.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the man of Tintagel was in a sinister mood for the
-moment. Genius moved his sweating brain. He dropped
-into philosophic brevities as he spat blood from his bruised
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All for a woman,&rdquo; he said thickly.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;True.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Are you much in love, sire?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther answered him nothing, but waited with his sword
-over his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She made fuss enough.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Still silence.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I never knew a woman so obstinate in making an
-end. And we buried her in the sand, where the waves
-roll at flood. Now, you and I lose our brains over a
-corpse.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther&rsquo;s sword shone again.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Guard,&rdquo; he said quietly.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden gust came clamouring through the wood.
-The darkening boughs tossed and jerked against the sky,
-breathing out a multitudinous moan, a hoarse cry as of a
-smitten host. The east piled thunder over the world. It
-was the same storm that swept the battlements of Tintagel.</p>
-
-<p>By the pool swords rang; red and gold strove and
-staggered over the heather. It was the death tussle and a
-sharp one at that. Destiny or not, matters were going all
-against Gorlois; his blows were out of luck; he was rent
-time on end and gave little in return. Rabid, dazed, he
-began making blind rushes that boded ill for him. More
-than once he stumbled, and was mired to the knees in the
-pool.</p>
-
-<p>The end came suddenly enough as the light failed.
-Both men smote together; both swords met with a sound
-that seemed to shake the woods, Gorlois&rsquo;s blade snapped at
-the hilt.</p>
-
-<p>He stood still a moment, then plucked out his poniard
-and made a spring. A merciless down-cut beat him back.
-The fine courage, the strenuous self-trust, seemed to ebb<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-from him on a sudden as though the blow had broken his
-soul. He fell on his knees and held his hands up with a
-thick, choking cry.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mercy! God&rsquo;s mercy!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Curse you! Had you pity on the woman?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, sire!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Thunder rolled overhead, and the girdles of the sky were
-loosed. A torrent of rain beat upon the man&rsquo;s streaming
-face; he tottered on his knees, and still held his hands to
-the heavens.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I lied,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;God witness, I lied.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ah&mdash;!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The woman lives&mdash;is at Tintagel.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Man&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Give me life, sire, give me life; you shall have her.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther looked at him and heaved up his sword. Gorlois
-saw the King&rsquo;s face, gave a great cry, and cowered behind
-his hands. It was all ended in a moment. The rain washed
-his gilded harness as he lay with his blood soaking into the
-heather.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>VIII</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As the world grew grey with waking light Uther the King
-came from the woods, and heard the noise of the sea in the
-hush that breathed in the dawn. The storm had passed
-over the ocean, and a vast quiet hung upon the lips of the
-day. In the east a green streak shone above the hills. The
-sky was still aglitter with sparse stars, and an immensity of
-gloom brooded over the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Gaunt, wounded, triumphant, he rode up beneath the
-banners of the dawn, eager yet fearful, inspired and strong
-of purpose. Wood and hill slept in a haze of mist; the
-birds were only beginning in the thickets, like the souls of
-children yet unborn calling to eternity. Beyond, on the
-cliffs, Tintagel, wrapped round with night, stood silent and
-sombre athwart the west.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Uther climbed from the valley as the day came with
-splendour, a glow as of molten gold streaming from the east.
-Wood and hillside glimmered in a smoking mist, dew-brilliant,
-wonderful. As the sun rose the sea stretched
-sudden into the arch of the west&mdash;a great pavement of gold.
-A mysterious lustre hovered over the cliffs; waves of light
-beat like saffron spray upon Tintagel.</p>
-
-<p>The dawn-light found an echo on Uther&rsquo;s face. He
-came that morning the ransomer, the champion, a King
-indeed; Spring bursting the thongs of Winter; Day thrusting
-back the Night. His manhood smote in him like the
-deep-throated cry of a great bell, voluminous and solemn.
-The towers on the cliff were haloed with magic hues. Life,
-glory, joy, lay locked in the grey stone walls. His heart
-sang in him, and his eyes were afire.</p>
-
-<p>As he walked his horse with a hollow thunder of hoofs
-over the bridge, he took his horn and blew a blast thereon.
-There was a quiet, a lifelessness, about the place that smote
-his senses, bodying forth mystery. The walls were void
-against the sky. At the sound of the horn there came no
-stirring of armed men, no answering fanfare, no glimmering
-of faces at the casements. Only the gulls circled from the
-cliffs, and the sea made its moan along the strand.</p>
-
-<p>Uther sat in the saddle and looked from tower to battlement,
-from battlement to gate. There was something
-tragic about the place, the silence of a sacked town, the
-ghostliness of a ship sailing the seas with a dead crew upon
-her deck. Uther&rsquo;s glance rested on the open postern, an
-empty streak in the great gate. His face darkened somewhat;
-his eyes lost their sanguine glow. There was something
-betwixt death and treachery in all this quiet.</p>
-
-<p>He dismounted and left his horse on the bridge. The
-postern beckoned him. He went in like a man nerved for
-peril, with sword drawn and shield above his head, ready for
-blows in dark corners. Again he blew his horn. The
-blast rang and resounded under the arch of the gate. No
-man came to answer or avenge it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The guard-room door stood ajar; Uther thrust it open
-with the point of his sword and looked in. A grey
-light filtered through the narrow windows. The place
-was like the cave of the Seven Sleepers. Men, women,
-guards, servants, were huddled on the benches and on the
-floor. Some lay fallen across the settles; others sat with
-their heads fallen forwards upon the table; a few had
-crawled towards the door. They were cast in every posture,
-every attitude, bleak, stiff, and motionless. Some had froth
-upon their lips, glistening eyes, clenched fingers. The
-shadow of death was over the whole.</p>
-
-<p>The King&rsquo;s face was as grey as the faces of the dead.
-He had looked for human throes, perils, strong hands, and
-the vehemence of man. There was something here, a calm
-horror, a mystery that hurled back the warm courage of the
-heart. Prophecy lurked open-mouthed in the shadows.
-Uther shouldered his sword, passed out, and drew to the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>In the great court he looked round him like a traveller
-who has stumbled upon a city wrapped in a magic sleep.
-Urged on by manifold forebodings, and knowing the place
-of old, he went first to the State quarters and hunted the
-rooms through and through. The same silence met him
-everywhere. In the great hall he came upon a ring of
-corpses round a table, a ring of men in armour, stiff and
-rigid as stone, with wine and fruit mocking their staring
-eyes. In the lodging of the women he found a lady laid on
-a couch by an open window. Her fair hair swept the
-pillow; her eyes were wide and glazed; an open casket lay
-on the bed, and strings of jewels were scattered on the
-coverlet. The woman&rsquo;s face was white as apple blossom;
-she had a half-eaten pomegranate in her hand.</p>
-
-<p>Uther passed from the death-chamber of Morgan la
-Blanche to the garden. The shadows of the place, the
-staring faces, the stiff hands clawing at things inanimate,
-were like phantasms of the night. He took the sea air into
-his nostrils, and looked into the blue realism of the sky.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-All about him the garden glistened in the dawn, the
-cypresses shimmered with dew, the pool was like a steel
-buckler on cloth of green. Here was the placid life of
-flowers making very death the more apparent to his soul.</p>
-
-<p>As he stood in deep thought, half dreading what he still half
-knew, a voice called to him, breaking suddenly the ponderous
-silence of the place. A face showed overhead at the upper
-window in the tower; a hand beckoned and pointed towards
-the tower&rsquo;s entry. Here at last was something quick and
-tangible in the flesh, something that could speak of the
-handicraft of death. Uther climbed the stairs and found
-Malmain&rsquo;s body by the well. When he had looked at the
-woman&rsquo;s face and seen blood he paid no more heed to her.
-She was only one among many.</p>
-
-<p>Guided by a voice, Uther unlatched the door and passed
-in with sword drawn. A man met him on the threshold, a
-man with the face of a Dante, and shaven lip and chin.
-It was the face of Merlin.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>IX</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Without the gate of Tintagel stood Uther the King
-looking out towards the eastern hills clear against the calm
-of the sky. He stood bare-headed, like one in prayer; his
-face was strong, yet wistful and patient as a sick child&rsquo;s.
-At his elbow waited Merlin, silent and inscrutable. Much
-had passed between them in that upper room, that room
-more hallowed to Uther than the rock tomb of the
-Christ.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Ever, ever night,&rdquo; he said, stretching out his hands as
-to an eternal void.</p>
-
-<p>Merlin&rsquo;s eyes seemed to look leagues away over moor,
-hill, and valley. A strange tenderness played upon his lips,
-and there was a radiance upon his face impossible to
-describe. It was like the face of a lover, a dreamer of
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;A man is a mystery to himself,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But to God?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I know no God, save the god my own soul. Let me
-live and die, nothing more. Why curse one&rsquo;s life with a
-&lsquo;to be&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther sighed heavily.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is a kind of fate to me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;inevitable as the
-setting of the sun, natural as sleep. Not for myself do I
-fear it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Let Jehovah follow Jupiter into the chaos of fable.
-Sire, look yonder.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Merlin&rsquo;s eyes had caught life on the distant hillsides, life
-surging from the valleys, life, and the glory of it. Harness,
-helm, and shield shone in the sun. Gold, azure, silver,
-scarlet, were creeping from the bronzed green of the wilds.
-Silent and solemn the host rolled gradual into the full
-splendour of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Uther&rsquo;s eyes beheld them through a mist of tears.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;King Nentres, King Urience, and the host,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Even so, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;They were bidden to follow.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Loyal to their king.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther watched them with a great pride stealing into his
-eyes; he smiled and held his head high.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;All these are mine,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Merlin&rsquo;s face had kindled.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Grapple the days to come,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;let Scripture and
-old ethics rot. You have a thousand knights; let them
-ride by stream and forest, moor and mere. Let them ride
-out and sunder like the wind.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The quest of a King&rsquo;s heart!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, like a golden dawn shall she rise out of the past.
-Blow thy horn. Let us not tarry.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>X</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Six days had passed. Once more the sun had tossed
-night from the sky, and kindled hope in the hymning
-east. The bleak wilderness barriered by sea and crag had
-mellowed into the golden silence of autumnal woods. The
-very trees seemed tongued with prophetic flame. The
-world like a young lover leapt radiant out of the dawn.</p>
-
-<p>Through the reddened woods rode Uther the King with
-Merlin silent at his side. Gloom still reigned on the gaunt,
-strong face, and there was no lustre in the eyes that
-challenged ever the lurking shade of death. Six nights and
-six days had the quest been baffled. Near and far armour
-glimmered in the reddened sanctuaries of the woods. Not
-a trumpet brayed, though the host had scattered in search of
-a woman&rsquo;s face.</p>
-
-<p>At the seventh dawn the trees drew back before the King,
-where the shimmering waters of a river streaked the meads.
-Peace dwelt there, and a calm eternal, as of the Spirit
-that heals the throes of men. Rare and golden lay the
-dawn-light on the valley. The song of birds came glad
-and multitudinous as in the burgeoning dawn of a glorious
-May.</p>
-
-<p>Uther had halted under a great oak. His head was bare
-in the sun-steeped shadows; his face was as the face of one
-weary with long watching under the voiceless stars. Hope,
-like a dewless rose, drooped shaken and thirsty with desire.
-Great dread possessed him. He dared not question his
-own soul.</p>
-
-<p>A horn sounded in the woods, wild, clamorous and
-exultant. It was as the voice of a prophet cleaving the
-despair of a godless world. Even the trees stood listening.
-Far below in the green shadows of the valley a horseman
-moved brilliant as a star that portents the conception
-of a king.</p>
-
-<p>Uther&rsquo;s eyes were on the horseman in the valley.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I am even as a child,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>Merlin&rsquo;s lips quivered.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The dawn breaks, sire, the night is past. Tidings come
-to us. Let us ride on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Uther seemed sunk in thought; he bowed his head, and
-looked long into the valley.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Am I he who slew Gorlois?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Courage, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My blood is as water, my heart as wax. Death and
-destiny are over my head.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak not of destiny, sire, and look not to the skies.
-In himself is man&rsquo;s power. Thou hast broken the crucifix.
-Now trust thine own soul. So long as thou didst serve a
-superstition, thou didst lose thy true heaven.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And yet&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Thou hast played the god, sire, and the Father in
-heaven must love thee for thy strength. God loves the
-strong. He will let thee rule destiny, and so prosper.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Strange words!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;But true. Were I God, should I love the priest puling
-prayers in a den? Nay, that man should be mine who
-moved godlike in the world, and strangled fate with the
-grip of truth. Great deeds are better than prayers. See!
-it is young Tristan who comes.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The horseman in the valley had swept at a gallop
-through a sea of sun-bronzed fern. He was a young
-knight on a black horse, caparisoned in green and gold.
-A halo of glistening curls aureoled his boyish face; his
-eyes were full of a restless radiance, the eyes of a man
-whose heart was troubled. He sprang from the saddle,
-and leading his horse by the bridle, kissed the scabbard of
-Uther&rsquo;s sword.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tidings, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tristan, I listen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The knight looked for a moment into the King&rsquo;s face,
-but dared not abide the trial. There was such a stare of
-desperate calm in the dark eyes, that the lad&rsquo;s courage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>
-whimpered, and quailed from the truth. He hung his head,
-and stood mute.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Tristan, I listen.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, man, speak out!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;The truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She lives, sire!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A great silence fell within the hearts of the three, an
-ecstasy of silence such as comes after the wail of a storm.
-Merlin stroked his lip, and smiled, the smile of one who
-dreams. The King&rsquo;s face was as the face of one who
-thrusts back hope out of his soul. He sat rigid on his
-horse, a scarlet image fronting Fate, grim-eyed and steadfast.
-There were tears in the eyes of Tristan the knight.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;What more?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Tristan leant against his horse, his arm hooked over the
-brute&rsquo;s neck.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;In the valley, sire, is a sanctuary; you can see it yonder
-by the ford. Two holy women dwell therein. To them,
-sire, I commend you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;You know more!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, spare me. The words are for women&rsquo;s lips, not
-for mine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;So be it.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The three rode on in silence; Merlin and Tristan
-together, looking mutely in each other&rsquo;s faces. Uther&rsquo;s
-chin was bowed on his breast. The reins lay loose on his
-horse&rsquo;s neck.</p>
-
-<p>A grey cell of unfaced stone showed amid the green
-boughs beyond the water. At its door stood a woman in a
-black mantle. A cross hung from her neck, and a white
-kerchief bound her hair. She stood motionless, half in the
-shadow, watching the horsemen as they rode down to the
-rippling ford.</p>
-
-<p>Autumn had touched the sanctuary garden, and the King&rsquo;s
-eyes beheld ruin as he climbed the slope. The woman had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-come from the cell, and now stood at the wicket-gate, with
-her hands folded as in prayer. Tristan took Uther&rsquo;s bridle.
-The King went on foot alone to speak with the anchoress.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire,&rdquo; she said, kneeling at his feet, &ldquo;God save and
-comfort you.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s brow was twisted into furrows. His right
-hand clasped his left wrist. He looked over the woman&rsquo;s
-head into the woods, and breathed fast through clenched
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, the woman lives.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I can bear the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The anchoress made the sign of the cross.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;She came to us, sire, here in this valley, a tall lady, with
-golden hair loose upon her neck. Her feet were bare and
-bleeding, her robe rent with thorns. And as she came, she
-sang wild snatches, such as tell of love. We took her, sire,
-and gave her meat and drink, bathed her torn feet, and gave
-her raiment. So, she abode with us, gentle and lovely, yet
-speaking like one who had suffered, even to death. And
-yet, even as we slept, she stole away from us last night, and
-now is gone.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The woman had never so much as lifted her eyes to the
-man&rsquo;s face. Her hands held her crucifix, and she was pale
-as new-hewn stone.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And is this all?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s voice trembled in his throat; his face shone
-in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Not all, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Say on.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The anchoress had buried her face in her black mantle;
-her voice was husky as with tears.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, you seek one bereft of reason.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Mad!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Alas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God, this then is the end!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3>XI</h3>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>An indefinite melancholy overshadowed the world. Autumn
-breathed in the wind; the year was rushing red-bosomed to
-its doom.</p>
-
-<p>On the summit of a wood-crowned hill, rising like a
-pyramid above moor and forest, two men stood silent under
-the shadow of an oak. In the distance the sea glimmered;
-and by a rock upon the hillside, armed knights, a knot of
-spears, shone like spirit sentinels athwart the west. Mists
-were creeping up the valleys as the sun went down into the
-sea. A few stars, dim and comfortless, gleamed out like
-souls still tortured by the platitudes of Time. An inevitable
-pessimism seemed to challenge the universe, taking for its
-parable the weird afterglow in the west.</p>
-
-<p>Deep in the woods a voice was singing, wild and solitary
-in the gathering gloom. Like the cry of a ghost, it seemed
-to set the silence quivering, the leaves quaking with a
-windless awe. The men who looked towards the sea heard
-it, a song that echoed in the heart like woe.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, there is yet hope.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Life grows dim, and dreams elapse in fire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Merlin pointed into the darkening woods. His eyes
-shone crystal bright, and there was a great radiance upon
-his face.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Sire, trust thine own heart, and the god in thee.
-Through superstition thou hast been brought nigh unto
-death and to despair. Trust not in priestcraft, grapple God
-unto thy soul. The laws of men are carven upon stone, the
-laws of heaven upon the heart. Be strong. From henceforth
-scorn mere words. Trample custom in the dust.
-Trust thyself, and the god in thy heart.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The distant voice had sunk into silence. Uther listened
-for it with hand aloft.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Yonder&mdash;heaven calls,&rdquo; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Go, sire.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I must be near her&mdash;through the night.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;And lo!&mdash;the moon stands full upon the hills. You
-shall bless me yet.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Dim were the woods that autumn evening, dim and deep
-with an ecstasy of gloom. Stars flickered in the heavens;
-the moon came, and broidered the trees with silver flame.
-A primæval calm lay heavy upon the bosom of the night.
-The spectral branches of the trees were rigid and prayerful
-towards the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Uther had left Merlin gazing out upon the shimmering
-sea. The voice called him from the woods with plaintive
-peals of song. The man followed, holding to a grass-grown
-track that curled purposeless into the gloom. Moonlight
-and shadow were alternate upon his armour. Hope and
-despair were mimicked upon his face. His soul leapt
-voiceless and inarticulate into the darkened shrine of
-prayer.</p>
-
-<p>The voice came to him clearer in the forest calm. The
-gulf had narrowed; the words flew as over the waters of
-death. They were pure, yet reasonless, passionate, yet
-void, words barbed with an utter pathos that wounded
-desire.</p>
-
-<p>For an hour the King followed in the woods, drawing
-ever nearer, waxing great with prayer. Anon the voice
-failed him by a little stream that quivered dimly through the
-grass. A stillness that was ghostly held the woods. The
-moonlight seemed to shudder on the trees. A stupendous
-stupor weighed upon the world.</p>
-
-<p>A hollow glade opened sudden in the woods, a white
-gulf in the forest&rsquo;s gloom. Water shone there, a mere, rush-ringed,
-and full of mysterious shadows, girded by the bronzed
-foliage of stately beeches. Moss grew thick about the roots;
-dead leaves covered the grass.</p>
-
-<p>The man knelt in a patch of bracken, and looked out
-over the glade. A figure went to and fro by the water&rsquo;s
-brim, a figure pale in the moonlight, with a glimmering
-flash of unloosed hair. The man kneeling in the bracken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-pressed his hands over his breast; his face seemed to start
-out of the gloom like the face of one who struggles in the
-sea, submerged, yet desperate.</p>
-
-<p>Uther saw the woman halt beside the mere. He saw her
-bend, take water in her palms, and dash it in her face.
-Standing in the moonlight she smoothed her hair between
-her fingers, her hands shining white against the dark bosom
-of her dress. She seemed to murmur to herself the while,
-words wistful and full of woe. Once she thrust her hands
-to the sky and cried, &ldquo;Pelleas! Pelleas!&rdquo; The man kneeling
-in the shadow quivered like a wind-shaken reed.</p>
-
-<p>The moon climbed higher, and the woman by the mere
-spread her cloak upon a patch of heather, and laid herself
-thereon. Not a sound ravaged the silence; the woods were
-mute, the air rippleless as the steel-surfaced water. An
-hour passed. The figure on the heather lay still as an
-effigy upon a tomb. The man in the bracken cast one look
-at the stars, crossed himself, and crept out into the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>Holding the scabbard of his sword, he skirted the mere
-with shimmering armour, went down upon his knees, and
-crawled slowly over the grass. Hours seemed to elapse
-before the black patch of heather spread crisp and dry
-beneath his hands. Breathing through dilating nostrils, he
-trembled like a craven who creeps to stab a sleeping friend.
-The moonlight showered vivid as with a supernatural glory.
-Tense anguish crowded the night with sound.</p>
-
-<p>Two more paces, and he was close at the woman&rsquo;s side.
-The heather crackled beneath his knees. He held his
-breath, crept nearer, and knelt so near that he could have
-kissed the woman&rsquo;s face. Her head lay pillowed on her
-arm, her hair spread in a golden sheet beneath it. Her
-bosom moved with the rhythmic calm of dreamless sleep.
-Her lips were parted in a smile. One hand was hid in the
-dark folds of her robe.</p>
-
-<p>Uther knelt with upturned face, his eyes shut to the sky.
-He seemed like one faint with pain; his lips moved as in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>prayer. A hundred inarticulate pleadings surged heavenwards
-from his heart.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_397.jpg" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>&ldquo;SHALL I NOT BE YOUR WIFE&rdquo;</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Again he bowed himself and watched the woman as she
-slept. A strange calm fell for a season upon his face; his
-eyes never wavered from the white arm and the glimmering
-hair. Vast awe possessed him. He was like a child who
-broods tearless and amazed over the calm face of a dead
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>Hours passed, and the man found no sustenance save in
-prayer. The unuttered yearnings of a world seemed molten
-in his soul. The moon waned; the stars grew dim.
-Sounds oracular were moving in the forest, the mysterious
-breathing of a thousand trees. Life ebbed and flowed with
-the sigh of a moon-stupored sea. Visions blazed in the
-night sky. The portals of heaven were open; the sound
-of harping fell like silver rain out of the clouds; the faces
-of saints shone radiant through purple gloom.</p>
-
-<p>Hours passed, and neither sleeper nor watcher stirred.
-The night grew faint, the water flickered in the mere.
-The very stars seemed to gaze upon the destinies of two
-wearied souls. Death hid his countenance. Christ walked
-the earth.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden sound of light, and the stirring of a wind.
-Far and faint came the quaver of a bird&rsquo;s note. Grey and
-mysterious stood the forest&rsquo;s spires. Light! Spears of
-amber darting in the east. A shudder seemed to shake the
-universe. The vault kindled. The sky grew great with gold.</p>
-
-<p>It was the dawn.</p>
-
-<p>Even as the light increased the man knelt and lifted up
-his face unto the heavens. Hope, glorious, seemed to fall
-sudden out of the east, a radiant faith begotten of spirit
-power. Banners of gold were streaming in the sky. The
-gloom elapsed. A vast expectancy hung solemn upon the
-red lips of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Igraine sighed in her sleep. Her mouth quivered, her
-hair stirred sudden in the heather, tendrils of gold that
-shivered in the sun. Uther, kneeling, lifted up his hands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
-with one long look to heaven. Prayer burnt upon his face.
-He strove, Jacob-like, with God.</p>
-
-<p>A second sigh, and the long lashes quivered. The lips
-moved, the eyes opened.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine! Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Sudden silence followed, a vast hush as of hope. The
-woman&rsquo;s eyes were searching silently the man&rsquo;s face. He
-bent and cowered over her like one who weeps. His hands
-touched her body, yet she did not stir.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine! Igraine!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>It was a hoarse, passionate cry that broke the golden
-stupor of the dawn. Sudden light leapt lustrous in the
-woman&rsquo;s eyes; her face shone radiant amid her hair.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>The man&rsquo;s arms circled her. She half crouched in his
-bosom, her face peering into his.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Pelleas!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;At last!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>A great shudder passed through her; her eyes grew big
-with fear.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Speak!&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Igraine.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Gorlois is dead.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Great silence held for a moment. The woman&rsquo;s head
-sank down upon the man&rsquo;s shoulder; madness had passed;
-her eyes were fixed on his with a wonderful earnestness, a
-splendid calm.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Is this a dream?&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;It is the truth.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>Presently she gave a great sigh, and looked strangely
-at the sun. Her voice came soft as music over
-water.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;I have dreamed a dream,&rdquo; she said, "and all was dark
-and fearful. Death seemed near, and shadows, and things
-from hell. I knew not what I did, nor where I wandered,
-nor what strange stupor held my soul. All was dark about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-me, horrible midnight peopled with foul forms. It has
-passed; now, I behold the dawn."</p>
-
-<p>The man lifted up his voice and wept.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;My God! my God! out of hell hast thou brought my
-soul. Never again shall my vile lips blaspheme.&rdquo;</p>
-
-<p>And Igraine comforted him.</p>
-
-<p>&ldquo;Shall I not be your wife?&rdquo; she said.</p>
-
-
-<p class="mt2 ph3">THE END</p>
-
-<div class='transnote'><h3>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes:</h3>
- <p>Minor punctuation and printer errors repaired.</p>
-
- <p>Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
- possible, including obsolete and variant spellings, inconsistent
- hyphenation, and other inconsistencies.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Uther and Igraine, by Warwick Deeping
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